Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1160481 Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 2015 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•In 1814 Laplace stated what is today known as the first formulation of determinism.•But 56 years earlier Roger Boscovich also formulated the principle of determinism.•There is a striking general similarity between Laplace's and Boscovich's formulations.•But there are also certain important differences between the two formulations.•Boscovich's determinism is more precise, complete and comprehensive than Laplace's.

In this paper, I compare Pierre-Simon Laplace's celebrated formulation of the principle of determinism in his 1814 Essai philosophique sur les probabilités with the formulation of the same principle offered by Roger Joseph Boscovich in his Theoria philosophiae naturalis, published 56 years earlier. This comparison discloses a striking general similarity between the two formulations of determinism as well as certain important differences. Regarding their similarities, both Boscovich's and Laplace's conceptions of determinism involve two mutually interdependent components—ontological and epistemic—and they are both intimately linked with the principles of causality and continuity. Regarding their differences, however, Boscovich's formulation of the principle of determinism turns out not only to be temporally prior to Laplace's but also—being founded on fewer metaphysical principles and more rooted in and elaborated by physical assumptions—to be more precise, complete and comprehensive than Laplace's somewhat parenthetical statement of the doctrine. A detailed analysis of these similarities and differences, so far missing in the literature on the history and philosophy of the concept of determinism, is the main goal of the present paper.

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