ABSTRACT
The making of the humanities was the making of the sciences at the same time. It is chiefly a story of reciprocal demarcation that gave, in the course of the nineteenth century, the sciences and the humanities distinct profiles. In early modern learning the distinction between the products of the human mind and of nature did not exist. The process of disentanglement may have started in the early modern period but it was driven by ‘scientific’ and ‘humanistic’ developments alike. In this article I will reflect upon the early modern relationship between the sciences and the humanities from the perspective of the mathematical sciences. The starting point consists of two instances of philological work in mathematics in early seventeenth-century Leiden. The background is not entirely coincidental. By 1600 the University of Leiden had become a bulwark of humanism and this affected the academic pursuit of mathematics as well. In the work of Willebrord Snellius (Snel van Royen, 1580-1626) and Jacob Golius (Gool, 1596-1667) philology was at the core of mathematics. I will take a closer look at the various purposes their philological work served and then address the more general historical question how such pursuits came to be separated from mathematics ‘proper’.
