Cavendish

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A01=David Cunning
Author_David Cunning
Blazing World
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Category=QD
Category=QDH
Cavendish's Argument
Cavendish's View
Cavendish’s Argument
Cavendish’s View
compatibilism
Divers Sorts
dualism
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eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
External World Skepticism
history of science
Hobbes
Hume
Imaginary Fancies
Imagistic Ideas
Imagistic Picture
Immaterial Entities
Immaterial Minds
Immaterial Souls
Immaterial Spirits
Incorporeal Motion
Innate Matter
intelligent design
Lady Contemplation
LADY VICTORIA
Libertarian Freedom
Margaret Cavendish
materialism
Mind Body Interaction
Non-human Bodies
Rational Matter
Self-moving Matter
seventeenth century philosophy
Sociable Letters
Spinoza
Ubiquitous Knowledge
Van Helmont
Wise Monarchs

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367138516
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Jan 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Margaret Cavendish (1623 - 1673) was a philosopher, poet, scientist, novelist, and playwright of the seventeenth century. Her work is important for a number of reasons. It presents an early and compelling version of the naturalism that is found in current-day philosophy; it offers important insights that bear on recent discussions of the nature and characteristics of intelligence and the question of whether or not the bodies that surround us are intelligent or have an intelligent cause; it anticipates some of the central views and arguments that are more commonly associated with figures like Thomas Hobbes and David Hume.

This is the first full account of Cavendish’s philosophy and covers the whole span of her work. David Cunning begins with an overview of Cavendish’s life and work before assessing her contribution to a wide range of philosophical subjects, including her arguments concerning materialism, experimentation, the existence of God, social and political philosophy and free will and compatibilism.

Setting Cavendish in both historical and philosophical context, he argues that like Spinoza she builds on central tenets of Descartes’ philosophy and develops them in a direction that Descartes himself would avoid. She defends a plenum metaphysics according to which all individuals are causally interdependent, and according to which the physical universe is a larger individual that constitutes all of reality.

Cavendish is essential reading for students of seventeenth-century philosophy, early modern philosophy and seventeenth-century literature.

David Cunning is Associate Professor and Chair of Philosophy at the University of Iowa, USA. He is the author of Argument and Persuasion in Descartes’ Meditations (2010), and Everyday Examples: An Introduction to Philosophy (2014), and editor of The Cambridge Companion to Descartes’ Meditations (2014).

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