Squaring the Circle: The War between Hobbes and Wallis (Science and Its Conceptual Foundations series)

by Douglas M. Jesseph

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In 1655, the philosopher Thomas Hobbes claimed he had solved the centuries-old problem of "squaring of the circle" (constructing a square equal in area to a given circle). With a scathing rebuttal to Hobbes's claims, the mathematician John Wallis began one of the longest and most intense intellectual disputes of all time. Squaring the Circle is a detailed account of this controversy, from the core mathematics to the broader philosophical, political, and religious issues at stake. Hobbes show more believed that by recasting geometry in a materialist mold, he could solve any geometric problem and thereby demonstrate the power of his materialist metaphysics. Wallis, a prominent Presbyterian divine as well as an eminent mathematician, refuted Hobbes's geometry as a means of discrediting his philosophy, which Wallis saw as a dangerous mix of atheism and pernicious political theory. Hobbes and Wallis's "battle of the books" illuminates the intimate relationship between science and crucial seventeenth-century debates over the limits of sovereign power and the existence of God. show less

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Genres
Nonfiction, History, Science & Nature, Philosophy
DDC/MDS
510.942Natural sciences & mathematicsMathematicsMathematics / GraphsBiography And HistoryEurope
LCC
QA29 .H58 .J47ScienceMathematicsMathematicsGeneral
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Paper
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2