Thursday, September 26 2024, 4 - 6pm 115 Peabody Hall Special Information: co-sponsored with the UGA Departments of History, Physics, and Math Departmental Colloquium KATHERINE BRADING Philosophy Duke University Here is a familiar story. Up until the early 17th century, physics was a part of philosophy. Then the Scientific Revolution happened – including Newton’s Principia of 1687 -- and after this physics was a separate discipline. This story has been told many times, and challenged in many ways, but a common thread persists in which we think of 18th century physics as having already separated from philosophy, as broadly familiar from the perspective of contemporary physics, and as a stable period of normal science within the “Newtonian paradigm.” I will argue that this obscures the deep philosophical reasons that drove the separation of physics from philosophy and skews our understanding of the philosophical landscape in the 18th century. At stake were two central issues from the period, material substance and causation, along with the appropriate methodologies for tackling them. The relevant arguments unfolded over the course of the 18th century in the work of such figures as Leibniz, Malebranche, Wolff, Maupertuis, Du Châtelet, Euler, d’Alembert, Boscovich, Kant, and Laplace. It was only late in the 18th century that the split took hold, with consequences that continue to play out in philosophy today. I will invite you to rethink how you think (and teach) about the 18th century. Katherine Brading is a philosopher of science who specializes in physics from the seventeenth century to the present day. She has published on a variety of topics including the physics of Descartes and Newton; symmetries and conservation laws in Hilbert, Noether, Einstein and Weyl; philosophy of time; and structuralism in philosophy of science. Most recently, her research has focussed on the intersection physics and philosophy in the eighteenth century, including work on Emilie Du Châtelet and her recent book Philosophical Mechanics in the Age of Reason co-authored with Marius Stan (OUP 2024). She is co-editor of Symmetries in Physics: Philosophical Reflections (with Elena Castellani, CUP 2003) and author of Emilie Du Châtelet and the Foundations of Physical Science (Routledge 2019).