Leibniz died November 14, 1716.
Leibniz wasn’t the first mathematician to discover the Leibniz series.
Consider another two passages from Leibniz:
Leibniz rejected the Cartesian formulation.
In an informative piece dated to 1702, Leibniz writes:
One such attempt involves the notion of a “Leibniz algebra.”
But Nicholas Jolley notes that Leibniz does not always argue this way.
(Leibniz exchanged letters with over 1100 different people in the course of his life.)
Leibniz acknowledges created substances, though they are very intimately dependent on God.
So, central tenets of Wolff’s philosophical system closely resemble those advanced by Leibniz.
This argument, often known as “Leibniz’ Mill”, appears as section 17 of Leibniz’ Monadology.
Finally, Strawson takes Leibniz as an opponent of some of his major theses and considers whether Leibniz might be able to avoid his conclusions.
Presumably, they met in the 1660s, maybe when Leibniz was at Altdorf University in 1666 or when he was the secretary of the alchemical society in Nuremberg in 1667 (for Leibniz life, see Arthur 2014: x–xvi).
Between 1673 and 1720 Leibniz designed a series of calculating machines intended to instantiate multiplication and division as well: the stepped reckoner, employing what is still known as the Leibniz wheel (Martin 1925).
The classes of logics we have considered so far are the main classes in what has come to be known as the Leibniz hierarchy because its members are classes of logics that can be characterized by the behavior of the Leibniz operator.
What is significant about considering the relationship between Wolff and Leibniz is that although there is clear evidence that Leibniz was a direct influence on Wolff, there is also equal evidence that testifies to Wolff’s independence from Leibniz, particularly when Wolff was formulating and first presenting his philosophical views (cf.
In 1988, Deleuze published a book on Leibniz entitled The Fold: Leibniz and the Baroque, which added new elements to the reading of Leibniz that appeared in Deleuze’s earlier books: an interpretation centered on the concept of the fold, a development of a concept of the Baroque, and a attempt to define a neo-Leibnizianism in terms of contemporary artistic and scientific practices.
Arnauld, Antoine | Continental Rationalism | identity: of indiscernibles | Kant, Immanuel: and Leibniz | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: ethics | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: influence on 19th century logic | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: modal metaphysics | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: on causation | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: on the problem of evil | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: philosophy of mind | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: philosophy of physics | Malebranche, Nicolas | Newton, Isaac: views on space, time, and motion
aesthetics: German, in the 18th century | Continental Rationalism | German Philosophy: in the 18th century, prior to Kant | intrinsic vs. extrinsic properties | Kant, Immanuel: and Leibniz | Kant, Immanuel: critique of metaphysics | Kant, Immanuel: philosophy of science | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: ethics | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: on causation | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: on the problem of evil | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: philosophy of mind | mathematics: inconsistent | Mendelssohn, Moses | rationalism vs. empiricism
Augustine, Saint | Continental Rationalism | Descartes, René: and the pineal gland | Descartes, René: epistemology | Descartes, René: ethics | Descartes, René: life and works | Descartes, René: modal metaphysics | Descartes, René: ontological argument | Descartes, René: physics | Desgabets, Robert | emotion: 17th and 18th century theories of | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: ethics | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: on causation | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: on the problem of evil | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm: philosophy of mind | Malebranche, Nicolas: theory of ideas and vision in God | Spinoza, Baruch | Spinoza, Baruch: psychological theory
Leibniz
noun person
- German philosopher and mathematician who thought of the universe as consisting of independent monads and who devised a system of the calculus independent of Newton (1646-1716)
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Augustine Saint | Continental Rationalism | Descartes René and the pineal gland | Descartes René epistemology | Descartes René ethics | Descartes René life and works | Descartes René modal metaphysics | Descartes René ontological argument | Descartes René physics | Desgabets Robert | emotion 17th and 18th century theories of | Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm ethics | Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm on causation | Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm on the problem of evil | Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm philosophy of mind | Malebranche Nicolas theory of ideas and vision in God | Spinoza Baruch | Spinoza Baruch psychological theory