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THE LEGACIES OF RICHARD POPKIN ARCHIVES INTERNATIONALES D’HISTOIRE DES IDÉES INTERNATIONAL ARCHIVES OF THE HISTORY OF IDEAS 198 THE LEGACIES OF RICHARD POPKIN Edited by JEREMY D. POPKIN Board of Directors: Founding Editors: Paul Dibon† and Richard H. Popkin† Director: Sarah Hutton (University of Aberystwyth, Wales, UK) Associate Directors: J.E. Force (University of Kentucky, Lexington, USA); J.C. Laursen (University of California, Riverside, USA) Editorial Board: M.J.B. Allen (Los Angeles); J.-R. Armogathe (Paris); J. Henry (Edinburgh); J.D. North (Oxford); M. Mulsow (Erfurt); G. Paganini (Vercelli); J. Popkin (Lexington); G.A.J. Rogers (Keele); Th. Verbeek (Utrecht) For other titles published in this series, go to www.springer.com/series/5640 The Legacies of Richard Popkin Edited by Jeremy D. Popkin Lexington, KY, USA A C.I.P. Catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. Library of Congress Control Number: 2008928692 ISBN 978-1-4020-8473-7 (HB) ISBN 978-1-4020-8474-4 (e-book) Published by Springer, P.O. Box 17, 3300 AA Dordrecht, The Netherlands. www.springer.com Printed on acid-free paper All Rights Reserved © 2008 Springer Science + Business Media B.V. No part of this work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording or otherwise, without written permission from the Publisher, with the exception of any material supplied specifically for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. CONTENTS Contributors ................................................................................................... vii Introduction.................................................................................................... xi Jeremy D. Popkin Part I Richard H. Popkin and the History of Philosophy 1 Popkin Non-Scepticus ............................................................................. 3 Brian Copenhaver 2 À Rebours: Richard Popkin’s Contributions to Intellectual History ............................................................................. 15 Allison P. Coudert 3 Popkin’s Spinoza ..................................................................................... 27 Sarah Hutton 4 Assessing the Work of Richard H. Popkin from the Vantage Point of Comparative Philosophy .................................... 39 Peter K. J. Park 5 Gilles Deleuze: From Hume to Spinoza (An Attempt to Make Good on a Popkin Request) ................................................... 57 Knox Peden Part II Religion and Philosophy in the Seventeenth Century 6 Richard H. Popkin’s Concept of the Third Force and the Newtonian Synthesis of Theology and Scientific Methodology in Isaac Newton and Samuel Clarke ............................ 73 James E. Force 7 The Third Force Revisited ...................................................................... 109 Martin Mulsow vi Contents 8 The Study of the Mishnah and the Quest for Christian Identity in Early Eighteenth-Century England: Completing a Narrative Initiated by Richard Popkin ...................... 123 David B. Ruderman Part III Popkin and the Skeptical Tradition 9 Popkin’s Skepticism and the Cynical Tradition ................................. 145 John Christian Laursen 10 Charron and Huet: Two Unexplored Legacies of Popkin’s Scholarship on Early Modern Skepticism ..................... 155 José R. Maia Neto 11 The Quarrel over Ancient and Modern Scepticism: Some Reflections on Descartes and His Context ............................. 173 Gianni Paganini Part IV Popkin and the Jews 12 Richard Popkin’s Marrano Problem ................................................... 197 Yosef Kaplan 13 Popkin and the Jews ............................................................................. 213 David S. Katz 14 The Spirit of the Eighteenth Century in the Anti-Sabbatean Polemics of Hakham David Nieto ............... 229 Matt Goldish Part V Popkin Close Up 15 Richard Popkin and Philosophy Made Simple .................................. 247 Avrum Stroll 16 In His Own Words: Richard Popkin’s Career in Philosophy ........... 259 Jeremy D. Popkin Index .............................................................................................................. 295 CONTRIBUTORS Brian Copenhaver, the Udvar-Hazy Professor of Philosophy and History at UCLA, first met Richard Popkin in Avranches in 1981, where he studied French cuisine and scepticism with Popkin. Copenhaver is now working on Lorenzo Valla, Giovanni Pico della Mirandola, Cabala in the Renaissance and post-Kantian philosophy in Italy. Allison P. Coudert holds the Paul and Marie Castelfranco Chair in Religious Studies at the University of California at Davis. Her publications include The Impact of the Kabbalah in the Seventeenth Century: The Life and Thought of Francis Mercury van Helmont (Leiden & New York: E.J. Brill, 1999) and Leibniz and the Kabbalah (Dordrecht & Boston, MA: Kluwer, 1995). She first met Popkin around 1981 or 1982 when she was an independent scholar at the Clark Library and had the temerity to slip him two articles about Francis Mercury van Helmont. James E. Force, professor of philosophy at the University of Kentucky, is the author of William Whiston, Honest Newtonian (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985, 2002) and of numerous publications on David Hume, Isaac Newton, and the intersection of science and religion in the early mod- ern period. Force first met Popkin in the office of the Journal of the History of Philosophy in the Humanities Library at the University of California, San Diego, in the late summer of 1972. Force had just returned from the Gulf of Tonkin and was in his first week as an Editorial Assistant for the JHP. Popkin had just returned from New York. Popkin burst into the JHP office in a rumpled suit, wearing a huge McGovern button, looking for the Oreo cook- ies that were hidden in one of the office’s file cabinets. Matt Goldish is Samuel M. and Esther Melton Professor of Jewish History and Director of the Melton Center for Jewish Studies at The Ohio State University. His publications include Judaism in the Theology of Sir Isaac Newton (1998); The Sabbatean Prophets (2003); and Jewish Questions: Responsa on Sephardic Life in the Early Modern Period (2008). He first met Dick Popkin in a UCLA seminar on Spinoza around 1985. viii Contributors Sarah Hutton holds a Chair at Aberystwyth University and is director of the International Archives of the History of Ideas. Her publications include Anne Conway. A Woman Philosopher (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), Platonism at the Origins of Modernity, co-edited with Douglas Hedley (Springer, 2008) and Women, Science and Medicine 1550–1700, co-edited with Lynette Hunter (Sutton 1997). She has also edited Ralph Cudworth’s Treatise Concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996). She first saw Popkin when she was a student at the Warburg Institute which he visited, from time to time, at the invitation of his friend, Charles Schmitt. They first really became acquainted at a conference on Spinoza held in Amsterdam, where they discovered that, Spinoza apart, they shared an interest in the kind of historical characters that other people found strange and deemed irrelevant. Yosef Kaplan is Bernard Cherrick Professor of the History of the Jewish People at the Hebrew University. He is the author and editor of many books on the history of the Marranos and the Western Sephardi Diaspora in the Early Modern Period. His most recent publications include An Alternative Path to Modernity (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 2000), Dutch Jews as Perceived by Themselves and by Others (edited with C. Brasz, Leiden: E.J. Brill, 2001) and The Dutch Intersection (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 2008). He first met Richard Popkin in 1974, at the Ets Haim Library in Amsterdam. David S. Katz is Director of the Fred W. Lessing Institute for European History and Civilization at Tel Aviv University, Israel. He co-edited two of Popkin’s Festschrift volumes, and with Richard Popkin, he co-authored Messianic Revolution: Radical Religious Politics to the End of the Second Millennium (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 1999). His first sight of Richard Popkin was in the law school cafeteria at Tel Aviv University in early 1980, when he saw a large man with a beard drop a tray full of food in front of a crowd of students. Israel being Israel, no one paid the slightest bit of attention. Later on in the day, a proper introduction took place at the History Department. In order to spare his blushes, he never mentioned the story about the tray to Popkin. John Christian Laursen is Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Riverside. His most recent work on skepticism is “Oakeshott’s Skepticism and the Skeptical Traditions”, European Journal of Political Theory 4, 2005, 37–55 and “Skepticism, Unconvincing Anti-skepticism, and Politics” in Marc-Andre Bernier and Sebastian Charles, eds., Scepticisme et modernité (Saint-Etienne: Publications de la Universite de Saint Etienne, 2005), 167–188. He met Richard Popkin at Wake Forest University in 1989. Contributors ix José R. Maia Neto is Associate Professor at the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil. He is the author of Machado de Assis, the Brazilian Pyrrhonian (Indiana: Purdue University Press, 1994), The Christianization of Pyrrhonism (Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1995) and co-editor with Richard H. Popkin of Skepticism: An Anthology (Amherst, NY: Prometheus, 2007). He first met Richard Popkin in 1988 in Saint Louis, Missouri, when he arrived to begin his graduate study at Washington University. He was impressed that Popkin and his wife Julie invited him for a dinner in a very nice restaurant to discuss his thesis project and other issues. Martin Mulsow is Professor of History at Rutgers University, New Brunswick. He is the author of Moderne aus dem Untergrund. Radikale Frühaufklärung in Deutschland, 1680–1720 (Hamburg: Meiner, 2002) and editor, together with Richard H. Popkin, of Secret Conversions to Judaism in Early Modern Europe (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 2004). He first met Popkin in 1990. Gianni Paganini is Professor of the History of Philosophy at University of Piedmont (Italy). His most recent books are Les philosophies clandestines à l’âge classique (Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 2005); The Return of Scepticism (Boston, MA, London & Dordrecht: Kluwer, 2003); Skepsis. Le débat des modernes sur le scepticisme (Paris, Vrin, forthcoming); Thomas Hobbes, De motu, loco et tempore (Turin, UTET, forthcoming). He corre- sponded with Dick starting in 1984, when Popkin reviewed his edition of the Theophrastus redivivus, but first met him in 1989 at University of Milan, where he gave a lecture. Peter K. J. Park is Assistant Professor of Historical Studies at the University of Texas at Dallas. He teaches early modern European history and the com- parative history of philosophy. He met Richard and Juliet Popkin in 1999, while he was a graduate student at UCLA. Knox Peden is a doctoral candidate in the Department of History at UC Berkeley, where he is preparing a dissertation on the conflict between Spinozism and phenomenology in twentieth-century French thought. He met Popkin in the spring of 2005 when he responded to Popkin’s adver- tisement for a research assistant. Thus began a lively conversation that would last for several short, but intense months, covering subjects ranging from Isaac Troki to Spinoza to Knox’s audition for “Jeopardy!” Popkin was ultimately delighted that Knox’s audition was unsuccessful because in his view fame and riches have a tendency to spoil academics. Jeremy D. Popkin is T. Marshall Hahn, Jr., professor of history at the University of Kentucky. He has published a number of books on the history of the French and Haitian Revolutions and on autobiographical writing.

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