Richard Baxter and the mechanical philosophers
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Richard Baxter and the mechanical philosophers
(Oxford studies in historical theology)
Oxford University Press, c2017
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Note
Bibliography: p. [287]-331
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Richard Baxter, one of the most famous Puritans of the seventeenth century, is generally known as a writer of practical and devotional literature. But he also excelled in knowledge of medieval and early modern scholastic theology, and was conversant with a wide variety of seventeenth-century philosophies. Baxter was among the early English polemicists to write against the mechanical philosophy of Rene Descartes and Pierre Gassendi in the years immediately
following the establishment of the Royal Society. At the same time, he was friends with Robert Boyle and Matthew Hale, corresponded with Joseph Glanvill, and engaged in philosophical controversy with Henry More. In this book, David Sytsma presents a chronological and thematic account of Baxter's relation to the
people and concepts involved in the rise of mechanical philosophy in late-seventeenth-century England.
Drawing on largely unexamined works, including Baxter's Methodus Theologiae Christianae (1681) and manuscript treatises and correspondence, Sytsma discusses Baxter's response to mechanical philosophers on the nature of substance, laws of motion, the soul, and ethics. Analysis of these topics is framed by a consideration of the growth of Christian Epicureanism in England, Baxter's overall approach to reason and philosophy, and his attempt to understand creation as an analogical
reflection of God's power, wisdom, and goodness, understood as vestigia Trinitatis. Baxter's views on reason, analogical knowledge of God, and vestigia Trinitatis draw on medieval precedents and directly inform a largely hostile, though partially accommodating, response to mechanical philosophy.
Table of Contents
Abbreviations
Preface
I. Richard Baxter as Philosophical Theologian
II. Baxter and the Rise of Mechanical Philosophy
III. Reason and Philosophy
IV. A Trinitarian Natural Philosophy
V. A Commotion over Motion
VI. The Incipient Materialism of Mechanical Philosophy
VII. From "Epicurean" Physics to Ethics
VIII. Conclusion
Bibliography
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