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Introductions to the translations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2014

David Walford
Affiliation:
St David's University College, University of Wales
Ralf Meerbote
Affiliation:
University of Rochester, New York
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Summary

NEW ELUCIDATION

Although Kant's New Elucidation (1755) was his first purely philosophical work, he had already published two major and three minor scientific works. Almost a decade earlier, the twenty-two-year-old Kant, having completed a six-year period of study at the University of Königsberg (devoted in part to the humanities and in part, under the influence of Martin Knutzen, to mathematics and natural science), crowned his studies with Living Forces (1747) (AK 1:1–181). Kant had addressed himself to the problem of calculating the magnitude of physical forces, attempting to mediate between and, indeed, reconcile the solution offered by Descartes, who construed force as the product of mass multiplied by velocity (mv), and that of Leibniz, who construed force as the product of mass multiplied by velocity squared (mv2), arguing that Leibniz's account related to ‘living’ force whereas that of Descartes related to ‘dead’ force. The correct account of the matter had been established by Boscovich in 1745, and the correct mathematical formula (mv2/2) was to be published by D'Alembert in the 1758 edition of his Traité de dynamique. In spite of its serious scientific shortcomings, the work displays extraordinary flashes of philosophical genius (the discussion of the structure of space and of the possibility of non-Euclidean spaces [AK 1:23–5] is an example). Living Forces also strikingly displays features characteristic of Kant's later thought: the predilection for a challenge posed by two cogently argued but incompatible positions; the wish to mediate between and, indeed, reconcile the seemingly irreconcilable by construing the two opposed positions as symptoms of a deeper ground of agreement; and the preoccupation with questions of method and epistemology and, in particular, with the issue of the limits of the applicability of mathematics to nature and physics.

In 1746, Kant was obliged temporarily to abandon his university career – the interruption was to last some eight years – by taking employment as a private tutor in the Königsberg area.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1992

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