Dear all,

The new CamPoS (Cambridge Philosophy of Science) seminar series continues 
this Wednesday, 17 October, 1-2:30pm in HPS Seminar Room 2. Emily Thomas, 
PhD student in the Faculty of Philosophy, will give a talk entitled 
"Catharine Cockburn on substantival space: a 'new' 18th-century solution". 
The abstract is below.

All are very welcome, and we hope to see many of you there.

Best wishes,
Vashka

--

Substantivalism is the thesis that space (or spacetime) is a concrete,
irreducible entity. Early modern substantivalists face a problem: as space
is often held to possess properties that are traditionally only attributed
to God - including eternality, infinity and immutability - early moderns
who argue that space is a substance run the risk of 'polytheistic
blasphemy', the blasphemy of positing a second God. Early moderns generally
take one of two strategies to avoid this: they either claim like Descartes
that space is a substance but deny that it has divine properties, or they
claim like Newton that space has divine properties but deny that it is a
substance. In the early eighteenth century, the English philosopher
Catharine Cockburn puts forward a 'new' account of substantival space
inspired by a neo-Platonic thesis known as the Great Chain of Being. This
paper examines that account, and the novel third solution it offers.

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