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Is Newton a ‘radical empiricist’ about method?
Authors:Victor Joseph Di Fate
Institution:Department of Philosophy, The Johns Hopkins University, 3400 North Charles Street, Gilman Hall, Baltimore, MD 21218, USA
Abstract:Recently, some Newton scholars have argued that Newton is an empiricist about metaphysics—that ideally, he wants to let advances in physical theory resolve either some or all metaphysical issues. But while proponents of this interpretation are using ‘metaphysics’ in a very broad sense, to include the ‘principles that enable our knowledge of natural phenomena’, attention has thus far been focused on Newton’s approach to ontological, not epistemological or methodological, issues. In this essay, I therefore consider whether Newton wants to let physical theory bear on the very ‘principles that enable our knowledge’. By examining two kinds of argument in the Principia, I contend that Newton can be considered a methodological empiricist in a substantial respect. I also argue, however, that he cannot be a ‘radical empiricist’—that he does not and cannot convert all methodological issues into empirical issues.
Keywords:Newton  Scientific method  Regulæ  Philosophandi  Induction  Empiricism
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