Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 January 2023
Our deepest commitments about history are reflected in how we break it down into periods. (Cf. Galison 1988) By drawing a break at a certain point we emphasize the novelty and importance of a new development. It is also how we contain and dismiss certain work as no longer relevant. Thus, in the history of physics we break the story with Newton, both to emphasize his roles in bringing previous developments to a close and in initiating new lines of work, and also to suggest that the ongoing practice of physics thereafter can appropriately in large measure ignore what preceeds Newton. Periodizing history is essential to understanding it, including when we periodize the work of a given writer. In philosophy, anyone who did not see a gulf between Kant’s early work and his critical philosophy or between Wittgenstein’s Tractatus and his Philosophical Investigations would be missing something enormously important.
I would like to thank colleagues Jane Maienschein and Michael White and fellow symposiasts Burton Dreben and Michael Friedman for comments on an earlier version of this paper. I would also like to thank the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences of Arizona State University for a research travel grant.