Available Formats
Philosophical Letters, Abridged
By (Author) Margaret Cavendish
Edited by Deborah Boyle
Hackett Publishing Co, Inc
Hackett Publishing Co, Inc
21st October 2021
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Philosophy of science
192
Paperback
296
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
400g
"Margaret Cavendish (16231673) is a fascinating figure who is getting increasing attention by historians of philosophy these days, and for good reason. . . . She's an interesting advocate of a vitalist tradition emphasizing the inherent activity of matter, as well as its inherent perceptive faculties. She's also the perfect character to open students (and their teachers) up to a different seventeenth century, and a different cast of philosophical characters. This isan ideal book to use in the classroom.The Philosophical Letters(1664) gives us Cavendish's view of what was interesting and important in the philosophical world at that moment, a view of philosophy as it was at the time by an engaged participant.There are few documents like it in the history of philosophy. Deborah Boyle's Introduction provides a very accessible summary of Cavendish's natural philosophy, as well as good introductions to the other figures that Cavendish discusses in the book. Boyle's annotations are not extensive, but they are a great help in guiding the student toward an informed reading of the texts."
-Daniel Garber,Princeton University
"Boyles new edition of CavendishsPhilosophical Lettersmakes accessible in print this imagined correspondence between Cavendish and another woman about how Cavendishs view compares to those of Descartes, Hobbes, More, and Van Helmont. Boyles excellent Introduction sets the work in its context with respect to modes of writing and the intellectual environment in which she wrote, to Cavendishs philosophical system as it is developed across her writings, and to the views of those thinkers against which she positions herself.This edition is both scholarly and accessible. It will be valuable to those already familiar with Cavendish, and especially valuable to those just starting to incorporate Cavendish into their understanding of early modern philosophy.
Lisa Shapiro,Simon Fraser University
Boyle argues, and succeeds in making the case, that the Letters can be read on their own and stand as a single work (not a scattered series of thoughts).This will almost certainly become the standard volume of Cavendish'sLetters."
Stephen Barbone,San Diego State University
CavendishsPhilosophical Lettersare an essential yet perhaps unappreciated text for those exploring the seventeenth century scientific revolution.. . . Boyles introduction is magically concise where the letters are dense and dizzying, at one moment abstract and then turning toward unexpected metaphor or even cultural commentary. . . . This is a text where the introduction is not only necessary, but thankfully also elucidatory, making legible the concerns and variety of opinions that produced it.
This edition is valuable to both advanced scholars and students because the scholarlyapparati show what Cavendish is reading and responding to, a difficult task for those who hadpreviously depended on the facsimile edition of the 1664 folio.
"Boyles edition makes it possible to introduce this difficult text with crucial background and clarification, so that students in particular will see what she accurately calls 'a clearer picture of the shape of philosophy in the seventeenth century.'"
Andrew Black, Murray State University, inThe Seventeenth Century
Deborah Boyleis Professor of Philosophy, College of Charleston.