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6 - Principia, Part IV: The Earth

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 December 2009

Stephen Gaukroger
Affiliation:
University of Sydney
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Summary

In Part IV of the Principia, Descartes made the Earth an object of natural–philosophical/scientific investigation for the first time. There had, of course, been theories about such phenomena as earthquakes and volcanic activity, but these were considered – most notably by Aristotle – to be something that affected only the superficial layers of the Earth: the Earth's great mass was inert. As Jacques Roger has put it, Descartes' was ‘the first attempt to understand systematically the Earth's structure and its actual topography’. Having not only moved the Earth from the centre of the cosmos, but also made it little more than a piece of refuse from another solar system, Descartes puts himself in a position where he can consider it in the same way as any other concentration of solid matter, and indeed can consider any other planet as being like the Earth. Descartes is not unaware of the radical consequences of what he is advocating. As he points out to Burman:

It is a common habit of men to suppose that they themselves are the dearest of God's creatures, and that all things are therefore made for their benefit. They think their own dwelling place, the Earth, is of supreme importance, that it contains everything that exists, that everything else was created for its sake. But what do we know of what God may have created outside the Earth, on the stars, and so on? How do we know that he has not placed on the stars other species of creature, other lives and other ‘men’ – or at least beings analogous to men?

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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