"If we conceive all the changes in the physical world as reducible to the motion of atoms, motions generated by means of the fixed nuclear forces of those atoms, the whole of the world could thus be known by means of the natural sciences"
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Dilthey is ventriloquizing a triumphalist mood he thinks modernity can’t stop indulging: the dream that reality, once translated into atomic motion and “fixed nuclear forces,” becomes fully legible to science. The sentence is built like a trap. It starts with an apparently modest “If we conceive…” and ends with an audacious payoff: “the whole of the world could thus be known.” That “thus” does a lot of ideological work, smuggling a metaphysical claim (total knowability) inside what looks like a methodological preference (reduction to physics).
The intent isn’t to cheerlead scientific progress so much as to isolate its governing fantasy: that explanation and understanding are the same thing. By picking the most fundamental register imaginable - atoms, forces, motion - Dilthey sketches an intellectual horizon where everything else (history, art, religion, institutions, motives) becomes derivative noise. The subtext is a warning about category error. Even if every bodily act could, in principle, be rendered as particle movement, that translation doesn’t automatically deliver meaning, intention, or the lived texture that makes human affairs “historical” rather than merely physical.
Context matters: Dilthey is writing in a 19th-century Germany intoxicated by the prestige of the Naturwissenschaften. As a historian and theorist of the human sciences, he’s pushing back against the colonizing impulse of scientific naturalism. His target is not physics itself, but the imperial inference that successful causal models entitle us to treat the human world as just more matter to be solved, rather than a web to be interpreted.
The intent isn’t to cheerlead scientific progress so much as to isolate its governing fantasy: that explanation and understanding are the same thing. By picking the most fundamental register imaginable - atoms, forces, motion - Dilthey sketches an intellectual horizon where everything else (history, art, religion, institutions, motives) becomes derivative noise. The subtext is a warning about category error. Even if every bodily act could, in principle, be rendered as particle movement, that translation doesn’t automatically deliver meaning, intention, or the lived texture that makes human affairs “historical” rather than merely physical.
Context matters: Dilthey is writing in a 19th-century Germany intoxicated by the prestige of the Naturwissenschaften. As a historian and theorist of the human sciences, he’s pushing back against the colonizing impulse of scientific naturalism. His target is not physics itself, but the imperial inference that successful causal models entitle us to treat the human world as just more matter to be solved, rather than a web to be interpreted.
Quote Details
| Topic | Science |
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