Article ID: CBB902217592

Boyle, Spinoza and Glauber: on the philosophical redintegration of saltpeter—a reply to Antonio Clericuzio (2020)

unapi

The so-called ‘redintegration experiment’ is traditionally at the center of the comments on the supposed Boyle/Spinoza controversy. A. Clericuzio influentially argued (criticizing R.A. & M.B. Hall’s interpretation) in his publications that, in De nitro, Boyle accounted for the ‘redintegration’ of saltpeter on the grounds of the chemical properties of corpuscles and “did not make any attempt to deduce them from mechanical principles”. By way of contrast, this paper argues that with his De nitro Boyle wanted to illustrate and promote his new corpuscular or mechanical philosophy, and that he made significant attempts to explain the phenomena in terms of mechanical qualities. Boyle had borrowed the ‘redintegration experiment’ from R. Glauber and used it in an attempt to demonstrate that his philosophy was superior to the Peripatetic and Paracelsian theory. Consequently, Clericuzio’s characterization of the Boyle/Spinoza controversy as a discussion between a strict mechanical philosopher and a chemist is problematic and a wider view of Spinoza’s interpretation and its context gives a fairer picture.

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Authors & Contributors
Chalmers, Alan Francis
Haileigh Robertson
Buyse, Filip
Yoshimoto, Hideyuki
Sargent, Rose-Mary
Saltzman, Martin D.
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Archive for History of Exact Sciences
Revue d'Histoire des Sciences
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Intellectual History Review
History of Science
Publishers
University of Chicago Press
The Robert Boyle Project
Oxford University Press
Librairie Philosophique J. Vrin
Harrassowitz
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Experiments and experimentation
Mechanism; mechanical philosophy
Chemistry
Natural philosophy
Physics
Philosophy of science
People
Boyle, Robert
Spinoza, Baruch
Galilei, Galileo
Willis, Thomas
Torricelli, Evangelista
Sydenham, Thomas
Time Periods
17th century
18th century
Early modern
Modern
Places
England
Europe
Great Britain
Institutions
Royal Society of London
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