Newtonianism and religion in the Netherlands |
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Authors: | Ernestine G.E. van der Wall |
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Affiliation: | Faculty of Theology, Department of the History of Christianity, Leiden University, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | In the early eighteenth century Newtonianism became popular in the Netherlands both in academic (Boerhaave, ’sGravesande, Van Musschenbroek) and non-academic circles. The ‘Book of Nature’ was interpreted with the help of Newton’s natural philosophy and his ideas about a providential deity, thereby greatly enhancing the attractiveness of physico-theology in the eighteenth-century United Provinces. Like other Europeans the Dutch welcomed physico-theology as a strategic means in their battle against irreligion and atheism. Bernard Nieuwentijt, Johan Lulofs, Petrus Camper, and Johannes Florentius Martinet were prominent experts in the field. Combining Newtonian notions with Leibnizian optimism and romanticist trends, physico-theology remained popular in the Netherlands well into the nineteenth century. |
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Keywords: | Apologetics Dutch Enlightenment Physico-theology Prophetic theology Argument from design Empiricism |
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