R. J. Boscovich’s Achievement in Natural Philosophy for the Development of Modern Particle Physics. On the Occasion of the 300th Anniversary of the Cover Image

Boškovićevo djelo u filozofiji prirode u razvoju moderne fizike čestica. O 300-toj obljetnici Boškovićevog rođenja
R. J. Boscovich’s Achievement in Natural Philosophy for the Development of Modern Particle Physics. On the Occasion of the 300th Anniversary of the

Author(s): Tomislav Petković, ml., Tomislav Petković
Subject(s): Philosophy
Published by: Hrvatsko Filozofsko Društvo
Keywords: Roger Joseph Boscovich; philosophy of nature; particle physics; points; dynamism; tree of forces; Richard P. Feynman; partons; apperception; unification

Summary/Abstract: R. J. Boscovich (1711–1787) was the first in history of philosophy to combine Newton, Descartes, Spinoza, and Leibniz’s method of thought in the middle of the 18th century before the Maxwell-Einstein era of physics, synthesising them into his new method of thought on Nature. His method may be expressed by the epistemological formula more geometrico sive mathematico – more rationali – more empirico – more theologico, as the four fundaments of science, philosophy and religion unified by Boscovich’s thought. Boscovich’s A Theory of Natural Philosophy on points-atoms as the ultimate building-blocks of matter is based on a single law of forces existing in nature. The Theory itself has been fundamental for the modern scientific picture of the world and the basic concepts of nature to date, due to the structure of nature and the phenomenology of particles it brings. Boscovich is the father of the original pictorial representation of the atom (dynamism hypothesis), important both for the modern concept of subatomic particles (from electrons, protons and neutrons to quarks) of the 20th century, and the predicted and expected new particles and objects of the 21st century. Accordingly, N. Bohr, W. Heisenberg and L. Lederman did indeed praise Boscovich’s Theory. However, it was Richard P. Feynman who showed keen interest in Boscovich’s atomism, having accepted it as his metaphysical credo 200 years later. Using an effective epistemic approach, the paper links Boscovich’s ingenious apperception of points and particles with Feynman more than two centuries later and his ingenious and precise parton-quark physics of the Standard Model. Boscovich’s theory was launched brilliantly on a new path by the discovery of the atomic nucleus and the nuclear model of the atom in 1911 in Manchester. The scientific-philosophical compatibility of the Dubrovnik-born thinker with E. Rutherford was put into the limelight by Rutherford’s paper from 1911 by way of three statements: the atomic nucleus as Boscovich’s point – a point source of Coulomb force, an α particle is also a point, and the impact parameter in an encounter between an α particle and a gold nucleus has the character of distance resembling the one in Boscovich’s curve. In a modern epistemic analysis, going beyond an orthodox scientific approach, the paper shows that the most interesting legacy of Boscovich’s tree of repulsion and attraction lies chiefly in the tree-level picture of nuclear forces in contemporary low-energy physics.

  • Issue Year: 32/2012
  • Issue No: 02/126
  • Page Count: 18
  • Language: Croatian