Protogaea is a history of the Earth written in conjectural terms; it was composed by Leibniz in the period from 1691 to 1693.[4] A summary in Latin was published in 1693 in the Leipzig Acta Eruditorum.[5] The text was first published in full in 1749, shortly after Benoît de Maillet's more far-reaching ideas on the origin of the Earth, circulated in manuscript, had been printed.[6]
Views
Protogaea built on, and criticized, the natural philosophy of René Descartes, as expressed in his Principia Philosophiae.[7] Leibniz in the work adopted the Cartesian theory of the Earth as a sun crusted over with sunspots.[3] He relied on the authority of Agostino Scilla writing about fossils to discredit the speculations of Athanasius Kircher and Johann Joachim Becher;[8] he had met Scilla in Rome a few years earlier.[9] He took up suggestions of Nicolaus Steno that argued for the forms of fossils being prior to their inclusion in rocks, for stratification, and for the gradual solidification of the Earth.[10]
Notes
^Full title in German: Protogaea oder Abhandlung von der ersten Gestalt der Erde und den Spuren der Historie in Denkmalen der Natur (Protogaea or Treatise on the First Form of the Earth and the Trail of History in Monuments of Nature).
^J. G. Eckhart, "Beschreibung desjenigen, was bey Grabung des Herrenhäuser‐Canals am Lein‐Strome her Curiöses in der Erde gefunden worden", Neue Zeitungen von Gelehrten Sachen auf das Jahr 1719,
Nr. 24, 185–192, see Cornelius Steckner: Lügenstein und Weltarchäologie.
^Oldroyd, D. R.; Howes, J. B. (1978). "The first published version of Leibniz's Protogaea". Journal of the Society for the Bibliography of Natural History. 9: 56–60. doi:10.3366/jsbnh.1978.9.1.56.