The Scientist's Atom and the Philosopher's Stone

How Science Succeeded and Philosophy Failed to Gain Knowledge of Atoms

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Anglais

This textbook describes the epistemological history of atomism and presents a comprehensive history of theories of the atom from Democritus to the twentieth century. This is not history for its own sake. By critically reflecting on the various versions of atomic theories of the past, the author is able to grapple with the question of what sets scientific knowledge apart from other kinds of knowledge, philosophical knowledge in particular. He thereby engages historically with issues concerning the nature and status of scientific knowledge that were dealt with in a more abstract way in his What Is This Thing Called Science?, a book that has been a standard text in philosophy of science for three decades and which is available in nineteen languages. Speculations about the fundamental structure of matter from Democritus to the seventeenth-century mechanical philosophers and beyond are construed as categorically distinct from atomic theories amenable to experimental investigation and support and as contributing little to the latter from a historical point of view. The thesis will provoke historians and philosophers of science alike and will require a revision of a range of standard views in the history of science and philosophy. The book is key reading for students and scholars in History and Philosophy of Science and will be instructive for and provide a challenge to philosophers, historians and scientists more generally. – Chapter 1. Atomism: Science or philosophy?; – Chapter 2. Democritean atomism; – Chapter 3. How did Epicurus’s garden grow?; – Chapter 4. Atomism in its Ancient Greek perspective; – Chapter 5. From the Ancient Greeks to the dawn of science; – Chapter 6. Atomism, experiment and the mechanical philosophy: The work of Robert Boyle; – Chapter 7. Newton’s atomism and its fate; – Chapter 8. The emergence of modern chemistry with no debt to atomism; – Chapter 9. Dalton’s atomism and its creative modification via formulae; – Chapter 10. From Avogadro to Cannizzaro: The Old Story; – Chapter 11. Thermodynamics and the kinetic theory; – Chapter 12. Experimental contact with molecules; – Chapter 13. Experimental contact with electrons; – Chapter 14. Atomism Vindicated? M.-M. V.