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Using Isaac Newton’s mathematical principles and laws of
motion and taking up an idea first suggested by Emanuel Swedenborg,
Immanuel Kant, the greatest philosopher of the eighteenth century, in
1755 produced a detailed account of what has come to be known as the
Nebular hypothesis, still considered the most plausible explanation for
the formation of the solar system: the structure of the universe
develops from widely dispersed materials scattered throughout space
which, under the influence of the forces of attraction and repulsion,
rotate, flatten, and over time produce stars and planets. In his
account, Kant also considers the ring of Saturn, the formation of moons,
and other celestial phenomena (like the axial rotation of the planets
and the development of comets). He also lets his imagination run rampant
in a fascinating exploration of what living creatures must be like on
other planets.
The extent to which Kant fully understood the mathematical complexities
involved in his explanation has been strongly challenged, but, for all
that, his account is an important document in the most important trend
of natural science in the eighteenth century, that is, placing
scientific accounts of natural phenomena on a historical basis and
seeing them as the result of a process of development maintained by
mechanical forces (a revolutionary trend which culminates a century
later in the work of Charles Darwin). In this way, while honoring
Newton’s achievement, Kant is also issuing a direct challenge to it.
Kant’s work also offers an enthusiastic defense of the design argument
(that the harmonies in the design of the solar system are the best
physical evidence we have for the existence of God), a claim which,
ironically enough, his later philosophy would do so much to undermine.
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