natural philosophy
Natural philosophy (noun): 1. The historical term for the systematic study of nature and the physical universe, encompassing the subjects now known as physics, astronomy, chemistry, and aspects of biology and geology. It is the precursor to modern science, focusing on fundamental principles, matter, energy, and their interactions through observation and reason.
- Natural philosophy is used to refer to the pre-modern, holistic study of the natural world before the specialization into distinct scientific disciplines.
- It is primarily a historical or academic term when discussing the development of scientific thought.
- Isaac Newton's seminal work was titled "" (Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy).
- Before the 19th century, a scientist was often called a "natural philosopher."
- The transition from natural philosophy to modern physics involved a greater emphasis on mathematical rigor and experimental method.
- "The methods of natural philosophy": Refers to the classical approach combining metaphysical reasoning with empirical observation.
- Used in contrast to moral philosophy (ethics) and metaphysics, which were other major branches of philosophical inquiry.
- Natural philosopher (noun): A practitioner of natural philosophy; an archaic term for a scientist.
- Physicist (noun): A modern scientist specializing in physics, the field that most directly evolved from core areas of natural philosophy.
- Natural science (noun): The modern collective term for sciences dealing with the physical world (e.g., physics, chemistry, biology), essentially the successor to natural philosophy.
- Physics (in its broad, historical sense)
- Physical science (historical context)
- Science of nature
While natural philosophy is the direct historical antecedent of modern physics, the terms are not perfectly interchangeable in contemporary usage. * Natural philosophy implies a broader, more philosophical framework that included questions about the ultimate causes and nature of the universe. * Physics today is a more specialized, mathematically precise discipline focused specifically on matter, energy, force, and motion.
- the science of matter and energy and their interactions
- his favorite subject was physics