The kingdom of darkness : Bayle, Newton, and the emancipation of the European mind from philosophy

書誌事項

The kingdom of darkness : Bayle, Newton, and the emancipation of the European mind from philosophy

Dmitri Levitin

Cambridge University Press, 2022

  • : hardback

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 853-934) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

In 1500, speculative philosophy lay at the heart of European intellectual life; by 1700, its role was drastically diminished. The Kingdom of Darkness tells the story of this momentous transformation. Dmitri Levitin explores the structural factors behind this change: the emancipation of natural philosophy from metaphysics; theologians' growing preference for philology over philosophy; and a new conception of the limits of the human mind derived from historical and oriental scholarship, not least concerning China and Japan. In turn, he shows that the ideas of two of Europe's most famous thinkers, Pierre Bayle and Isaac Newton, were both the products of this transformation and catalysts for its success. Drawing on hundreds of sources in many languages, Levitin traces in unprecedented detail Bayle and Newton's conceptions of what Thomas Hobbes called The Kingdom of Darkness: a genealogical vision of how philosophy had corrupted the human mind. Both men sought to remedy this corruption, and their ideas helped lay the foundation for the system of knowledge that emerged in the eighteenth century.

目次

  • Preface
  • Abbreviations and Conventions
  • Part I. Giving Up Philosophy: The Transformation of a System of Knowledge: 1. Giving Up Philosophy
  • 1.1. The Emancipation of Natural Philosophy from Metaphysics
  • 1.2. The Emancipation of Theology from Philosophy
  • 1.3. Reconstructing the Pagan Mind in Seventeenth-century Europe: A Historico-philosophical Critique of Pure Reason
  • Part II. Pierre Bayle and The Emancipation of Religion from Philosophy: 2. Pierre Bayle: A Life in the Republic of Letters
  • 2.1. Greece, Asia, and the Logic of Paganism. Cartesian Occasionalism as the only 'Christian Philosophy'
  • 2.2. The Manichean Articles and the 'Sponge of All Religions'
  • 2.3. Theological Method and the Foundations of Protestant Faith
  • 2.4. Virtuous Atheism, Philosophic Sin, and Toleration
  • Part III. Isaac Newton and the Emancipation of Natural Philosophy from Metaphysics: 3. The Formation of Newton's Natural Philosophical Project, 1664-1687
  • 3.1. After the Principia. Justifying a Science of Properties and the Invention of 'Newtonianism'
  • 3.2. The Queries to the Optice (1706). An Intelligent God, the Divine Sensorium, and the Development of an Anti-metaphysical Natural Theology
  • 3.3. The General Scholium: A Non-metaphysical Physics
  • 3.4. Newton's Kingdom of Darkness Complete
  • Part IV. Conclusion: The European System of Knowledge, 1700 and Beyond: Conclusion
  • Bibliography.

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