Andrew Baxter
{{Short description|Scottish metaphysician}}
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{{Use British English|date=December 2017}}
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Andrew Baxter (1686/1687, Aberdeen{{snd}}23 April 1750, Whittingehame, East Lothian) was a Scottish metaphysician.{{Citation | last=Stewart | first= M. A. | contribution=Baxter, Andrew | editor-last=Haakonssen | editor-first=Knud | title=The Cambridge History of Eighteenth-Century Philosophy | publisher=Cambridge University Press | volume=2 | pages=1145–46}}
Life
Baxter was educated at King's College, University of Aberdeen. He maintained himself by acting as tutor to noblemen's sons. From 1741 to 1747 he lived with Lord Blantyre and Mr Hay of Drummelzier at Utrecht, and made excursions in Flanders, France and the Holy Roman Empire. Returning to Scotland, he lived at Whittingehame, near Edinburgh, until his death in 1750. At Spa he had met John Wilkes, then twenty years old, and formed a lasting friendship with him.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911}}
Writings
Baxter's chief work, An Inquiry into the Nature of the Human Soul (editions 1733, 1737 and 1745; with appendix added in 1750 in answer to an attack in Maclaurin's Account of Sir I. Newton's Philosophical Discoveries, and dedication to John Wilkes), examines the properties of matter. It described the one essential property of matter as its inactivity, vis inertiae (accepted later by Monboddo). All movement in matter is, therefore, caused by some immaterial force, namely, God. But the movements of the body are not analogous to the movements of matter; they are caused by a special immaterial force, the soul. The soul, as being immaterial, is immortal, and its consciousness does not depend upon its connection with the body. He claimed the argument was supported by an analysis of the phenomena of dreams, which are ascribed to direct spiritual influences. Lastly Baxter attempted to prove that matter is finite.{{sfn|Chisholm|1911}}
Baxter's Inquiry met rather different reactions. E.g. it was criticized by Benjamin Franklin in a letter which pointed on Baxter's lack of understand in mechanics,Benjamin Franklin [https://books.google.com/books?id=TdNOAAAAcAAJ&pg=PA479 On the Vis Inertiae in Matter: In a Letter to Mr. Baxter] in Political, Miscellaneous, and Philosophical Pieces, London: J. Johnson, 1779, pp. 479-486 (accessed 15 November 2017) yet left a lasting impression on Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who said, 'I should not wonder if I found that Andrew had thought more on the subject of Dreams than any other of our Psychologists, Scotch or English'.[https://www.bl.uk/collection-items/an-enquiry-into-the-nature-of-the-human-soul An enquiry into the nature of the human soul] British Library: Collection items (accessed 15 November 2017)
His work is an attack on John Toland's Letters to Serena (1704), which argued that motion is essential to matter, and on Locke and Berkeley. His criticism of Berkeley (in the second volume) is, however, based on the common misinterpretation of his theory. Sir Leslie Stephen described him as a curious example of "the effects of an exploded metaphysics on a feeble though ingenious intellect".{{sfn|Chisholm|1911}}
Baxter's ideas on dreams were contested by Thomas Branch in his Thoughts on Dreaming (1738).{{cite web |url=http://sydney.edu.au/science/hps/early_modern_science/publications_and_preprints/Sutton_carelessness_and_inattention.pdf |title=Carelessness and Inattention: mind-wandering and the physiology of fantasy from Locke to Hume |author= John Sutton|access-date=8 December 2011}}
Works
- Some Reflections on a late Pamphlet called, The State of the Moral World Considered, 1732
- An enquiry into the nature of the human soul; wherein the immateriality of the soul is evinced from the principles of reason and philosophy, 1733
- Matho; or, The cosmotheoria puerilis, 1740
Notes
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References
- {{EB1911|wstitle=Baxter, Andrew|volume=3|page=551}}
- {{cite DNB|wstitle=Baxter, Andrew|first=Leslie|last=Stephen|volume=3}}
- {{cite ODNB|first=Paul|last=Wood|title=Baxter, Andrew (1686/7–1750)|id=1728}}
Further reading
- {{Eminent Scotsmen|Baxter, Andrew|1|163-65}}
External links
- Andrew Baxter [https://archive.org/details/enquiryintonatur00baxtuoft An enquiry into the nature of the human soul], Vol. 1, 1745 (3rd ed.), Internet Archive
- Andrew Baxter [https://archive.org/details/enquiryintonatur02baxtuoft An enquiry into the nature of the human soul], Vol. 2, 1745 (3rd ed.), Internet Archive
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Category:18th-century Scottish philosophers