Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General editors’ preface
- Editor's preface
- General introduction
- 1 Thoughts on the true estimation of living forces and assessment of the demonstrations that Leibniz and other scholars of mechanics have made use of in this controversial subject, together with some prefatory considerations pertaining to the force of bodies in general (1746–1749)
- 2 Examination of the question whether the rotation of the Earth on its axis by which it brings about the alternation of day and night has undergone any change since its origin and how one can be certain of this, which [question] was set by the Royal Academy of Sciences in Berlin as the prize question for the current year (1754)
- 3 The question, whether the Earth is ageing, considered from a physical point of view (1754)
- 4 Universal natural history and theory of the heavens or essay on the constitution and the mechanical origin of the whole universe according to Newtonian principles (1755)
- 5 Succinct exposition of some meditations on fire (1755)
- 6 On the causes of earthquakes on the occasion of the calamity that befell the western countries of Europe towards the end of last year (1756)
- 7 History and natural description of the most noteworthy occurrences of the earthquake that struck a large part of the Earth at the end of the year 1755 (1756)
- 8 Continued observations on the earthquakes that have been experienced for some time (1756)
- 9 New notes to explain the theory of the winds, in which, at the same time, he invites attendance at his lectures (1756)
- 10 Plan and announcement of a series of lectures on physical geography with an appendix containing a brief consideration of the question: Whether the West winds in our regions are moist because they travel over a great sea (1757)
- 11 New doctrine of motion and rest and the conclusions associated with it in the fundamental principles of natural science while at the same time his lectures for this half-year are announced (1758)
- 12 Review of Silberschlag's work: Theory of the fireball that appeared on 23 July 1762 (1764)
- 13 Notice of Lambert's correspondence (1782)
- 14 On the volcanoes on the Moon (1785)
- 15 Something concerning the influence of the Moon on the weather (1794)
- 16 Physical geography (1802)
- Appendix I Kant's units of measurement
- Appendix II Astronomical data for the solar system given by Kant (with conversions to English miles) and modern values for comparison
- Notes
- Glossary
- Index of names
- Index of places
- Index of subjects
14 - On the volcanoes on the Moon (1785)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- General editors’ preface
- Editor's preface
- General introduction
- 1 Thoughts on the true estimation of living forces and assessment of the demonstrations that Leibniz and other scholars of mechanics have made use of in this controversial subject, together with some prefatory considerations pertaining to the force of bodies in general (1746–1749)
- 2 Examination of the question whether the rotation of the Earth on its axis by which it brings about the alternation of day and night has undergone any change since its origin and how one can be certain of this, which [question] was set by the Royal Academy of Sciences in Berlin as the prize question for the current year (1754)
- 3 The question, whether the Earth is ageing, considered from a physical point of view (1754)
- 4 Universal natural history and theory of the heavens or essay on the constitution and the mechanical origin of the whole universe according to Newtonian principles (1755)
- 5 Succinct exposition of some meditations on fire (1755)
- 6 On the causes of earthquakes on the occasion of the calamity that befell the western countries of Europe towards the end of last year (1756)
- 7 History and natural description of the most noteworthy occurrences of the earthquake that struck a large part of the Earth at the end of the year 1755 (1756)
- 8 Continued observations on the earthquakes that have been experienced for some time (1756)
- 9 New notes to explain the theory of the winds, in which, at the same time, he invites attendance at his lectures (1756)
- 10 Plan and announcement of a series of lectures on physical geography with an appendix containing a brief consideration of the question: Whether the West winds in our regions are moist because they travel over a great sea (1757)
- 11 New doctrine of motion and rest and the conclusions associated with it in the fundamental principles of natural science while at the same time his lectures for this half-year are announced (1758)
- 12 Review of Silberschlag's work: Theory of the fireball that appeared on 23 July 1762 (1764)
- 13 Notice of Lambert's correspondence (1782)
- 14 On the volcanoes on the Moon (1785)
- 15 Something concerning the influence of the Moon on the weather (1794)
- 16 Physical geography (1802)
- Appendix I Kant's units of measurement
- Appendix II Astronomical data for the solar system given by Kant (with conversions to English miles) and modern values for comparison
- Notes
- Glossary
- Index of names
- Index of places
- Index of subjects
Summary
EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION
Kant published On the Volcanoes on the Moon in the March 1785 issue of the Berlinische Monatsschrift, which was edited by F. Gedike and J. E. Biester. The occasion for Kant's essay was Aepinus's claim that Herschel's ‘discovery’ of volcanic activity on the Moon supported his view that volcanic activity could be invoked to explain the irregularities on its surface. Kant wants to reject this explanation in favour of the explanation of the formation of the Moon he had proffered earlier, in his Universal Natural History and Theory of the Heavens (Chapter 4, this volume). That is, Kant wants to maintain that the Moon, like the Earth and the other planets in the solar system, was formed from chaotic, gaseous material that gradually lost heat on the surface and solidified, albeit with irregular crevices. Therefore, the uneven geographical features of the Moon that could be perceived from Earth were due not to volcanic eruptions, but rather to other kinds of eruptions that occurred as the gaseous materials that constitute the mass of the Earth cooled and gave off heat. The primary novelty of Kant's explanation here, compared to what he offered thirty years earlier, is his adoption of Crawford's theory of heat.
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- Kant: Natural Science , pp. 418 - 425Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2012
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