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πŸ“

The Problem of Certainty in English Thought 1630–1690

✍ Scribed by Henry G. Van Leeuwen (auth.)


Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Year
1970
Tongue
English
Leaves
174
Series
Archives Internationales D’ Histoire des Idees/International Archives of the History of Ideas 3
Edition
2
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


The revival of ancient Greek scepticism in the 16th and 17th centuries was of the greatest importance in changing the intellectual climate in which modern science developed, and in developing the attitude that we now call "The scientific outlook". Many streams of thought came together contributing to various facets of this crucial development. One of the most fascinating of these is that of "constructive scepticism", the history of one of whose forms is traced in this study by Prof. Van Leeuwen. The sceptical crisis that arose during the Renaissance and ReforΒ­ mation challenged the fundamental principles of the many areas of man's intellectual world, in philosophy, theology, humane and moral studies, and the sciences. The devastating weapons of classical scepΒ­ ticism were employed to undermine man's confidence in his ability to discover truth in any area whatsoever by use of the human faculties of the senses and reason. These sceptics indicated that there was no area in which human beings could gain any certain knowledge, and that the effort to do so was fruitless, vain, presumptuous, and perhaps even blasphemous. StaI'ting with the writings of Hen ric us Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim (1486-1535) and Michel de Montaigne (1533-92), a thoroughly destructive sceptical movement developed, attacking both the old and the new science, philosophy and theology, and insisting that true and certain knowledge can only be gained by Revelation.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xvii
Francis Bacon and Scientific Knowledge....Pages 1-12
The Problem of Certainty in its Theological Context....Pages 13-48
The Theory of Certainty Secularized....Pages 49-89
The Theory of Certainty in its Scientific Context....Pages 90-120
John Locke and the Philosophical Exposition of the Theory of Certainty....Pages 121-152
Back Matter....Pages 153-159

✦ Subjects


History; Modern Philosophy


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