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Into the ‘regions of physical and metaphysical chaos’: Maxwell’s scientific metaphysics and natural philosophy of action (agency,determinacy and necessity from theology,moral philosophy and history to mathematics,theory and experiment)
Authors:Jordi Cat
Institution:1. Department of Mathematics, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33146, USA;2. Department of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2G1;1. Department of Physics, P.O. Box 64, FIN-00014, University of Helsinki, Finland;2. Helsinki Institute of Physics, P.O. Box 64, FIN-00014, University of Helsinki, Finland;3. Departamento de Física de Partículas, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Spain;4. Instituto Galego de Física de Altas Enerxías (IGFAE), E-15782, Santiago de Compostela, Spain
Abstract:Maxwell’s writings exhibit an enduring preoccupation with the role of metaphysics in the advancement of science, especially the progress of physics. I examine the question of the distinction and the proper relation between physics and metaphysics and the way in which the question relies on key notions that bring together much of Maxwell’s natural philosophy, theoretical and experimental. Previous discussions of his attention to metaphysics have been confined to specific issues and polemics such as conceptions of matter and the problem of free will. I suggest a unifying pattern based on a generalized philosophical perspective and varying expressions, although never a systematic or articulated philosophical doctrine, but at least a theme of action and active powers, natural and human, intellectual and material, with sources and grounds in theology, moral philosophy and historical argument. While science was developing in the direction of professional specialization and alongside the rise of materialism, Maxwell held on to conservative intellectual outlook, but one that included a rich scientific life and held science as part of a rich intellectual, cultural and material life. His philosophical outlook integrated his science with and captured the new Victorian culture of construction and work, political, economic, artistic and engineering.
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