1. CHAP. PAGE
  1. [NATURE AND THOUGHT] [1]
  2. [THEORIES OF THE BIFURCATION OF NATURE] [26]
  3. [TIME] [49]
  4. [THE METHOD OF EXTENSIVE ABSTRACTION] [74]
  5. [SPACE AND MOTION] [99]
  6. [CONGRUENCE] [120]
  7. [OBJECTS] [143]
  8. [SUMMARY] [164]
  9. [THE ULTIMATE PHYSICAL CONCEPTS] [185]
  10. [NOTE: On the Greek Concept of a Point] [197]
  11. [NOTE: On Significance and Infinite Events] [197]
  12. [INDEX] [199]

THE CONCEPT OF NATURE


CHAPTER I
NATURE AND THOUGHT

The subject-matter of the Tarner lectures is defined by the founder to be ‘the Philosophy of the Sciences and the Relations or Want of Relations between the different Departments of Knowledge.’ It is fitting at the first lecture of this new foundation to dwell for a few moments on the intentions of the donor as expressed in this definition; and I do so the more willingly as I shall thereby be enabled to introduce the topics to which the present course is to be devoted.

We are justified, I think, in taking the second clause of the definition as in part explanatory of the earlier clause. What is the philosophy of the sciences? It is not a bad answer to say that it is the study of the relations between the different departments of knowledge. Then with admirable solicitude for the freedom of learning there is inserted in the definition after the word ‘relations’ the phrase ‘or want of relations.’ A disproof of relations between sciences would in itself constitute a philosophy of the sciences. But we could not dispense either with the earlier or the later clause. It is not every relation between sciences which enters into their philosophy. For example biology and physics are connected by the use of the microscope. Still, I may safely assert that a technical description of the uses of the microscope in biology is not part of the philosophy of the sciences. Again, you cannot abandon the later clause of the definition; namely that referring to the relations between the sciences, without abandoning the explicit reference to an ideal in the absence of which philosophy must languish from lack of intrinsic interest. That ideal is the attainment of some unifying concept which will set in assigned relationships within itself all that there is for knowledge, for feeling, and for emotion. That far off ideal is the motive power of philosophic research; and claims allegiance even as you expel it. The philosophic pluralist is a strict logician; the Hegelian thrives on contradictions by the help of his absolute; the Mohammedan divine bows before the creative will of Allah; and the pragmatist will swallow anything so long as it ‘works.’

The mention of these vast systems and of the age-long controversies from which they spring, warns us to concentrate. Our task is the simpler one of the philosophy of the sciences. Now a science has already a certain unity which is the very reason why that body of knowledge has been instinctively recognised as forming a science. The philosophy of a science is the endeavour to express explicitly those unifying characteristics which pervade that complex of thoughts and make it to be a science. The philosophy of the sciences—conceived as one subject—is the endeavour to exhibit all sciences as one science, or—in case of defeat—the disproof of such a possibility.

Again I will make a further simplification, and confine attention to the natural sciences, that is, to the sciences whose subject-matter is nature. By postulating a common subject-matter for this group of sciences a unifying philosophy of natural science has been thereby presupposed.