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Margaret Cavendish: Observations upon Experimental Philosophy

Part of the Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy series
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Margaret Cavendish's 1668 edition of Observations upon Experimental Philosophy, presented here in its first modern edition, holds a unique position in early modern philosophy.

Cavendish rejects the Aristotelianism which was taught in the universities in the seventeenth century, and the picture of nature as a grand machine which was propounded by Hobbes, Descartes and members of the Royal Society of London, such as Boyle.

She also rejects the views of nature which make reference to immaterial spirits.

Instead she develops an original system of organicist materialism, and draws on the doctrines of ancient Stoicism to attack the tenets of seventeenth-century mechanical philosophy.

Her treatise is a document of major importance in the history of women's contributions to philosophy and science.

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Product Details
Cambridge University Press
0521776759 / 9780521776752
Paperback / softback
192
07/02/2001
United Kingdom
English
xlvii, 287p.
23 cm
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