In search for nothing
remarks on the arguments for and against the vacuum
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0101-31731993000100001Keywords:
Space, Vacuum, Ether, A priori knowledge, Observables, EpistemologyAbstract
This paper discusses the possibility of an absolute vacuum - a space without any substance. The motivation of this study is the contrast between most philosophers, up to Descartes, who stated that a vacuum was impossible, and the 17th century change of outlook, when the possibility and effective existence of the vacuum was accepted after the experiments ofTorricelli and Pascal. This article attempts to show that, contrary to the received opinion, the acceptance of an ether is preferable to the acceptance of a vacuum for several reasons. First: it is impossible to provide an empirical proof of the non-existence of the ether; second, an absolute vacuum is unthinkable; third, the ether concept is useful for the understanding of physical phaenomena; and fourth, the hypothesis of an ether in apparently void spaces is useful for the future development of science. The paper also endeavours to show that no recent advance of science has changed those conclusions and that no future development can change them.
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Copyright (c) 1993 TRANS/FORM/AÇÃO: Revista de Filosofia
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