Development of the Concept of Space up to Newton
Definition
:1. Introduction
- First, the various conceptions of space in Greek antiquity are presented, comparing them with the intuitive idea of space;
- Then, the harmonization during the Renaissance of the notions of scholasticism and the rediscovered Ancient Greek sources are considered;
- Finally, the vision of absolute space in the modern era is presented, successfully overcoming the intuitive idea of space, made necessary for the development of a science of motion with cosmic significance, with Newton and Gassendi.
2. Relationalist and Substantivalist Approaches to Space
These two concepts of space may be contrasted as follows: (a) space as positional quality of the world of material objects; (b) space as container of all material objects. In case (a), space without a material object is inconceivable. In case (b), a material object can only be conceived as existing in space; space then appears as a reality which, in a certain sense, is superior to the material world. Both space concepts are free creations of the human imagination, means devised for easier comprehension of our sense experience [1] (Foreword by Albert Einstein).
If I am at the extremity of the heaven of the fixed stars, can I stretch outward my hand or staff? It is absurd to suppose that I could not; and if I can, what is outside must be either body or space. We may then in the same way get to the outside of that again, and so on; and if there is always a new place to which the staff may be held out, this clearly involves extension without limit. Now if it is a body, the assumption is proved; if it is space, given that space is what a body is or can be in [emphasis added] and that when we speak of eternal substances we must certainly say that it is what it is in potentiality, even so it will be demonstrated that infinite are body and space [17] (p. 267. Simplicius, Physica 467, 26. Translation into English in [4]).
3. Concepts of Space in Ancient Greece
3.1. Substantivalist Views of Space
3.1.1. The Atomists
Democritus thought the nature of the eternal things consisted of small substances infinite in number; these he placed in space, separate from them and infinite in extent [emphasis added]. He called space by the following names: the void, nothing, and the infinite, and each of the substances he calls thing, the solid, and what is. He thought that the substances were so small as to escape our senses. They have all kinds of forms and all kinds of shapes and differences of size. Now from these as elements the visible and perceptible bodies are genera. He says that they conflict with one another and travel about in the void because of their unlikeness [20] (pp. 70–71. Simplicius, commentary on De caelo).
3.1.2. The Stoics
- (a)
- Every body is necessarily present in something; but the thing that a body is present in, given that it is incorporeal and, as such, without physical contact, must be distinct from what occupies and fills it; we therefore speak of such a state of subsistence—namely, a capacity to receive body and be occupied as void [24] (p. 22).Cosmic order is not eternal but must eventually perish. Its destruction comes in a tremendous conflagration, called the ekpyrosis, in which everything is changed into fire. Then, after a period during which nothing but fire exists, the world order will again come into a new existence. The future cosmos will be identical to this one in every respect; there will be another Plato and another Socrates; Socrates will marry another Xanthippe, etc. The history of the cosmos will proceed in eternal cycles of destruction and restoration [25] (p. 185). Though it was not strictly necessary the expansion of the cosmos called for a void space outside it, it may suggest it.
- (b)
- The logical justification for the existence the void follows one of the definition derived from Aristotle, for which void is that “in which the presence of body though not actual is possible” [26] (I.9 279a). According to Aristotle logic a proposition is possible only if it becomes actual at some time. According to the Stoics this condition is instead not necessary; a proposition is possible if nothing external prevents it from being true. Consequently, the condition beyond the periphery of the cosmos satisfies the definition of void, even if body never comes to occupy it [25] (p. 106).
- (a)
- It is absolutely necessary that this void extend without limit in every direction from the cosmos, as we may learn from the following (principle): everything that is limited has its limit in something different in kind from it (This is the same argumentation of the atomist-Epicurean tradition, see [23] 1.958). To take an obvious example: in the whole cosmos air, because it is limited, ceases (to be air) at two bodies different in kind, aether and water. Similarly, the aether ceases at both the air and the void, the water at both the earth and the air, and the earth at the water. It is, then, necessary that if the void enclosing the cosmos be limited rather than unlimited, it ceases to be a void and is something different in kind. However, it is no different in kind from the void, and there is no point at which the void ceases that can be conceived of. Therefore, the void is unlimited [24] (pp. 29–30).
- (b)
- According to Chrysippus, just as non-being has no limit, there is no limit to non-being, of which non-being is the kind of thing that void is. In its own subsistence, it is then infinite [27] (p. 426).
3.2. Relationalist Approaches to Space
3.2.1. Plato and the Timaeus
In the same way that which is to receive perpetually and through its whole extent the resemblances of all eternal beings [space] ought to be devoid of any particular form. Wherefore, the mother and receptacle [emphasis added] of all created and visible and in any way sensible things, is not to be termed earth, or air, or fire, or water, or any of their compounds or any of the elements from which these are derived, but is an invisible and formless being which receives all things and in some mysterious way partakes of the intelligible, and is most incomprehensible [28] (49a).
3.2.2. Aristotle and the Place
Space, likewise, is a continuous quantity; for the parts of a solid occupy a certain space, and these have a common boundary; it follows that the parts of space also, which are occupied by the parts of the solid, have the same common boundary as the parts of the solid. Thus, not only time, but space also, is a continuous quantity, for its parts have a common boundary [30] (6.5a).
The existence of place is held to be obvious from the fact of mutual replacement. Where water now is, there in turn, when the water has gone out as from a vessel, air is present. When therefore another body occupies this same place, the place is thought to be different from all the bodies which come to be in it and replace one another. What now contains air formerly contained water, so that clearly the place or space [emphasis added] into which and out of which they passed was something different from both [31] (4.1.208b).
The void is thought to be place with nothing in it. The reason for this is that people take what exists to be body, and hold that while every body is in place, void is place in which there is no body, so that where there is no body, there must be void [31] (4.7.213b).
4. Concepts of Space in Middle Ages and Renaissance
The truth of matter, as it seems, is that the true place of a thing is the interval between the limits of that which surrounds […]. That it should be so it can be also shown from the consideration that place must be equal to the whole of its occupant as well as to [the sum] of its parts [emphasis added] [34] (pp. 195–199).
Since the void has been shown to be a magnitude, it has thus been shown that an incorporeal magnitude exists. However, this incorporeal magnitude outside the world cannot have a limit, for if it had a limit it would have to terminate either at a body or at another void. That it should terminate at a body, however, is impossible. It must therefore terminate at another void, and so it will go on to infinity. It has thus been shown that on their own premises an infinite incorporeal magnitude must exist [34] (p. 189).
Francesco Patrizi and Giordano Bruno
First space is a three dimensional being. It is something incorporeal having all the three dimensions of a body, though it is not a body. […]. Space therefore is substantial extension (extensio hypostatica), subsisting per se, inhering in nothing else. It is not quantity. And, if it be a quantity, it is not that of the categories, but prior to it, and its source and origin. Nor can it be called an accident, for it is not the attribute of any substance. […]. For all these reasons, therefore, it is very clear that Space is above all a substance, but not the “substance” of the category. […] What then is it, a body or an incorporeal substance? Neither, but a mean between the two […] Therefore it is an incorporeal body and a corporeal non-body [35] (f. 65r-v. Translation into English [36]).
Moreover, it is a plenum to the senses and in popular parlance, but according to reason, as I have shown, it is a vacuum, and its being a plenum does not pertain to its essence, but is rather accidental to it. For plentitude, of course, comes to it from the bodies, which are different from it in nature in such a way that the spaces which we spoke of before as essential attributes of bodies, are for the most part accidental to them, their own essence consisting in resistance [35] (f. 64v. Translation into English in [36]).
This difference, arising as it does from located bodies, is accidental to them, unless it should be proved that those parts of Space were so arranged from the beginning that the one holding the earth is incapable of holding the air, and the one holding the water is unable to hold the heaven, air, or earth, and that each part received bodies peculiar to itself [35] (f. 65v. Translation into English in [36]).
Carrying the same reasoning further, it is clear to anyone undertaking the study of natural things that the science of Space [geometry] must be acquired and taught before either natural science or that treating of the actions and passions of men. For the latter come after the activities of nature, and these in turn come after Space. Rightly did this saying appear over the entrance of the divine Plato’s school: “Let no one enter who is ignorant of geometry”. [35] (f. 68r. Translation into English in [36]).
In this way we say to be an infinite, that is, an immense aethereal region, in which there are innumerable and infinite bodies, […], this aether, is not only about these bodies, but still penetrates all of them, and is inherent in everything. We still say vacuum according to meaning, for which we would answer the question, where are the infinite aether and the worlds? [42] (vol. 2, Dialogue 2, p. 32. My translation).
It is therefore not necessary to seek whether in the external sky there are place, vacuum or time; because the general place is one, the immense space that we can freely call void; in which there are innumerable and infinite globes, such as this one in which we live and vegetate. We say such space infinite, because there is no reason, convenience, possibility, sense or nature that must make it finite: in it there are infinite worlds similar to this one, and not different in general from this; because there is neither reason nor defect of natural faculties, I say, as much passive power as active, for which, as there are in this space around us, likewise there are in all the other spaces whose by nature are not different from this one [48] (Dialogue 5, p. 93. My translation).
5. The Early Modern Science: Gassendi and Newton
The first is that there were immense spaces before God created the World, that these would continue to exist were He perchance to destroy the world; and that of these God has chosen for his own god pleasure the specific region in which to create the World […].
Secondly, that these spaces are entirely immobile. For it is not the case that If God were to move the World from its present location, that space would follow accordingly and move along with it […].
Thirdly, that spatial dimensions, without which these spaces would be endlessly open in length, width and depth, as they are immobile, are thus incorporeal, and so have no resistance, or can be penetrated by bodies, or, as it is even commonly said, can coexist with them [49] (Vol. 1, Syntagma philosophicum, Physica, Section 1, book 3, pp. 183a,b. Translation into English in [54]).
Absolute space, of its own nature without reference to anything external, always remains homogeneous and immovable. Relative space is any movable measure or dimension of this absolute space; such a measure or dimension is determined by our senses from the situation of the space with respect to bodies and is popularly used for immovable space [61] (Scholium to definitions; p. 6).
6. Conclusions
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Capecchi, D. Development of the Concept of Space up to Newton. Encyclopedia 2022, 2, 1528-1544. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia2030104
Capecchi D. Development of the Concept of Space up to Newton. Encyclopedia. 2022; 2(3):1528-1544. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia2030104
Chicago/Turabian StyleCapecchi, Danilo. 2022. "Development of the Concept of Space up to Newton" Encyclopedia 2, no. 3: 1528-1544. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia2030104
APA StyleCapecchi, D. (2022). Development of the Concept of Space up to Newton. Encyclopedia, 2(3), 1528-1544. https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia2030104