Mechanical philosophy In the early 17th century, natural philosophers began to develop new ways to understand nature gradually replacing
Aristotelianism, which had been for centuries the dominant scientific theory, during the process known as the
Scientific Revolution. Various European philosophers adopted what came to be known as mechanical philosophy sometime between around 1610 to 1650, which described the universe and its contents as a kind of large-scale mechanism, a philosophy that explained the universe is made with
matter and
motion. This mechanical philosophy was based on
Epicureanism, and the work of
Leucippus and his pupil
Democritus and their
atomism, in which everything in the universe, including a person's body, mind, soul and even thoughts, was made of
atoms; very small particles of moving matter. During the early part of the 17th century, the atomistic portion of mechanical philosophy was largely developed by Gassendi,
René Descartes and other atomists.
Pierre Gassendi's atomist matter theory The core of
Pierre Gassendi's philosophy is his
atomist matter theory. In his work,
Syntagma Philosophicum, ("Philosophical Treatise"), published posthumously in 1658, Gassendi tried to explain aspects of matter and natural phenomena of the world in terms of atoms and
the void. He took Epicurean atomism and modified it to be compatible with Christian theology, by suggesting God created a finite number of indivisible and moving atoms, and has a continuing
divine relationship to creation (of matter). Corpuscular theories, or
corpuscularianism, are similar to the theories of atomism, except that in atomism the atoms were supposed to be indivisible, whereas corpuscles could in principle be divided. Corpuscles are single, infinitesimally small, particles that have shape, size, color, and other physical properties that alter their functions and effects in phenomena in the mechanical and biological sciences. This later led to the modern idea that compounds have secondary properties different from the elements of those compounds. Gassendi asserts that corpuscles are particles that carry other substances and are of different types. These corpuscles are also emissions from various sources such as solar entities, animals, or plants.
Robert Boyle was a strong proponent of corpuscularianism and used the theory to exemplify the differences between a vacuum and a
plenum, by which he aimed to further support his mechanical philosophy and overall atomist theory. ==Newtonian theory of light==