TY - JOUR
T1 - What is Chemistry, for Kant?
AU - McNulty, Michael Bennett
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston.
PY - 2017/9/26
Y1 - 2017/9/26
N2 - Kant's preoccupation with architectonics is a characteristic and noteworthy aspect of his thought. Various features of Kant's argumentation and philosophical system are founded on the precise definitions of the various subdomains of human knowledge and the derivative borders among them. One science conspicuously absent from Kant's routine discussions of the organization of knowledge is chemistry. Whereas sciences such as physics, psychology, and anthropology are all explicitly located in the architectonic, chemistry finds no such place. In this paper, I examine neglected passages from Kant's corpus as well as texts regarding chemistry that Kant himself read in order to unveil his views on the definition of chemistry and its relations with the other sciences. These considerations reveal chemistry to be the science that studies the changes of matter into new kinds. Yet Kant idiosyncratically believes that such a change requires an infinite division of matter, effected by chemical forces. Although this understanding of chemical change dovetails with Kant's dynamical, continualist theory of matter, it implies that chemistry cannot be reduced to physics. Thus, although chemistry stands alongside empirical physics as an applied natural science in Kant's architectonic, it remains a distinct, independent science.
AB - Kant's preoccupation with architectonics is a characteristic and noteworthy aspect of his thought. Various features of Kant's argumentation and philosophical system are founded on the precise definitions of the various subdomains of human knowledge and the derivative borders among them. One science conspicuously absent from Kant's routine discussions of the organization of knowledge is chemistry. Whereas sciences such as physics, psychology, and anthropology are all explicitly located in the architectonic, chemistry finds no such place. In this paper, I examine neglected passages from Kant's corpus as well as texts regarding chemistry that Kant himself read in order to unveil his views on the definition of chemistry and its relations with the other sciences. These considerations reveal chemistry to be the science that studies the changes of matter into new kinds. Yet Kant idiosyncratically believes that such a change requires an infinite division of matter, effected by chemical forces. Although this understanding of chemical change dovetails with Kant's dynamical, continualist theory of matter, it implies that chemistry cannot be reduced to physics. Thus, although chemistry stands alongside empirical physics as an applied natural science in Kant's architectonic, it remains a distinct, independent science.
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U2 - 10.1515/kantyb-2017-0005
DO - 10.1515/kantyb-2017-0005
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85031928038
SN - 1868-4599
VL - 9
SP - 85
EP - 112
JO - Kant Yearbook
JF - Kant Yearbook
IS - 1
ER -