Systematizers: Reason, Machines, and the Rise of Systematic Thought in Early Modern Philosophy, 1517–1790
Book manuscript.
Philosophers tend to treat the drive towards systematic thought as a timeless demand of rationality. But there is a counter-tradition warning that this “will to a system” can function as a substitute for moral character, an aesthetic fetish, or a dangerous universalization machine. In response to these critics of systematization, this book offers a genealogical reconstruction of the ideal of cognitive systematicity. It asks not just how thought became systematic, but why, charting the development of the ideal of systematicity from its post-Reformation roots to the threshold of German Idealism, or from Keckermann to Kant.
Moving beyond the standard historical explanation, which assumes that systems were built merely to mirror the metaphysical blueprint of a rationally designed universe, the book argues that early modern thinkers introduced the demand for cognitive systematization in an effort to emulate the virtues of well-designed machines. By modeling cognitive on mechanical virtues, these systematizers transferred the authority of knowledge from the internal, personal dispositions (the habitus) of individual thinkers into freestanding, externalized architectures. Through historical case studies ranging from Ramus and Keckermann through Descartes, Hobbes, Spinoza, and Cavendish through Leibniz, Newton, and Du Châtelet to Condillac, Diderot, D’Alembert, Rousseau, and Kant, the book uncovers three distinct practical rationales that drive this mechanization of thought: the pedagogical rationale, according to which systematization makes knowledge transmissible; the epistemological rationale, according to which systematization makes thought self-certifying and self-correcting; and the political rationale, according to which systematization makes public authority accountable and fair.
While these rationales vindicate the systematic impulse as a practical necessity rather than an arbitrary quirk, the genealogy also traces a counter-tradition, from Cavendish’s vitalism through Diderot’s polyphony to Hegelian reactions to Kant, that exposes the costs of emulating the virtues of machines. Pushed beyond its proper remit, cognitive systematization risks becoming dogmatic, betraying the rattle of machinery rather than the resonant harmony of reason. The book thus provides a delimiting framework for understanding both the indispensable value of systematizing thought and the importance of recognizing its limits.
systematicity, genealogy, early modern philosophy, conceptual needs, rationalism, authority