The philosophy of Gassendi by George Sidney Brett

"The philosophy of Gassendi" by George Sidney Brett is a scholarly study of philosophy written in the early 20th century. It reassesses Pierre Gassendi’s system—logic, physics, and ethics—within the lineage of ancient atomism and its early modern revival, aiming to correct his neglect and clarify his influence. The work synthesizes Gassendi’s vast Syntagma and related writings, situating him among Epicurus, Democritus, Aristotle, and Descartes to show his empirical, pluralist alternative to dominant idealisms. The opening of the book sets out Brett’s purpose: to condense Gassendi’s sprawling scholarship into a clear, reliable account and to restore his place in the history of philosophy, favoring breadth, concreteness, and empirical restraint over Cartesian abstraction. It provides a bibliography and a detailed catalogue of Gassendi’s works, then traces the background from Leucippus and Democritus to Epicurus—marking shifts from Eleatic roots to atomist pluralism, from Democritean mechanics to Epicurean canons, swerve, material psychology, and ethics-first method. Brett sketches the early modern context of science challenging dogma, outlines Gassendi’s life and character, and positions him as a moderate critic of Aristotelianism and Descartes who builds a comprehensive, experience-based system. In Part I (Logic), the summary highlights Epicurean-inspired criteria—sensation, anticipations, and feelings—asserting sense as the starting point, opinions testable by experience, and inference from signs as the path from the known to the occult, while steering a middle course between scepticism and dogmatism and retaining the syllogism and method. At the start of Part II (Physics), nature is treated concretely as the totality of things, with cautious agnosticism about multiple worlds, a rejection of a world-soul, and a guarded preference for Tycho’s astronomy (out of deference to scripture) despite sympathy with Copernicus. Creation is affirmed against an eternal world, and the discussion of time and space begins by treating space as a real, independent, incorporeal, continuous quantity—akin to a substance, possibly infinite—while acknowledging the puzzles this view raises. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

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Author Brett, George Sidney, 1879-1944
LoC No. 09012892
Title The philosophy of Gassendi
Original Publication London: Macmillan and Co. Limited, 1908.
Credits The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Language English
LoC Class B: Philosophy, Psychology, Religion
Subject Gassendi, Pierre, 1592-1655
Category Text
EBook-No. 77134
Release Date
Copyright Status Public domain in the USA.
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