Literature DB >> 19245107

Can matter mark the hours? Eighteenth-century vitalist materialism and functional properties.

Timo Kaitaro1.   

Abstract

Eighteenth-century Montpellerian vitalism and contemporaneous French "vitalist" materialism, exemplified by the medical and biological materialism of La Mettrie and Diderot, differ in some essential aspects from some later forms of vitalism that tended to postulate immaterial vital principles or forces. This article examines the arguments defending the existence of vital properties in living organisms presented in the context of eighteenth-century French materialism. These arguments had recourse to technological metaphors and analogies, mainly clockworks, in order to claim that just as machines can have functional properties which its parts do not possess (e.g., showing time), so living organisms can, as material entities, also have organic or vital properties which its material parts do not possess. Such arguments, with the help of a healthy dose of epistemological scepticism, tend to strike a balance between two positions concerning the ontology of life which we now tend to label "vitalism" and "emergentism." Although there is nothing inconsistent in viewing vital properties as emergent, some ambiguity results if one does not draw a clear distinction between properties and functions. The philosophical problems related to these ambiguities are revealed in Diderot's apparent hesitation concerning sentience as "a general property of matter or the product of organization."

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Year:  2008        PMID: 19245107     DOI: 10.1017/s0269889708001968

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sci Context        ISSN: 0269-8897            Impact factor:   0.425


  1 in total

1.  Vitalism in contemporary chiropractic: a help or a hinderance?

Authors:  J Keith Simpson; Kenneth J Young
Journal:  Chiropr Man Therap       Date:  2020-06-11
  1 in total

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