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Laws of nature discussion, HOPOS, Feb 2018, bibliografia citada na discussão

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Artigos:

Milton, John R. “The Origin and Development of the Concept of the ‘Laws of
Nature.’” European Journal of Sociology 22, no. 02 (1981): 173–195.

Kedar, Yael, and Giora Hon. 2017. "'Natures' and 'Laws': the Making of the Concept
of Law of Nature--Robert Grosseteste (c. 1168-1253) and Roger Bacon (1214/1220-
1292)." Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 61: 21-31.

Kedar, Yael, and Giora Hon. (2017). "Roger Bacon (c.1220-1292) and his System of
Laws of Nature: Classification, Hierarchy and Significance." Perspectives on
Science 25 (6): 719-745.

John Henry, "Metaphysics and the Origins of Modern Science" _Early Science and
Medicine_ 9, 2 (2004), 73-114

Sophie Roux, "Les lois de la nature au XVIIe siècle: le problème terminologique"


_Revue de synthèse_, 4e Series, 2-4 (2001), 531-76.

Peter Harrison, "The Development of the Concept of Law of Nature", en Fraser Watts
(ed.) Creation: Law and Probability (Ashgate: Aldershot, 2008), 13-35.

Alan Padget, The Roots of the Western Concept of the "Laws of Nature": From the
Greeks to Newton, Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith 55:4 (2003), 212-
221 .

Daryn Lehoux, Laws of nature and natural laws, Stud. Hist. Phil. Sci. 37 (2006)
527-549.

Steffen Ducheyne and Pieter Present, Pieter van Musschenbroek on laws of nature,
British Journal for the History of Science, vol. 50(4), pp. 637-656.

Kedar, Y. and G. Hon (2017), ‘‘Natures’ and ‘Laws’: The making of the Concept of
Law of Nature - Robert Grosseteste (c. 1168-1253) and Roger Bacon (1214/1220-
1292)’, Studies in History and Philosophy of Science, 61, 21-31.

Crombie, A.C., *Infinite power and the laws of nature*. In: Crombie, A.C. *Science,
Art and Nature in Medieval and Modern Thought*. London: The Hambledon Press, 1996,
67-87.
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Colectâneas:

Natural Law and Laws of Nature in Early Modern Europe: Jurisprudence, Theology,
Moral and Natural Philosophy, edited by Lorraine Daston & Michael Stolleis.

Laws of Nature, edited Friedel Weinert.

Nancy Cartwright and Keith Ward (eds.), Rethinking Order after the Laws of Nature
(New York e.a., Bloomsbury, 2016)
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Na internet:

Steffen Ducheyne, steffen.ducheyne@vub.ac.be has done an unimaginably exhaustive


overview of the literature on laws of nature in early modern period.
http://digressionsnimpressions.typepad.com/digressionsimpressions/2016/05/on-the-
invention-of-progress.html

hhttp://digressionsnimpressions.typepad.com/digressionsimpressions/2016/05/halley-
and-the-senecas-prophecy.html

A bibliography: https://groups.google.com/a/vt.edu/d/msg/hopos-
g/x07S3yBsCHM/2dSXDCQSBgAJ
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Um comentário:

Let me give you this quote form Boyle “I must freely observe that, to speak
properly, a law being but a notional rule of acting according to the declared will
of a superior, it is plain that nothing but an intellectual being can be properly
capable of receiving and acting by a law” [Boyle, 1996, p.24].
[Boyle, 1996] Boyle, R. (1675 (1996)). A free enquiry into the vulgarly received
notion of nature. In Hunter, M. and Davis, E. B., editors, Cambridge University
Press.
=NN= A free enquiry into the vulgarly received notion of nature, Selected Phil
Paers, ed Stewart, Indianapolis, Hackett, 1991, p. 181.
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Para formatar:

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17th century:

Edgar Zilsel (1942), The Genesis of the Concept of Scientific Law, The
Philosophical Review, vol. 51(3), pp. 245-267; Joseph Needham (1951), Human
Laws and the Laws of Nature in China and the West (I), Journal of the
History of Ideas, vol. 12(1), pp. 3-30; id. (1951), Human Laws and the Laws
of Nature in China and the West (II), Journal of the History of Ideas, vol.
12(2), pp. 194-230; id. (1991 [1956]), Science and Civilisation in China,
Volume 2: History of Scientific Thought (Cambridge, Cambridge University
Press), pp. 518-583; Francis Oakley (1961), Christian Theology and the
Newtonian Science: The Rise of the Concepts of the Laws of Nature, Church
History, vol. 30(4), pp. 433-457; Paolo Casini (1976), ‘Loi naturelle:
Reflexion politique et sciences exactes’, in: Theodore Besterman (ed.),
Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century, volume 151: Transactions of
the Fourth International Congress on the Enlightenment (Oxford, The
Voltaire Foundation at the Taylor Institution), pp. 417-432; John R. Milton
(1981), The Origin and Development of the Concept of the ‘Laws of Nature’,
European Journal of Sociology, vol. 22(2), pp. 173-195; id. (2003), ‘Laws
of Nature’, in: Daniel Garber and Michael Ayers (eds.), The Cambridge
History of Seventeenth-Century Philosophy (2 vols.) (Cambridge, Cambridge
University Press), vol. 1, pp. 680–701; Jane E. Ruby (1986), The Origins of
Scientific ‘Law’, Journal of the History of Ideas, vol. 47(3), pp. 341-359;
Catherine Chevalley (1995), ‘Nature et loi dans la philosophie moderne’,
in: Denis Kambouchner (ed.), Notions de philosophie (3 vols.) (Paris,
Gallimard), vol. 1, pp. 127-230; Rienk Vermij (1999), ‘Een nieuw concept:
De wetten der natuur’, in: Florike Egmond, Eric Jorink, and Rienk Vermij
(eds.), Kometen, monsters en muilezels: Het veranderende natuurbeeld en de
natuurwetenschap in de zeventiende eeuw (Haarlem, Uitgeverij Arcadia), pp.
105-119; Sophie Roux (2001), Les lois de la nature à l’âge classique: La
question terminologique, Revue de synthèse, vol. 122(2-4), pp. 531-576;
Friedrich Steinle (2002), ‘Negotiating Experiment, Reason and Theology: The
Concept of Laws of Nature in the Early Royal Society’, in: Wolfgang Detel
and Claus Zittel (eds.), Wissensideale und Kulturwissen in der frühen
Neuzeit - Ideals and Cultures of Knowledge in Early Modern Europe
(Frankfurt, Akademie Verlag), pp. 197-212; Alan Padgett (2003), The Roots
of the Western Concept of the ‘Laws of Nature’: From the Greeks to Newton,
Perspectives on Science and Christian Faith, vol. 55(3), pp. 212-221; John
Henry (2004), Metaphysics and the Origins of Modern Science: Descartes and
the Importance of Laws of Nature, Early Science and Medicine, vol. 9(2),
pp. 73-114; Mauro Dorato (2005), The Software of the Universe. An
introduction to the History and Philosophy of the Laws of Nature
(Aldershot, Ashgate), chapter 1; Karin Hartbecke and Christian Schütte
(eds.) (2006), Naturgesetze. Historisch-systematische Analysen eines
wissenschaftlichen Grundbegriffs (Paderborn, Mentis); Lynn S. Joy (2006),
‘Scientific Explanation from Formal Causes to Laws of Nature’, in:
Katherine Park and Lorraine Daston (eds.), The Cambridge History of
Science, Volume 3: Early Modern Science (Cambridge, Cambridge University
Press), pp. 70-105; Friedel Weinert (ed.) (1995), Laws of Nature: Essays on
the Philosophical, Scientific, and Historical Dimensions (Berlin, Walter de
Gruyter); Andreas Hütteman (ed.) (2001), Kausalität und Naturgesetz in der
Frügen Neuzeit (Stuttgart, Franz Steiner Verlag); Lorraine Daston and
Michael Stolleis (eds.) (2008), Natural Law and Laws of Nature in Early
Modern Europe: Jurisprudence, Theology, Moral and Natural Philosophy
(Farnam, Ashgate); Peter Harrison (2008), ‘The Development of the Concept
of Laws of Nature’, in: Fraser Watts (ed.), Creation: Law and Probability
(Aldershot, Ashgate), pp. 13-36; Walter Ott (2009), Causation and Laws of
Nature in Early Modern Philosophy (Oxford, Oxford University Press); Simone
De Angelis (2010), ‘Lex naturalis, Leges naturae, ‘Regeln der Moral’. Der
Begriff des ‘Naturegesetzes’ und die Entstehung der modernen
‘Wissenschaften vom Menschen’ um naturrechtlichen Zeitalter’, in: Simone De
Angelis, Florian Gelzer and Lucas Marco Gisi (eds.), ‘Natur’, Naturrecht
und Geschichte, Aspekte eines fundamentalen Begründungdsdiskurses de
Neuzeit (1600-1900) (Heidelberg, Universitätsverlag Winter), pp. 47-70;
Daniel Garber (2013), ‘God, Laws, and the Order of Nature: Descartes and
Leibniz, Hobbes and Spinoza’, in: Eric Watkins (ed.), The Divine Order, the
Human Order, and the Order of Nature (Oxford, Oxford University Press), pp.
45-66; Peter Harrison (2013), ‘Laws of Nature in Seventeenth-Century
England: From Cambridge Platonism to Newtonianism’, in: Watkins (ed.), The
Divine Order, pp. 127-148; Eric Schliesser (2013), Newtonian Emanation,
Spinozism, Measurement and the Baconian Origins of the Laws of Nature,
Foundations of Science, vol. 18(3), pp. 449-466; and Eric Watkins (2016),
‘The Rise and Fall of Laws of Nature’, in: Nancy Cartwright and Keith Ward
(eds.), Rethinking Order after the Laws of Nature (New York e.a.,
Bloomsbury), pp. 7-24.

18th century:

Giorgio Tonelli (1959), La nécessité des lois de la nature au XVIIIe siècle


et chez Kant en 1762, Revue d’histoire des sciences et de leurs
applications, vol. 12(3), pp. 225-241; P.M. Heimann (1978), Voluntarism and
Immanence: Conceptions of Nature in Eighteenth-Century Thought, Journal of
the History of Ideas, vol. 39(2), pp. 271-283 and Eric Schliesser (2014),
‘Newton and Newtonianism’, in: Aaron Garrett (ed.), The Routledge Companion
to Eighteenth Century Philosophy (London and New York, Routledge), pp.
62-90, pp. 72-74; André Charrak (2006), Contingence et nécessité des lois
de la nature au XVIIIe siècle: La philosophie seconde des Lumières (Paris,
J. Vrin). On the broader European context, see Gerd Buchdahl (1969),
Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Science: The Classical Origins, Descartes
to Kant (Oxford, Blackwell), esp. chapters 1 and 5; Michael Ayers (1996),
‘Natures and Laws from Descartes to Hume’, in: G.A.J. Rogers and Sylvana
Tomaselli (eds.), The Philosophical Canon in the 17th and 18th Centuries,
Essays in Honour of John W. Yolton (Rochester (N.Y.), University of
Rochester Press), pp. 83-107; and Tad M. Schmaltz (2011), ‘From Causes to
Laws’, in: Desmond M. Clarke and Catherine Wilson (eds.), The Oxford
Handbook of Philosophy in the Eighteenth Century (Oxford, Oxford University
Press) pp. 32-50).

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