Main content
Wireless Philosophy
Course: Wireless Philosophy > Unit 4
Lesson 2: Early modern- Early Modern: Locke on Personal Identity, Part 1
- Early Modern: Locke on Personal Identity, Part 2
- Early Modern: Locke on Personal Identity, Part 3
- Early Modern: Descartes' Cogito Argument
- Early Modern: Émilie du Châtelet, Part 1
- Early Modern: Émilie du Châtelet, Part 2
- Early Modern: Margaret Cavendish, Part 1
- Early Modern: Margaret Cavendish, Part 2
© 2023 Khan AcademyTerms of usePrivacy PolicyCookie Notice
Early Modern: Margaret Cavendish, Part 1
In the first of two videos, Adela Deanova introduces Margaret Cavendish, an early modern English philosopher, and discusses the background to her critique of experimental philosophy. This video is a part of a series of videos coming from Project Vox (Duke), a project recovering the lost voices of women philosophers.
Speaker: Adela Deanova, Duke University
.
Speaker: Adela Deanova, Duke University
.
Want to join the conversation?
- What was I supposed to learn from this video?(5 votes)
Video transcript
(intro music) This is Adela Deanova in
the philosophy department at Duke University, where
we are leading Project Vox. This is part one of Margaret Cavendish, an English philosopher who worked in the
middle of the seventeenth century. Cavendish was a very popular writer, famous in her day for
her witty plays, poetry, letters, orations, fiction,
and, last but not least, her husband's biography, which was so popular that it was
republished several times after her death. As a wealthy aristocrat, Cavendish could afford to lead a very lavish lifestyle, which she actively and successfully used to promote her public image as a writer. In fact, she became so notorious
for her eccentric manners and her unashamed seeking of fame that
she became known affectionately as "The Mad Madge." As a result, scholars in her own time,
and for many generations thereafter, saw her primarily as an
entertaining literary writer, rather than as a serious philosopher. Cavendish, however, was also an astute
natural philosopher in her own right. Despite her lack of any formal education in philosophy
or academic languages, she was determined to learn about the
latest scientific developments and to engage in philosophical debates. In her works, Cavendish discusses
Cartesian dualism, the materialism of Thomas Hobbes, and
mechanist views of nature and causation. Cavendish's interest in natural
philosophy was probably fostered early in her life by her brother John, a scholar and one of the founding
fathers of the Royal Society. It blossomed, however, with the loving and unwavering support her
husband, William Cavendish, who later became the Duke of Newcastle and one of the richest men in England. also famous for his work
on training horses. Margaret met William in France, where she accompanied
the Queen Henrietta Maria into exile as Lady-in-Waiting. In 1642, a destructive civil war had
erupted in England, and so the royal court, as well as many aristocrats
and scholars loyal to the Crown, escaped to France and the Netherlands, where they lived until the
royal restoration in 1660. Cavendish's marriage match
proved to be intellectually, as well as socially, important for her. Her well-established and
influential husband William, thirty years her senior, was an amateur
scholar, much interested in philosophy. The famous philosopher Thomas Hobbes was in fact his personal tutor. William introduced Margaret to an intellectual circle of
both French scholars and English scholars in exile, which
soon became known as the Newcastle, or the Cavendish, circle. The circle included the "who is
who" of philosophy of the day. English philosophers such
as Thomas Hobbes, Kenelm Digby, and Walter Charlton, and French philosophers
such as Rene Descartes, Pierre Gassendi, and Marin Mersene. The new mechanical philosophy
discussed by these philosophers left a deep impression upon Cavendish, inspiring her to pursue natural philosophy. By the time she returned with
her husband to England in 1660, she already wrote five works
in natural philosophy. In the next video, we will look
at Cavendish's development as a natural philosopher in restoration
England in the 1660s. Subtitles by the Amara.org community