“Mathematizing Metaphysics: the Case of the Principle of Least Action”

This paper looks at Euler’s and Maupertuis’ attempt to place mechanics on foundations different from Newton’s or Leibniz’s, via the principle of least action (PLA). I argue this episode shows how mathematization is not neutral with respect to ways the world can be.

Maupertuis claimed to ‘derive’ the PLA from a metaphysical principle, one asserting that Nature acts in the simplest, most efficient way. The PLA has interested philosophers because it is – controversially – billed as a continuing embodiment of final causes in physics. But the episode illustrates a phenomenon previously unnoticed by philosophers: the consequences for metaphysics of the mathematization of nature. When Maupertuis’ metaphysical principle was mathematized as a principle of mechanics, the PLA, it immediately faced formal challenges to its viability. Contra existing narratives, this re-emergence of teleology in physics was felled by novel means. The wider upshot is a new norm of consistent mathematical representability now constraining metaphysics.

The PLA asserts that, among all the possible paths a body might take between two points, Nature selects the one with minimal action.