end CUNYB/Clarke December, :
Notes to Pages–
.Pascal (–), i..
.Ibid., i.–.
.These doubts began to emerge in the seventeenth century, and they were raised
even by well-known experimental scientists such as Robert Boyle, who supported
Pascal’s general theory but was worried that some of his experiments were only
thought experiments. For example, inHydrostatical Paradoxes(), Boyle ques-
tioned whether Pascal had done the experiment that required someone to sit fifteen
or twenty feet under water with a tube in contact with his thigh. Alexandre Koyr ́e
raised similar doubts whether glass makers in thes could have constructed
a glass tube thirty or forty feet long, with sufficiently strong sides to support a
column of water of the same length. See Boyle (–), v., and Koyr ́e
(),–.
.Pascal (–), i..
.Ibid.,–,.
.Ibid., i..
.Huygens to Descartes,November(v.–).
.Descartes to Huygens,December(v.).
.Descartes to Mersenne,December(v.).
.Descartes to Mersenne,December:‘Iadvised Mr. Pascal to experiment
if the mercury rises as much when one is high up on a mountain as when one is
atthe bottom, and I do not know if he has done the experiment yet’ (v.). Since
Mersenne had died in, Descartes wrote to Carcavi in Paris,June,
still asking whether the experiment had been done or not. ‘I hope you will not find
it unacceptable if I ask you to tell me about the results of an experiment which, I
am told, Mr. Pascal performed or had arranged to be performed on the Auvergne
mountains, to find out if mercury rises higher in a tube at the bottom of a mountain
and to what extent it rises more than when it is higher up the mountain. I should
be entitled to get the information from him rather than from you, because I was
the one who suggested, two years ago, that he do this experiment and that I had no
doubt about its success, although I had not done the experiment myself’ (v.).
.Descartes to Carcavi,August(v.).
.Carcavi to Descartes,September(v.). Pascal remained in Clermont
from Mayto November, whereas Descartes diedFebruary.
.This debate is discussed in detail in Shapin and Schaffer ().
.Brasset wrote to Brisacier,October, that Descartes had passed through The
Hague on his return journey to Egmond, where he would ‘practise his philosophy
during the winter’ (v.).
.Baillet (), ii..
.Huygens to Descartes,December(v.).
.This was sparked by a lecture she heard at Uppsala onSeptemberby
Johann Freinsheim (–), who had been professor of politics and rhetoric
atthe university and, in, became court librarian and historiographer to the
queen. He remained in Sweden until after Descartes’ death, and took up a post as
counsellor to Princess Elizabeth’s brother, the elector of Palatine, in. Chanut’s
letter was delayed in transit, and he wrote a second time, onNovember, to remind