
Kepler's Philosophy and the New Astronomy.
Title:
Kepler's Philosophy and the New Astronomy.
Author:
Martens, Rhonda.
ISBN:
9781400831098
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (216 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- Introduction -- 1. Kepler's Life and Times -- Select Biography -- Kepler's Astronomical Inheritance -- Kepler's Philosophical Inheritance -- 2. The Mysterium cosmographicum and Kepler's Early Approach to Natural Philosophy -- The Content of the Mysterium cosmographicum -- Kepler's Cosmology -- Kepler's Approach to Natural Philosophy -- 3. Kepler's Apologia: An Early Modern Treatise on Realism -- Extra-Astronomical Considerations -- The Nature of Astronomical Hypotheses -- The Testing of Astronomical Hypotheses -- Kepler's ImprovedNotion of Testability -- Concluding Remarks: The Archetypes -- 4. Kepler's Archetypes and the Astronomia nova -- The Status of Hypotheses in Physical Astronomy -- The Replacement of the Mean by the True Sun -- The Vicarious Hypothesis -- The New Physics -- Kepler's SecondLaw -- Oval Orbits -- Physical andGeometrical Models of Libration -- The Ellipse of Chapter 59 -- Concluding Remarks: Archetypes in the Astronomia -- 5. The Aristotelian Kepler -- The Aristotelian Challenge -- Physical Astronomy as a MixedDiscipline.
Abstract:
Johannes Kepler contributed importantly to every field he addressed. He changed the face of astronomy by abandoning principles that had been in place for two millennia, made important discoveries in optics and mathematics, and was an uncommonly good philosopher. Generally, however, Kepler's philosophical ideas have been dismissed as irrelevant and even detrimental to his legacy of scientific accomplishment. Here, Rhonda Martens offers the first extended study of Kepler's philosophical views and shows how those views helped him construct and justify the new astronomy. Martens notes that since Kepler became a Copernican before any empirical evidence supported Copernicus over the entrenched Ptolemaic system, his initial reasons for preferring Copernicanism were not telescope observations but rather methodological and metaphysical commitments. Further, she shows that Kepler's metaphysics supported the strikingly modern view of astronomical method that led him to discover the three laws of planetary motion and to wed physics and astronomy--a key development in the scientific revolution. By tracing the evolution of Kepler's thought in his astronomical, metaphysical, and epistemological works, Martens explores the complex interplay between changes in his philosophical views and the status of his astronomical discoveries. She shows how Kepler's philosophy paved the way for the discovery of elliptical orbits and provided a defense of physical astronomy's methodological soundness. In doing so, Martens demonstrates how an empirical discipline was inspired and profoundly shaped by philosophical assumptions.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Subject Term:
Genre:
Electronic Access:
Click to View