Special Issue of Synthese on The Uses and Abuses of Mathematics in Early Modern Philosophy

The latest special issue of Synthese on "The Uses and Abuses of Mathematics in Early Modern Philosophy", edited by Tamás Demeter and Eric Schliesser, has been published.

Contributions include:

1. Tamás Demeter and Eric Schliesser: The uses and abuses of mathematics in early modern philosophy: introduction
2. Mark Wilson: What I've learned from the early moderns
3. Alan Nelson: Descartes on the limited usefulness of mathematics
4. Mary Domski: Imagination, metaphysics, mathematics: Descartes's arguments for the Vortex Hypothesis
5. Alison Peterman: Empress vs. Spider-Man: Margaret Cavendish on pure and applied mathematics
6. Jonathan L. Shaheen: Part of nature and division in Margaret Cavendish's materialism
7. Gábor Áron Zemplén: Diagrammatic carriers and the acceptance of Newton's optical theory
8. Steffen Ducheyne: Constraining (mathematical) imagination by experience: Nieuwentijt and van Musschenbroek on the abuses of mathematics
9. 
Tamás Demeter: Hume on the social construction of mathematical knowledge
10. Charles T. Wolfe: Vital anti-mathematicism and the ontology of emerging life-sciences: from Mandeville to Diderot