
This volume turns a careful eye toward the great scientific minds who wrestled with the notion of a divine creator as a philosophical hypothesis. Through vivid anecdotes—most famously Laplace’s cool reply to Napoleon that he “did not need that hypothesis”—the text shows how the era’s leading mathematicians and physicists navigated the tension between rigorous natural philosophy and lingering religious sentiment. Their exchanges reveal a time when the boundaries between scientific explanation and theological speculation were still being drawn.
Beyond Laplace, the book surveys the contrasting positions of figures like Euler, a staunch theist, and Diderot, whose lively atheistic dialogues at the Russian court sparked both amusement and caution. By juxtaposing these personal stories with broader reflections on the limits of pure denial, the work invites listeners to contemplate how the objective world can challenge, but not always silence, the human yearning for meaning.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (751K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-08-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1806–1871
A brilliant 19th-century mathematician and logician, he helped shape modern symbolic logic while also writing widely for general readers. He was known for making difficult ideas feel lively and accessible.
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