{"title":"“令人费解的恒星数量”——除了康德在NTH的Maupertuis招待会外,还有一块铜牌匾(1755年)","authors":"M. Walter","doi":"10.1515/kant-2023-2032","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract In his Treatise on the Figure of the Stars (1732), Maupertuis described bright and elliptic phenomena in the night sky. Based on Maupertuis’s account of these astronomical observations, Kant developed an explanation of his own in his early book on the Universal Natural History and Theory of the Heavens (1755). For him, these figures were seemingly stars, suns and even whole galaxies, subsystems orbiting a central body or a central sun, held by Kant to be the middle of the universe and a whole, an immense and immeasurable system of many uncountable solar systems. Since Kant did not read Maupertuis’s treatise, he derived his knowledge from a review of the Collected Essays of Maupertuis, in which the Treatise was published (1744). This review appeared in the Nova Acta Eruditorum in April 1745. Alongside this known source, another possible and complementary source on Maupertuis’s theory may have influenced Kant in his thinking: Gottsched’s philosophical textbook First Elements of all Philosophical Disciplines (5th edition, Theoretical part, Vol. I, 1748). The plate beneath the front matter of this book shows a picture of many solar systems. It depicts in detail, and according to Maupertuis’s account, comets signifying the center of different solar systems by the alignment of their tails, pointing in the opposite direction of the center. Gottsched’s book was known to Kant, who mentioned it in at least three lectures on logic. In addition, it was widely read in Königsberg’s intellectual and academic circles, since Gottsched was born not far from Königsberg and was a friend of Knutzen, Flottwell, Scheffner, the Imperial Countess of Keyserlingk, and others.","PeriodicalId":45952,"journal":{"name":"KANT-STUDIEN","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.9000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"„Ein unbegreiflich zahlreiches Sternenheer“ – Eine Kupfertafel, ergänzend zu Kants Maupertuis-Rezeption in der NTH (1755)\",\"authors\":\"M. Walter\",\"doi\":\"10.1515/kant-2023-2032\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Abstract In his Treatise on the Figure of the Stars (1732), Maupertuis described bright and elliptic phenomena in the night sky. 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The plate beneath the front matter of this book shows a picture of many solar systems. It depicts in detail, and according to Maupertuis’s account, comets signifying the center of different solar systems by the alignment of their tails, pointing in the opposite direction of the center. Gottsched’s book was known to Kant, who mentioned it in at least three lectures on logic. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
Maupertuis在他的《论星象》(Treatise on the Figure of the Stars, 1732)中描述了夜空中明亮的椭圆形现象。根据莫珀蒂对这些天文观测的描述,康德在他的早期著作《宇宙自然史和天堂理论》(1755年)中提出了自己的解释。对他来说,这些数字似乎是恒星、太阳甚至整个星系,围绕一个中心物体或中心太阳运行的子系统,康德认为这是宇宙的中心和一个整体,是一个由无数太阳系组成的巨大而不可测量的系统。由于康德没有读过莫佩尔蒂的论文,他从《莫佩尔蒂文集》(1744年出版)的书评中获得了他的知识。这篇综述发表在1745年4月的《新博学学报》上。除了这个已知的来源,莫珀蒂理论的另一个可能的补充来源可能影响了康德的思想:Gottsched的哲学教科书《所有哲学学科的第一要素》(第5版,理论部分,第一卷,1748年)。这本书封面下面的底片展示了许多太阳系的图片。根据Maupertuis的描述,它详细地描绘了彗星,通过它们尾巴的排列,指向与中心相反的方向,来表示不同太阳系的中心。康德知道戈特切德的书,他至少在三次逻辑学讲座中提到过这本书。此外,它在Königsberg的知识分子和学术界被广泛阅读,因为Gottsched出生在离Königsberg不远的地方,是Knutzen, Flottwell, Scheffner, Keyserlingk的帝国伯爵夫人和其他人的朋友。
„Ein unbegreiflich zahlreiches Sternenheer“ – Eine Kupfertafel, ergänzend zu Kants Maupertuis-Rezeption in der NTH (1755)
Abstract In his Treatise on the Figure of the Stars (1732), Maupertuis described bright and elliptic phenomena in the night sky. Based on Maupertuis’s account of these astronomical observations, Kant developed an explanation of his own in his early book on the Universal Natural History and Theory of the Heavens (1755). For him, these figures were seemingly stars, suns and even whole galaxies, subsystems orbiting a central body or a central sun, held by Kant to be the middle of the universe and a whole, an immense and immeasurable system of many uncountable solar systems. Since Kant did not read Maupertuis’s treatise, he derived his knowledge from a review of the Collected Essays of Maupertuis, in which the Treatise was published (1744). This review appeared in the Nova Acta Eruditorum in April 1745. Alongside this known source, another possible and complementary source on Maupertuis’s theory may have influenced Kant in his thinking: Gottsched’s philosophical textbook First Elements of all Philosophical Disciplines (5th edition, Theoretical part, Vol. I, 1748). The plate beneath the front matter of this book shows a picture of many solar systems. It depicts in detail, and according to Maupertuis’s account, comets signifying the center of different solar systems by the alignment of their tails, pointing in the opposite direction of the center. Gottsched’s book was known to Kant, who mentioned it in at least three lectures on logic. In addition, it was widely read in Königsberg’s intellectual and academic circles, since Gottsched was born not far from Königsberg and was a friend of Knutzen, Flottwell, Scheffner, the Imperial Countess of Keyserlingk, and others.
期刊介绍:
Publications in the Kant-Studien have a dual focus: firstly contributions to the interpretation, history and editorial questions of Kant"s philosophy, and secondly systematic debates on transcendental philosophy. In addition, there are investigations on Kant"s precursors and on the effects of his philosophy. The journal also contains a documentation section, in which the current state of research is indicated by means of a continually updated bibliography with reviews and references.