Infinite Regress: Wolff’s Cosmology and the Background of Kant’s Antinomies

Kant Studien 112 (2):239-264 (2021)
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Abstract

Wolff’s relation to Leibniz and Kant’s relation to both are notoriously vexed questions. First, this paper argues that Wolff’s most serious departure from Leibniz consists in his (so far overlooked) rejection of the latter’s infinitism. Second, it contends that the controversies that surrounded Wolff’s early acceptance of infinite causal regress and prompted his conversion to finitism played a prominent role in shaping the theses of Kant’s Antinomies. Whereas Leibniz and the early Wolff considered infinite regress to provide support for the contingency of the world and the existence of God, Wolff’s enemies condemned it as Spinozistic. After Wolff, the claim that an infinite chain of causes is impossible became the standard view among both Wolffian and anti-Wolffian metaphysicians.

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Citations of this work

Christian Wolff.Matt Hettche & Corey W. Dyck - 2019 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
From the Boundary of the World to the Boundary of Reason: The First Antinomy and the Development of Kant’s Critical Philosophy.Stephen Howard - 2022 - Hopos: The Journal of the International Society for the History of Philosophy of Science 12 (1):225-241.

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References found in this work

La critique wolffienne du Spinozisme.Jean École - 1983 - Archives de Philosophie 46 (4):553.

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