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Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz[a] (1 July 1646 [O.S. 21 June] – 14 November 1716) was a German polymath active as a mathematician, philosopher, scientist and diplomat who invented calculus in addition to many other branches of mathematics and statistics. Leibniz has been called the "last universal genius" due to his knowledge and skills in different fields and because such people became less common during the Industrial Revolution and spread of specialized labor after his lifetime.[15] He is a prominent figure in both the history of philosophy and the history of mathematics. He wrote works on philosophy, theology, ethics, politics, law, history, philology, games, music, and other studies. Leibniz also made major contributions to physics and technology, and anticipated notions that surfaced much later in probability theory, biology, medicine, geology, psychology, linguistics and computer science. In addition, he contributed to the field of library science by devising a cataloguing system whilst working at the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbüttel, Germany, that would have served as a guide for many of Europe's largest libraries.[16] Leibniz's contributions to a wide range of subjects were scattered in various learned journals, in tens of thousands of letters and in unpublished manuscripts. He wrote in several languages, primarily in Latin, French and German.[17][b]

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
Portrait, 1695
Born1 July 1646
Died14 November 1716(1716-11-14) (aged 70)
Education
Era17th-/18th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
Theses
  • De Arte Combinatoria (On the Combinatorial Art) (March 1666)
  • Disputatio Inauguralis de Casibus Perplexis in Jure (Inaugural Disputation on Ambiguous Legal Cases) (November 1666)
Doctoral advisorBartholomäus Leonhard von Schwendendörffer [de] (Dr. jur. thesis advisor)[6][7]
Other academic advisors
Notable students
Main interests
Mathematics, physics, geology, medicine, biology, embryology, epidemiology, veterinary medicine, paleontology, psychology, engineering, librarianship linguistics, philology, sociology, metaphysics, ethics, economics, diplomacy, history, politics, music theory, poetry, logic, theodicy, universal language, universal science
Notable ideas
Signature

As a philosopher, he was a leading representative of 17th-century rationalism and idealism. As a mathematician, his major achievement was the development of the main ideas of differential and integral calculus, independently of Isaac Newton's contemporaneous developments.[19] Mathematicians have consistently favored Leibniz's notation as the conventional and more exact expression of calculus.[20][21][22]

In the 20th century, Leibniz's notions of the law of continuity and transcendental law of homogeneity found a consistent mathematical formulation by means of non-standard analysis. He was also a pioneer in the field of mechanical calculators. While working on adding automatic multiplication and division to Pascal's calculator, he was the first to describe a pinwheel calculator in 1685[23] and invented the Leibniz wheel, later used in the arithmometer, the first mass-produced mechanical calculator.

In philosophy and theology, Leibniz is most noted for his optimism, i.e. his conclusion that our world is, in a qualified sense, the best possible world that God could have created, a view sometimes lampooned by other thinkers, such as Voltaire in his satirical novella Candide. Leibniz, along with René Descartes and Baruch Spinoza, was one of the three influential early modern rationalists. His philosophy also assimilates elements of the scholastic tradition, notably the assumption that some substantive knowledge of reality can be achieved by reasoning from first principles or prior definitions. The work of Leibniz anticipated modern logic and still influences contemporary analytic philosophy, such as its adopted use of the term "possible world" to define modal notions.

Biography edit

Early life edit

Gottfried Leibniz was born on July 1 [OS: June 21], 1646, in Leipzig, Saxony, to Friedrich Leibniz and Catharina Schmuck.[24] He was baptized two days later at St. Nicholas Church, Leipzig; his godfather was the Lutheran theologian Martin Geier [de].[25] His father died when he was six years old, and Leibniz was raised by his mother.[26]

Leibniz's father had been a Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Leipzig, where he also served as dean of philosophy. The boy inherited his father's personal library. He was given free access to it from the age of seven. While Leibniz's schoolwork was largely confined to the study of a small canon of authorities, his father's library enabled him to study a wide variety of advanced philosophical and theological works—ones that he would not have otherwise been able to read until his college years.[27] Access to his father's library, largely written in Latin, also led to his proficiency in the Latin language, which he achieved by the age of 12. At the age of 13 he composed 300 hexameters of Latin verse in a single morning for a special event at school.[28]

In April 1661 he enrolled in his father's former university at age 14.[29][8][30] There he was guided, among others, by Jakob Thomasius, previously a student of Friedrich. Leibniz completed his bachelor's degree in Philosophy in December 1662. He defended his Disputatio Metaphysica de Principio Individui (Metaphysical Disputation on the Principle of Individuation),[31] which addressed the principle of individuation, on 9 June 1663 [O.S. 30 May], presenting an early version of monadic substance theory. Leibniz earned his master's degree in Philosophy on 7 February 1664. In December 1664 he published and defended a dissertation Specimen Quaestionum Philosophicarum ex Jure collectarum (An Essay of Collected Philosophical Problems of Right),[31] arguing for both a theoretical and a pedagogical relationship between philosophy and law. After one year of legal studies, he was awarded his bachelor's degree in Law on 28 September 1665.[32] His dissertation was titled De conditionibus (On Conditions).[31]

In early 1666, at age 19, Leibniz wrote his first book, De Arte Combinatoria (On the Combinatorial Art), the first part of which was also his habilitation thesis in Philosophy, which he defended in March 1666.[31][33] De Arte Combinatoria was inspired by Ramon Llull's Ars Magna and contained a proof of the existence of God, cast in geometrical form, and based on the argument from motion.

His next goal was to earn his license and Doctorate in Law, which normally required three years of study. In 1666, the University of Leipzig turned down Leibniz's doctoral application and refused to grant him a Doctorate in Law, most likely due to his relative youth.[34][35] Leibniz subsequently left Leipzig.[36]

Leibniz then enrolled in the University of Altdorf and quickly submitted a thesis, which he had probably been working on earlier in Leipzig.[37] The title of his thesis was Disputatio Inauguralis de Casibus Perplexis in Jure (Inaugural Disputation on Ambiguous Legal Cases).[31] Leibniz earned his license to practice law and his Doctorate in Law in November 1666. He next declined the offer of an academic appointment at Altdorf, saying that "my thoughts were turned in an entirely different direction".[38]

As an adult, Leibniz often introduced himself as "Gottfried von Leibniz". Many posthumously published editions of his writings presented his name on the title page as "Freiherr G. W. von Leibniz." However, no document has ever been found from any contemporary government that stated his appointment to any form of nobility.[39]

1666–1676 edit

 
Engraving of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz

Leibniz's first position was as a salaried secretary to an alchemical society in Nuremberg.[40] He knew fairly little about the subject at that time but presented himself as deeply learned. He soon met Johann Christian von Boyneburg (1622–1672), the dismissed chief minister of the Elector of Mainz, Johann Philipp von Schönborn.[41] Von Boyneburg hired Leibniz as an assistant, and shortly thereafter reconciled with the Elector and introduced Leibniz to him. Leibniz then dedicated an essay on law to the Elector in the hope of obtaining employment. The stratagem worked; the Elector asked Leibniz to assist with the redrafting of the legal code for the Electorate.[42] In 1669, Leibniz was appointed assessor in the Court of Appeal. Although von Boyneburg died late in 1672, Leibniz remained under the employment of his widow until she dismissed him in 1674.[43]

Von Boyneburg did much to promote Leibniz's reputation, and the latter's memoranda and letters began to attract favorable notice. After Leibniz's service to the Elector there soon followed a diplomatic role. He published an essay, under the pseudonym of a fictitious Polish nobleman, arguing (unsuccessfully) for the German candidate for the Polish crown. The main force in European geopolitics during Leibniz's adult life was the ambition of Louis XIV of France, backed by French military and economic might. Meanwhile, the Thirty Years' War had left German-speaking Europe exhausted, fragmented, and economically backward. Leibniz proposed to protect German-speaking Europe by distracting Louis as follows: France would be invited to take Egypt as a stepping stone towards an eventual conquest of the Dutch East Indies. In return, France would agree to leave Germany and the Netherlands undisturbed. This plan obtained the Elector's cautious support. In 1672, the French government invited Leibniz to Paris for discussion,[44] but the plan was soon overtaken by the outbreak of the Franco-Dutch War and became irrelevant. Napoleon's failed invasion of Egypt in 1798 can be seen as an unwitting, late implementation of Leibniz's plan, after the Eastern hemisphere colonial supremacy in Europe had already passed from the Dutch to the British.

Thus Leibniz went to Paris in 1672. Soon after arriving, he met Dutch physicist and mathematician Christiaan Huygens and realised that his own knowledge of mathematics and physics was patchy. With Huygens as his mentor, he began a program of self-study that soon pushed him to making major contributions to both subjects, including discovering his version of the differential and integral calculus. He met Nicolas Malebranche and Antoine Arnauld, the leading French philosophers of the day, and studied the writings of Descartes and Pascal, unpublished as well as published.[45] He befriended a German mathematician, Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus; they corresponded for the rest of their lives.

 
Stepped reckoner

When it became clear that France would not implement its part of Leibniz's Egyptian plan, the Elector sent his nephew, escorted by Leibniz, on a related mission to the English government in London, early in 1673.[46] There Leibniz came into acquaintance of Henry Oldenburg and John Collins. He met with the Royal Society where he demonstrated a calculating machine that he had designed and had been building since 1670. The machine was able to execute all four basic operations (adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing), and the society quickly made him an external member.

The mission ended abruptly when news of the Elector's death (12 February 1673) reached them. Leibniz promptly returned to Paris and not, as had been planned, to Mainz.[47] The sudden deaths of his two patrons in the same winter meant that Leibniz had to find a new basis for his career.

In this regard, a 1669 invitation from Duke John Frederick of Brunswick to visit Hanover proved to have been fateful. Leibniz had declined the invitation, but had begun corresponding with the duke in 1671. In 1673, the duke offered Leibniz the post of counsellor. Leibniz very reluctantly accepted the position two years later, only after it became clear that no employment was forthcoming in Paris, whose intellectual stimulation he relished, or with the Habsburg imperial court.[48]

In 1675 he tried to get admitted to the French Academy of Sciences as a foreign honorary member, but it was considered that there were already enough foreigners there and so no invitation came. He left Paris in October 1676.

House of Hanover, 1676–1716 edit

Leibniz managed to delay his arrival in Hanover until the end of 1676 after making one more short journey to London, where Newton accused him of having seen his unpublished work on calculus in advance.[49] This was alleged to be evidence supporting the accusation, made decades later, that he had stolen calculus from Newton. On the journey from London to Hanover, Leibniz stopped in The Hague where he met van Leeuwenhoek, the discoverer of microorganisms. He also spent several days in intense discussion with Spinoza, who had just completed his masterwork, the Ethics.[50]

In 1677, he was promoted, at his request, to Privy Counselor of Justice, a post he held for the rest of his life. Leibniz served three consecutive rulers of the House of Brunswick as historian, political adviser, and most consequentially, as librarian of the ducal library. He thenceforth employed his pen on all the various political, historical, and theological matters involving the House of Brunswick; the resulting documents form a valuable part of the historical record for the period.

Leibniz began promoting a project to use windmills to improve the mining operations in the Harz Mountains. This project did little to improve mining operations and was shut down by Duke Ernst August in 1685.[48]

Among the few people in north Germany to accept Leibniz were the Electress Sophia of Hanover (1630–1714), her daughter Sophia Charlotte of Hanover (1668–1705), the Queen of Prussia and his avowed disciple, and Caroline of Ansbach, the consort of her grandson, the future George II. To each of these women he was correspondent, adviser, and friend. In turn, they all approved of Leibniz more than did their spouses and the future king George I of Great Britain.[51]

The population of Hanover was only about 10,000, and its provinciality eventually grated on Leibniz. Nevertheless, to be a major courtier to the House of Brunswick was quite an honor, especially in light of the meteoric rise in the prestige of that House during Leibniz's association with it. In 1692, the Duke of Brunswick became a hereditary Elector of the Holy Roman Empire. The British Act of Settlement 1701 designated the Electress Sophia and her descent as the royal family of England, once both King William III and his sister-in-law and successor, Queen Anne, were dead. Leibniz played a role in the initiatives and negotiations leading up to that Act, but not always an effective one. For example, something he published anonymously in England, thinking to promote the Brunswick cause, was formally censured by the British Parliament.

The Brunswicks tolerated the enormous effort Leibniz devoted to intellectual pursuits unrelated to his duties as a courtier, pursuits such as perfecting calculus, writing about other mathematics, logic, physics, and philosophy, and keeping up a vast correspondence. He began working on calculus in 1674; the earliest evidence of its use in his surviving notebooks is 1675. By 1677 he had a coherent system in hand, but did not publish it until 1684. Leibniz's most important mathematical papers were published between 1682 and 1692, usually in a journal which he and Otto Mencke founded in 1682, the Acta Eruditorum. That journal played a key role in advancing his mathematical and scientific reputation, which in turn enhanced his eminence in diplomacy, history, theology, and philosophy.

 
Pages from Leibniz's papers in the National Library of Poland

The Elector Ernest Augustus commissioned Leibniz to write a history of the House of Brunswick, going back to the time of Charlemagne or earlier, hoping that the resulting book would advance his dynastic ambitions. From 1687 to 1690, Leibniz traveled extensively in Germany, Austria, and Italy, seeking and finding archival materials bearing on this project. Decades went by but no history appeared; the next Elector became quite annoyed at Leibniz's apparent dilatoriness. Leibniz never finished the project, in part because of his huge output on many other fronts, but also because he insisted on writing a meticulously researched and erudite book based on archival sources, when his patrons would have been quite happy with a short popular book, one perhaps little more than a genealogy with commentary, to be completed in three years or less. They never knew that he had in fact carried out a fair part of his assigned task: when the material Leibniz had written and collected for his history of the House of Brunswick was finally published in the 19th century, it filled three volumes.

Leibniz was appointed Librarian of the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbüttel, Lower Saxony, in 1691.

In 1708, John Keill, writing in the journal of the Royal Society and with Newton's presumed blessing, accused Leibniz of having plagiarised Newton's calculus.[52] Thus began the calculus priority dispute which darkened the remainder of Leibniz's life. A formal investigation by the Royal Society (in which Newton was an unacknowledged participant), undertaken in response to Leibniz's demand for a retraction, upheld Keill's charge. Historians of mathematics writing since 1900 or so have tended to acquit Leibniz, pointing to important differences between Leibniz's and Newton's versions of calculus.

In 1711, while traveling in northern Europe, the Russian Tsar Peter the Great stopped in Hanover and met Leibniz, who then took some interest in Russian matters for the rest of his life. In 1712, Leibniz began a two-year residence in Vienna, where he was appointed Imperial Court Councillor to the Habsburgs. On the death of Queen Anne in 1714, Elector George Louis became King George I of Great Britain, under the terms of the 1701 Act of Settlement. Even though Leibniz had done much to bring about this happy event, it was not to be his hour of glory. Despite the intercession of the Princess of Wales, Caroline of Ansbach, George I forbade Leibniz to join him in London until he completed at least one volume of the history of the Brunswick family his father had commissioned nearly 30 years earlier. Moreover, for George I to include Leibniz in his London court would have been deemed insulting to Newton, who was seen as having won the calculus priority dispute and whose standing in British official circles could not have been higher. Finally, his dear friend and defender, the Dowager Electress Sophia, died in 1714.

Death edit

Leibniz died in Hanover in 1716. At the time, he was so out of favor that neither George I (who happened to be near Hanover at that time) nor any fellow courtier other than his personal secretary attended the funeral. Even though Leibniz was a life member of the Royal Society and the Berlin Academy of Sciences, neither organization saw fit to honor his death. His grave went unmarked for more than 50 years. He was, however, eulogized by Fontenelle, before the French Academy of Sciences in Paris, which had admitted him as a foreign member in 1700. The eulogy was composed at the behest of the Duchess of Orleans, a niece of the Electress Sophia.

Personal life edit

Leibniz never married. He proposed to an unknown woman at age 50, but changed his mind when she took too long to decide.[53] He complained on occasion about money, but the fair sum he left to his sole heir, his sister's stepson, proved that the Brunswicks had, by and large, paid him well. In his diplomatic endeavors, he at times verged on the unscrupulous, as was all too often the case with professional diplomats of his day. On several occasions, Leibniz backdated and altered personal manuscripts, actions which put him in a bad light during the calculus controversy.[54]

He was charming, well-mannered, and not without humor and imagination.[55] He had many friends and admirers all over Europe. He was identified as a Protestant and a philosophical theist.[56][57][58][59] Leibniz remained committed to Trinitarian Christianity throughout his life.[60]

Philosophy edit

Leibniz's philosophical thinking appears fragmented, because his philosophical writings consist mainly of a multitude of short pieces: journal articles, manuscripts published long after his death, and many letters to many correspondents. He wrote only two book-length philosophical treatises, of which only the Théodicée of 1710 was published in his lifetime.

Leibniz dated his beginning as a philosopher to his Discourse on Metaphysics, which he composed in 1686 as a commentary on a running dispute between Nicolas Malebranche and Antoine Arnauld. This led to an extensive and valuable correspondence with Arnauld;[61] it and the Discourse were not published until the 19th century. In 1695, Leibniz made his public entrée into European philosophy with a journal article titled "New System of the Nature and Communication of Substances".[62] Between 1695 and 1705, he composed his New Essays on Human Understanding, a lengthy commentary on John Locke's 1690 An Essay Concerning Human Understanding, but upon learning of Locke's 1704 death, lost the desire to publish it, so that the New Essays were not published until 1765. The Monadologie, composed in 1714 and published posthumously, consists of 90 aphorisms.

Leibniz also wrote a short paper, "Primae veritates" ("First Truths"), first published by Louis Couturat in 1903 (pp. 518–523)[63] summarizing his views on metaphysics. The paper is undated; that he wrote it while in Vienna in 1689 was determined only in 1999, when the ongoing critical edition finally published Leibniz's philosophical writings for the period 1677–90.[64] Couturat's reading of this paper was the launching point for much 20th-century thinking about Leibniz, especially among analytic philosophers. But after a meticulous study of all of Leibniz's philosophical writings up to 1688—a study the 1999 additions to the critical edition made possible—Mercer (2001) begged to differ with Couturat's reading; the jury is still out.

Leibniz met Spinoza in 1676, read some of his unpublished writings, and had since been influenced by some of Spinoza's ideas. While Leibniz befriended him and admired Spinoza's powerful intellect, he was also forthrightly dismayed by Spinoza's conclusions,[65] especially when these were inconsistent with Christian orthodoxy.

Unlike Descartes and Spinoza, Leibniz had a thorough university education in philosophy. He was influenced by his Leipzig professor Jakob Thomasius, who also supervised his BA thesis in philosophy.[9] Leibniz also eagerly read Francisco Suárez, a Spanish Jesuit respected even in Lutheran universities. Leibniz was deeply interested in the new methods and conclusions of Descartes, Huygens, Newton, and Boyle, but viewed their work through a lens heavily tinted by scholastic notions. Yet it remains the case that Leibniz's methods and concerns often anticipate the logic, and analytic and linguistic philosophy of the 20th century.

Principles edit

Leibniz variously invoked one or another of seven fundamental philosophical Principles:[66]

  • Identity/contradiction. If a proposition is true, then its negation is false and vice versa.
  • Identity of indiscernibles. Two distinct things cannot have all their properties in common. If every predicate possessed by x is also possessed by y and vice versa, then entities x and y are identical; to suppose two things indiscernible is to suppose the same thing under two names. Frequently invoked in modern logic and philosophy, the "identity of indiscernibles" is often referred to as Leibniz's Law. It has attracted the most controversy and criticism, especially from corpuscular philosophy and quantum mechanics.
  • Sufficient reason. "There must be a sufficient reason for anything to exist, for any event to occur, for any truth to obtain."[67]
  • Pre-established harmony.[68] "[T]he appropriate nature of each substance brings it about that what happens to one corresponds to what happens to all the others, without, however, their acting upon one another directly." (Discourse on Metaphysics, XIV) A dropped glass shatters because it "knows" it has hit the ground, and not because the impact with the ground "compels" the glass to split.
  • Law of continuity. Natura non facit saltus[69] (literally, "Nature does not make jumps").
  • Optimism. "God assuredly always chooses the best."[70]
  • Plenitude. Leibniz believed that the best of all possible worlds would actualize every genuine possibility, and argued in Théodicée that this best of all possible worlds will contain all possibilities, with our finite experience of eternity giving no reason to dispute nature's perfection.[71]

Leibniz would on occasion give a rational defense of a specific principle, but more often took them for granted.[72]

Monads edit

 
A page from Leibniz's manuscript of the Monadology

Leibniz's best known contribution to metaphysics is his theory of monads, as exposited in Monadologie. He proposes his theory that the universe is made of an infinite number of simple substances known as monads.[73] Monads can also be compared to the corpuscles of the mechanical philosophy of René Descartes and others. These simple substances or monads are the "ultimate units of existence in nature". Monads have no parts but still exist by the qualities that they have. These qualities are continuously changing over time, and each monad is unique. They are also not affected by time and are subject to only creation and annihilation.[74] Monads are centers of force; substance is force, while space, matter, and motion are merely phenomenal. It is said that he anticipated Albert Einstein by arguing, against Newton, that space, time, and motion are completely relative as he quipped,[75] "As for my own opinion, I have said more than once, that I hold space to be something merely relative, as time is, that I hold it to be an order of coexistences, as time is an order of successions."[76] Einstein, who called himself a "Leibnizian" even wrote in the introduction to Max Jammer's book Concepts of Space that Leibnizianism was superior to Newtonianism, and his ideas would have dominated over Newton's had it not been for the poor technological tools of the time; it has been argued that Leibniz paved the way for Einstein's theory of relativity.[77]

Leibniz's proof of God can be summarized in the Théodicée.[78] Reason is governed by the principle of contradiction and the principle of sufficient reason. Using the principle of reasoning, Leibniz concluded that the first reason of all things is God.[78] All that we see and experience is subject to change, and the fact that this world is contingent can be explained by the possibility of the world being arranged differently in space and time. The contingent world must have some necessary reason for its existence. Leibniz uses a geometry book as an example to explain his reasoning. If this book was copied from an infinite chain of copies, there must be some reason for the content of the book.[79] Leibniz concluded that there must be the "monas monadum" or God.

The ontological essence of a monad is its irreducible simplicity. Unlike atoms, monads possess no material or spatial character. They also differ from atoms by their complete mutual independence, so that interactions among monads are only apparent. Instead, by virtue of the principle of pre-established harmony, each monad follows a pre-programmed set of "instructions" peculiar to itself, so that a monad "knows" what to do at each moment. By virtue of these intrinsic instructions, each monad is like a little mirror of the universe. Monads need not be "small"; e.g., each human being constitutes a monad, in which case free will is problematic.

Monads are purported to have gotten rid of the problematic:

  • interaction between mind and matter arising in the system of Descartes;
  • lack of individuation inherent to the system of Spinoza, which represents individual creatures as merely accidental.

Theodicy and optimism edit

The Theodicy[80] tries to justify the apparent imperfections of the world by claiming that it is optimal among all possible worlds. It must be the best possible and most balanced world, because it was created by an all powerful and all knowing God, who would not choose to create an imperfect world if a better world could be known to him or possible to exist. In effect, apparent flaws that can be identified in this world must exist in every possible world, because otherwise God would have chosen to create the world that excluded those flaws.[81]

Leibniz asserted that the truths of theology (religion) and philosophy cannot contradict each other, since reason and faith are both "gifts of God" so that their conflict would imply God contending against himself. The Theodicy is Leibniz's attempt to reconcile his personal philosophical system with his interpretation of the tenets of Christianity.[82] This project was motivated in part by Leibniz's belief, shared by many philosophers and theologians during the Enlightenment, in the rational and enlightened nature of the Christian religion. It was also shaped by Leibniz's belief in the perfectibility of human nature (if humanity relied on correct philosophy and religion as a guide), and by his belief that metaphysical necessity must have a rational or logical foundation, even if this metaphysical causality seemed inexplicable in terms of physical necessity (the natural laws identified by science).

Because reason and faith must be entirely reconciled, any tenet of faith which could not be defended by reason must be rejected. Leibniz then approached one of the central criticisms of Christian theism:[83] if God is all good, all wise, and all powerful, then how did evil come into the world? The answer (according to Leibniz) is that, while God is indeed unlimited in wisdom and power, his human creations, as creations, are limited both in their wisdom and in their will (power to act). This predisposes humans to false beliefs, wrong decisions, and ineffective actions in the exercise of their free will. God does not arbitrarily inflict pain and suffering on humans; rather he permits both moral evil (sin) and physical evil (pain and suffering) as the necessary consequences of metaphysical evil (imperfection), as a means by which humans can identify and correct their erroneous decisions, and as a contrast to true good.[84]

Further, although human actions flow from prior causes that ultimately arise in God and therefore are known to God as metaphysical certainties, an individual's free will is exercised within natural laws, where choices are merely contingently necessary and to be decided in the event by a "wonderful spontaneity" that provides individuals with an escape from rigorous predestination.

Discourse on Metaphysics edit

For Leibniz, "God is an absolutely perfect being". He describes this perfection later in section VI as the simplest form of something with the most substantial outcome (VI). Along these lines, he declares that every type of perfection "pertains to him (God) in the highest degree" (I). Even though his types of perfections are not specifically drawn out, Leibniz highlights the one thing that, to him, does certify imperfections and proves that God is perfect: "that one acts imperfectly if he acts with less perfection than he is capable of", and since God is a perfect being, he cannot act imperfectly (III). Because God cannot act imperfectly, the decisions he makes pertaining to the world must be perfect. Leibniz also comforts readers, stating that because he has done everything to the most perfect degree; those who love him cannot be injured. However, to love God is a subject of difficulty as Leibniz believes that we are "not disposed to wish for that which God desires" because we have the ability to alter our disposition (IV). In accordance with this, many act as rebels, but Leibniz says that the only way we can truly love God is by being content "with all that comes to us according to his will" (IV).

Because God is "an absolutely perfect being" (I), Leibniz argues that God would be acting imperfectly if he acted with any less perfection than what he is able of (III). His syllogism then ends with the statement that God has made the world perfectly in all ways. This also affects how we should view God and his will. Leibniz states that, in lieu of God's will, we have to understand that God "is the best of all masters" and he will know when his good succeeds, so we, therefore, must act in conformity to his good will—or as much of it as we understand (IV). In our view of God, Leibniz declares that we cannot admire the work solely because of the maker, lest we mar the glory and love God in doing so. Instead, we must admire the maker for the work he has done (II). Effectively, Leibniz states that if we say the earth is good because of the will of God, and not good according to some standards of goodness, then how can we praise God for what he has done if contrary actions are also praiseworthy by this definition (II). Leibniz then asserts that different principles and geometry cannot simply be from the will of God, but must follow from his understanding.[85]


Leibniz wrote: "Why is there something rather than nothing? The sufficient reason ... is found in a substance which ... is a necessary being bearing the reason for its existence within itself."[86] Martin Heidegger called this question "the fundamental question of metaphysics".[87][88]

Symbolic thought and rational resolution of disputes edit

Leibniz believed that much of human reasoning could be reduced to calculations of a sort, and that such calculations could resolve many differences of opinion:

The only way to rectify our reasonings is to make them as tangible as those of the Mathematicians, so that we can find our error at a glance, and when there are disputes among persons, we can simply say: Let us calculate, without further ado, to see who is right.[89][90][91]

Leibniz's calculus ratiocinator, which resembles symbolic logic, can be viewed as a way of making such calculations feasible. Leibniz wrote memoranda[92] that can now be read as groping attempts to get symbolic logic—and thus his calculus—off the ground. These writings remained unpublished until the appearance of a selection edited by Carl Immanuel Gerhardt (1859). Louis Couturat published a selection in 1901; by this time the main developments of modern logic had been created by Charles Sanders Peirce and by Gottlob Frege.

Leibniz thought symbols were important for human understanding. He attached so much importance to the development of good notations that he attributed all his discoveries in mathematics to this. His notation for calculus is an example of his skill in this regard. Leibniz's passion for symbols and notation, as well as his belief that these are essential to a well-running logic and mathematics, made him a precursor of semiotics.[93]

But Leibniz took his speculations much further. Defining a character as any written sign, he then defined a "real" character as one that represents an idea directly and not simply as the word embodying the idea. Some real characters, such as the notation of logic, serve only to facilitate reasoning. Many characters well known in his day, including Egyptian hieroglyphics, Chinese characters, and the symbols of astronomy and chemistry, he deemed not real.[94] Instead, he proposed the creation of a characteristica universalis or "universal characteristic", built on an alphabet of human thought in which each fundamental concept would be represented by a unique "real" character:

It is obvious that if we could find characters or signs suited for expressing all our thoughts as clearly and as exactly as arithmetic expresses numbers or geometry expresses lines, we could do in all matters insofar as they are subject to reasoning all that we can do in arithmetic and geometry. For all investigations which depend on reasoning would be carried out by transposing these characters and by a species of calculus.[95]

Complex thoughts would be represented by combining characters for simpler thoughts. Leibniz saw that the uniqueness of prime factorization suggests a central role for prime numbers in the universal characteristic, a striking anticipation of Gödel numbering. Granted, there is no intuitive or mnemonic way to number any set of elementary concepts using the prime numbers.

Because Leibniz was a mathematical novice when he first wrote about the characteristic, at first he did not conceive it as an algebra but rather as a universal language or script. Only in 1676 did he conceive of a kind of "algebra of thought", modeled on and including conventional algebra and its notation. The resulting characteristic included a logical calculus, some combinatorics, algebra, his analysis situs (geometry of situation), a universal concept language, and more. What Leibniz actually intended by his characteristica universalis and calculus ratiocinator, and the extent to which modern formal logic does justice to calculus, may never be established.[96] Leibniz's idea of reasoning through a universal language of symbols and calculations remarkably foreshadows great 20th-century developments in formal systems, such as Turing completeness, where computation was used to define equivalent universal languages (see Turing degree).

Formal logic edit

Leibniz has been noted as one of the most important logicians between the times of Aristotle and Gottlob Frege.[97] Leibniz enunciated the principal properties of what we now call conjunction, disjunction, negation, identity, set inclusion, and the empty set. The principles of Leibniz's logic and, arguably, of his whole philosophy, reduce to two:

  1. All our ideas are compounded from a very small number of simple ideas, which form the alphabet of human thought.
  2. Complex ideas proceed from these simple ideas by a uniform and symmetrical combination, analogous to arithmetical multiplication.

The formal logic that emerged early in the 20th century also requires, at minimum, unary negation and quantified variables ranging over some universe of discourse.

Leibniz published nothing on formal logic in his lifetime; most of what he wrote on the subject consists of working drafts. In his History of Western Philosophy, Bertrand Russell went so far as to claim that Leibniz had developed logic in his unpublished writings to a level which was reached only 200 years later.

Russell's principal work on Leibniz found that many of Leibniz's most startling philosophical ideas and claims (e.g., that each of the fundamental monads mirrors the whole universe) follow logically from Leibniz's conscious choice to reject relations between things as unreal. He regarded such relations as (real) qualities of things (Leibniz admitted unary predicates only): For him, "Mary is the mother of John" describes separate qualities of Mary and of John. This view contrasts with the relational logic of De Morgan, Peirce, Schröder and Russell himself, now standard in predicate logic. Notably, Leibniz also declared space and time to be inherently relational.[98]

Leibniz's 1690 discovery of his algebra of concepts[99][100] (deductively equivalent to the Boolean algebra)[101] and the associated metaphysics, are of interest in present-day computational metaphysics.[102]

Mathematics edit

Although the mathematical notion of function was implicit in trigonometric and logarithmic tables, which existed in his day, Leibniz was the first, in 1692 and 1694, to employ it explicitly, to denote any of several geometric concepts derived from a curve, such as abscissa, ordinate, tangent, chord, and the perpendicular (see History of the function concept).[103] In the 18th century, "function" lost these geometrical associations. Leibniz also believed that the sum of an infinite number of zeros would be equal to one half using the analogy of the creation of the world from nothing.[104] Leibniz was also one of the pioneers in actuarial science, calculating the purchase price of life annuities and the liquidation of a state's debt.[105]

Leibniz's research into formal logic, also relevant to mathematics, is discussed in the preceding section. The best overview of Leibniz's writings on calculus may be found in Bos (1974).[106]

Leibniz, who invented one of the earliest mechanical calculators, said of calculation: "For it is unworthy of excellent men to lose hours like slaves in the labor of calculation which could safely be relegated to anyone else if machines were used."[107]

Linear systems edit

Leibniz arranged the coefficients of a system of linear equations into an array, now called a matrix, in order to find a solution to the system if it existed.[108] This method was later called Gaussian elimination. Leibniz laid down the foundations and theory of determinants, although the Japanese mathematician Seki Takakazu also discovered determinants independently of Leibniz.[109][110] His works show calculating the determinants using cofactors.[111] Calculating the determinant using cofactors is named the Leibniz formula. Finding the determinant of a matrix using this method proves impractical with large n, requiring to calculate n! products and the number of n-permutations.[112] He also solved systems of linear equations using determinants, which is now called Cramer's rule. This method for solving systems of linear equations based on determinants was found in 1684 by Leibniz (Cramer published his findings in 1750).[110] Although Gaussian elimination requires   arithmetic operations, linear algebra textbooks still teach cofactor expansion before LU factorization.[113][114]

Geometry edit

The Leibniz formula for π states that

 

Leibniz wrote that circles "can most simply be expressed by this series, that is, the aggregate of fractions alternately added and subtracted".[115] However this formula is only accurate with a large number of terms, using 10,000,000 terms to obtain the correct value of π/4 to 8 decimal places.[116] Leibniz attempted to create a definition for a straight line while attempting to prove the parallel postulate.[117] While most mathematicians defined a straight line as the shortest line between two points, Leibniz believed that this was merely a property of a straight line rather than the definition.[118]

Calculus edit

Leibniz is credited, along with Isaac Newton, with the discovery of calculus (differential and integral calculus). According to Leibniz's notebooks, a critical breakthrough occurred on 11 November 1675, when he employed integral calculus for the first time to find the area under the graph of a function y = f(x).[119] He introduced several notations used to this day, for instance the integral sign ( ), representing an elongated S, from the Latin word summa, and the d used for differentials ( ), from the Latin word differentia. Leibniz did not publish anything about his calculus until 1684.[120] Leibniz expressed the inverse relation of integration and differentiation, later called the fundamental theorem of calculus, by means of a figure[121] in his 1693 paper Supplementum geometriae dimensoriae....[122] However, James Gregory is credited for the theorem's discovery in geometric form, Isaac Barrow proved a more generalized geometric version, and Newton developed supporting theory. The concept became more transparent as developed through Leibniz's formalism and new notation.[123] The product rule of differential calculus is still called "Leibniz's law". In addition, the theorem that tells how and when to differentiate under the integral sign is called the Leibniz integral rule.

Leibniz exploited infinitesimals in developing calculus, manipulating them in ways suggesting that they had paradoxical algebraic properties. George Berkeley, in a tract called The Analyst and also in De Motu, criticized these. A recent study argues that Leibnizian calculus was free of contradictions, and was better grounded than Berkeley's empiricist criticisms.[124]

From 1711 until his death, Leibniz was engaged in a dispute with John Keill, Newton and others, over whether Leibniz had invented calculus independently of Newton.

The use of infinitesimals in mathematics was frowned upon by followers of Karl Weierstrass,[125][126] but survived in science and engineering, and even in rigorous mathematics, via the fundamental computational device known as the differential. Beginning in 1960, Abraham Robinson worked out a rigorous foundation for Leibniz's infinitesimals, using model theory, in the context of a field of hyperreal numbers. The resulting non-standard analysis can be seen as a belated vindication of Leibniz's mathematical reasoning. Robinson's transfer principle is a mathematical implementation of Leibniz's heuristic law of continuity, while the standard part function implements the Leibnizian transcendental law of homogeneity.

Topology edit

Leibniz was the first to use the term analysis situs,[127] later used in the 19th century to refer to what is now known as topology. There are two takes on this situation. On the one hand, Mates, citing a 1954 paper in German by Jacob Freudenthal, argues:

Although for Leibniz the situs of a sequence of points is completely determined by the distance between them and is altered if those distances are altered, his admirer Euler, in the famous 1736 paper solving the Königsberg Bridge Problem and its generalizations, used the term geometria situs in such a sense that the situs remains unchanged under topological deformations. He mistakenly credits Leibniz with originating this concept. ... [It] is sometimes not realized that Leibniz used the term in an entirely different sense and hence can hardly be considered the founder of that part of mathematics.[128]

But Hideaki Hirano argues differently, quoting Mandelbrot:[129]

To sample Leibniz' scientific works is a sobering experience. Next to calculus, and to other thoughts that have been carried out to completion, the number and variety of premonitory thrusts is overwhelming. We saw examples in "packing", ... My Leibniz mania is further reinforced by finding that for one moment its hero attached importance to geometric scaling. In Euclidis Prota ..., which is an attempt to tighten Euclid's axioms, he states ...: "I have diverse definitions for the straight line. The straight line is a curve, any part of which is similar to the whole, and it alone has this property, not only among curves but among sets." This claim can be proved today.[130]

Thus the fractal geometry promoted by Mandelbrot drew on Leibniz's notions of self-similarity and the principle of continuity: Natura non facit saltus.[69] We also see that when Leibniz wrote, in a metaphysical vein, that "the straight line is a curve, any part of which is similar to the whole", he was anticipating topology by more than two centuries. As for "packing", Leibniz told his friend and correspondent Des Bosses to imagine a circle, then to inscribe within it three congruent circles with maximum radius; the latter smaller circles could be filled with three even smaller circles by the same procedure. This process can be continued infinitely, from which arises a good idea of self-similarity. Leibniz's improvement of Euclid's axiom contains the same concept.

Science and engineering edit

Leibniz's writings are currently discussed, not only for their anticipations and possible discoveries not yet recognized, but as ways of advancing present knowledge. Much of his writing on physics is included in Gerhardt's Mathematical Writings.

Physics edit

Leibniz contributed a fair amount to the statics and dynamics emerging around him, often disagreeing with Descartes and Newton. He devised a new theory of motion (dynamics) based on kinetic energy and potential energy, which posited space as relative, whereas Newton was thoroughly convinced that space was absolute. An important example of Leibniz's mature physical thinking is his Specimen Dynamicum of 1695.[131]

Until the discovery of subatomic particles and the quantum mechanics governing them, many of Leibniz's speculative ideas about aspects of nature not reducible to statics and dynamics made little sense. For instance, he anticipated Albert Einstein by arguing, against Newton, that space, time and motion are relative, not absolute: "As for my own opinion, I have said more than once, that I hold space to be something merely relative, as time is, that I hold it to be an order of coexistences, as time is an order of successions."[76]

Leibniz held a relationist notion of space and time, against Newton's substantivalist views.[132][133][134] According to Newton's substantivalism, space and time are entities in their own right, existing independently of things. Leibniz's relationism, in contrast, describes space and time as systems of relations that exist between objects. The rise of general relativity and subsequent work in the history of physics has put Leibniz's stance in a more favorable light.

One of Leibniz's projects was to recast Newton's theory as a vortex theory.[135] However, his project went beyond vortex theory, since at its heart there was an attempt to explain one of the most difficult problems in physics, that of the origin of the cohesion of matter.[135]

The principle of sufficient reason has been invoked in recent cosmology, and his identity of indiscernibles in quantum mechanics, a field some even credit him with having anticipated in some sense. In addition to his theories about the nature of reality, Leibniz's contributions to the development of calculus have also had a major impact on physics.

The vis viva edit

Leibniz's vis viva (Latin for "living force") is mv2, twice the modern kinetic energy. He realized that the total energy would be conserved in certain mechanical systems, so he considered it an innate motive characteristic of matter.[136] Here too his thinking gave rise to another regrettable nationalistic dispute. His vis viva was seen as rivaling the conservation of momentum championed by Newton in England and by Descartes and Voltaire in France; hence academics in those countries tended to neglect Leibniz's idea. Leibniz knew of the validity of conservation of momentum. In reality, both energy and momentum are conserved (in closed systems), so both approaches are valid.

Other natural science edit

By proposing that the earth has a molten core, he anticipated modern geology. In embryology, he was a preformationist, but also proposed that organisms are the outcome of a combination of an infinite number of possible microstructures and of their powers. In the life sciences and paleontology, he revealed an amazing transformist intuition, fueled by his study of comparative anatomy and fossils. One of his principal works on this subject, Protogaea, unpublished in his lifetime, has recently been published in English for the first time. He worked out a primal organismic theory.[137] In medicine, he exhorted the physicians of his time—with some results—to ground their theories in detailed comparative observations and verified experiments, and to distinguish firmly scientific and metaphysical points of view.

Psychology edit

Psychology had been a central interest of Leibniz.[138][139] He appears to be an "underappreciated pioneer of psychology"[140] He wrote on topics which are now regarded as fields of psychology: attention and consciousness, memory, learning (association), motivation (the act of "striving"), emergent individuality, the general dynamics of development (evolutionary psychology). His discussions in the New Essays and Monadology often rely on everyday observations such as the behaviour of a dog or the noise of the sea, and he develops intuitive analogies (the synchronous running of clocks or the balance spring of a clock). He also devised postulates and principles that apply to psychology: the continuum of the unnoticed petites perceptions to the distinct, self-aware apperception, and psychophysical parallelism from the point of view of causality and of purpose: "Souls act according to the laws of final causes, through aspirations, ends and means. Bodies act according to the laws of efficient causes, i.e. the laws of motion. And these two realms, that of efficient causes and that of final causes, harmonize with one another."[141] This idea refers to the mind-body problem, stating that the mind and brain do not act upon each other, but act alongside each other separately but in harmony.[142] Leibniz, however, did not use the term psychologia.[143] Leibniz's epistemological position—against John Locke and English empiricism (sensualism)—was made clear: "Nihil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu, nisi intellectu ipse." – "Nothing is in the intellect that was not first in the senses, except the intellect itself."[144] Principles that are not present in sensory impressions can be recognised in human perception and consciousness: logical inferences, categories of thought, the principle of causality and the principle of purpose (teleology).

Leibniz found his most important interpreter in Wilhelm Wundt, founder of psychology as a discipline. Wundt used the "… nisi intellectu ipse" quotation 1862 on the title page of his Beiträge zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung (Contributions on the Theory of Sensory Perception) and published a detailed and aspiring monograph on Leibniz.[145] Wundt shaped the term apperception, introduced by Leibniz, into an experimental psychologically based apperception psychology that included neuropsychological modelling – an excellent example of how a concept created by a great philosopher could stimulate a psychological research program. One principle in the thinking of Leibniz played a fundamental role: "the principle of equality of separate but corresponding viewpoints." Wundt characterized this style of thought (perspectivism) in a way that also applied for him—viewpoints that "supplement one another, while also being able to appear as opposites that only resolve themselves when considered more deeply."[146][147] Much of Leibniz's work went on to have a great impact on the field of psychology.[148] Leibniz thought that there are many petites perceptions, or small perceptions of which we perceive but of which we are unaware. He believed that by the principle that phenomena found in nature were continuous by default, it was likely that the transition between conscious and unconscious states had intermediary steps.[149] For this to be true, there must also be a portion of the mind of which we are unaware at any given time. His theory regarding consciousness in relation to the principle of continuity can be seen as an early theory regarding the stages of sleep. In this way, Leibniz's theory of perception can be viewed as one of many theories leading up to the idea of the unconscious. Leibniz was a direct influence on Ernst Platner, who is credited with originally coining the term Unbewußtseyn (unconscious).[150] Additionally, the idea of subliminal stimuli can be traced back to his theory of small perceptions.[151] Leibniz's ideas regarding music and tonal perception went on to influence the laboratory studies of Wilhelm Wundt.[152]

Social science edit

In public health, he advocated establishing a medical administrative authority, with powers over epidemiology and veterinary medicine. He worked to set up a coherent medical training program, oriented towards public health and preventive measures. In economic policy, he proposed tax reforms and a national insurance program, and discussed the balance of trade. He even proposed something akin to what much later emerged as game theory. In sociology he laid the ground for communication theory.

Technology edit

In 1906, Garland published a volume of Leibniz's writings bearing on his many practical inventions and engineering work. To date, few of these writings have been translated into English. Nevertheless, it is well understood that Leibniz was a serious inventor, engineer, and applied scientist, with great respect for practical life. Following the motto theoria cum praxi, he urged that theory be combined with practical application, and thus has been claimed as the father of applied science. He designed wind-driven propellers and water pumps, mining machines to extract ore, hydraulic presses, lamps, submarines, clocks, etc. With Denis Papin, he created a steam engine. He even proposed a method for desalinating water. From 1680 to 1685, he struggled to overcome the chronic flooding that afflicted the ducal silver mines in the Harz Mountains, but did not succeed.[153]

Computation edit

Leibniz may have been the first computer scientist and information theorist.[154] Early in life, he documented the binary numeral system (base 2), then revisited that system throughout his career.[155] While Leibniz was examining other cultures to compare his metaphysical views, he encountered an ancient Chinese book I Ching. Leibniz interpreted a diagram which showed yin and yang and corresponded it to a zero and one.[156] More information can be found in the Sinophology section. Leibniz had similarities with Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz and Thomas Harriot, who independently developed the binary system, as he was familiar with their works on the binary system.[157] Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz worked extensively on logarithms including logarithms with base 2.[158] Thomas Harriot's manuscripts contained a table of binary numbers and their notation, which demonstrated that any number could be written on a base 2 system.[159] Regardless, Leibniz simplified the binary system and articulated logical properties such as conjunction, disjunction, negation, identity, inclusion, and the empty set.[160] He anticipated Lagrangian interpolation and algorithmic information theory. His calculus ratiocinator anticipated aspects of the universal Turing machine. In 1961, Norbert Wiener suggested that Leibniz should be considered the patron saint of cybernetics.[161] Wiener is quoted with "Indeed, the general idea of a computing machine is nothing but a mechanization of Leibniz's Calculus Ratiocinator."[162]

In 1671, Leibniz began to invent a machine that could execute all four arithmetic operations, gradually improving it over a number of years. This "stepped reckoner" attracted fair attention and was the basis of his election to the Royal Society in 1673. A number of such machines were made during his years in Hanover by a craftsman working under his supervision. They were not an unambiguous success because they did not fully mechanize the carry operation. Couturat reported finding an unpublished note by Leibniz, dated 1674, describing a machine capable of performing some algebraic operations.[163] Leibniz also devised a (now reproduced) cipher machine, recovered by Nicholas Rescher in 2010.[164] In 1693, Leibniz described a design of a machine which could, in theory, integrate differential equations, which he called "integraph".[165]

Leibniz was groping towards hardware and software concepts worked out much later by Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace. In 1679, while mulling over his binary arithmetic, Leibniz imagined a machine in which binary numbers were represented by marbles, governed by a rudimentary sort of punched cards.[166][167] Modern electronic digital computers replace Leibniz's marbles moving by gravity with shift registers, voltage gradients, and pulses of electrons, but otherwise they run roughly as Leibniz envisioned in 1679.

Librarian edit

Later in Leibniz's career (after the death of von Boyneburg), Leibniz moved to Paris and accepted a position as a librarian in the Hanoverian court of Johann Friedrich, Duke of Brunswick-Luneburg.[168] Leibniz's predecessor, Tobias Fleischer, had already created a cataloging system for the Duke's library but it was a clumsy attempt. At this library, Leibniz focused more on advancing the library than on the cataloging. For instance, within a month of taking the new position, he developed a comprehensive plan to expand the library. He was one of the first to consider developing a core collection for a library and felt "that a library for display and ostentation is a luxury and indeed superfluous, but a well-stocked and organized library is important and useful for all areas of human endeavor and is to be regarded on the same level as schools and churches".[169] Leibniz lacked the funds to develop the library in this manner. After working at this library, by the end of 1690 Leibniz was appointed as privy-councilor and librarian of the Bibliotheca Augusta at Wolfenbüttel. It was an extensive library with at least 25,946 printed volumes.[169] At this library, Leibniz sought to improve the catalog. He was not allowed to make complete changes to the existing closed catalog, but was allowed to improve upon it so he started on that task immediately. He created an alphabetical author catalog and had also created other cataloging methods that were not implemented. While serving as librarian of the ducal libraries in Hanover and Wolfenbüttel, Leibniz effectively became one of the founders of library science. Seemingly, Leibniz paid a good deal of attention to the classification of subject matter, favoring a well-balance library covering a host of numerous subjects and interests.[170] Leibniz, for example, proposed the following classification system in the Otivm Hanoveranvm Sive Miscellanea (1737).[170][171]

Leibniz's Idea of Arranging a Narrower Library

  • Theology
  • Jurisprudence
  • Medicine
  • Intellectual Philosophy
  • Philosophy of the Imagination or Mathematics
  • Philosophy of Sensible Things or Physics
  • Philology or Language
  • Civil History
  • Literary History and Libraries
  • General and Miscellaneous

He also designed a book indexing system in ignorance of the only other such system then extant, that of the Bodleian Library at Oxford University. He also called on publishers to distribute abstracts of all new titles they produced each year, in a standard form that would facilitate indexing. He hoped that this abstracting project would eventually include everything printed from his day back to Gutenberg. Neither proposal met with success at the time, but something like them became standard practice among English language publishers during the 20th century, under the aegis of the Library of Congress and the British Library.[citation needed]

He called for the creation of an empirical database as a way to further all sciences. His characteristica universalis, calculus ratiocinator, and a "community of minds"—intended, among other things, to bring political and religious unity to Europe—can be seen as distant unwitting anticipations of artificial languages (e.g., Esperanto and its rivals), symbolic logic, even the World Wide Web.

Advocate of scientific societies edit

Leibniz emphasized that research was a collaborative endeavor. Hence he warmly advocated the formation of national scientific societies along the lines of the British Royal Society and the French Académie Royale des Sciences. More specifically, in his correspondence and travels he urged the creation of such societies in Dresden, Saint Petersburg, Vienna, and Berlin. Only one such project came to fruition; in 1700, the Berlin Academy of Sciences was created. Leibniz drew up its first statutes, and served as its first President for the remainder of his life. That Academy evolved into the German Academy of Sciences, the publisher of the ongoing critical edition of his works.[172]

Law and Morality edit

Leibniz's writings on law, ethics, and politics[173] were long overlooked by English-speaking scholars, but this has changed of late.[174]

While Leibniz was no apologist for absolute monarchy like Hobbes, or for tyranny in any form, neither did he echo the political and constitutional views of his contemporary John Locke, views invoked in support of liberalism, in 18th-century America and later elsewhere. The following excerpt from a 1695 letter to Baron J. C. Boyneburg's son Philipp is very revealing of Leibniz's political sentiments:

As for ... the great question of the power of sovereigns and the obedience their peoples owe them, I usually say that it would be good for princes to be persuaded that their people have the right to resist them, and for the people, on the other hand, to be persuaded to obey them passively. I am, however, quite of the opinion of Grotius, that one ought to obey as a rule, the evil of revolution being greater beyond comparison than the evils causing it. Yet I recognize that a prince can go to such excess, and place the well-being of the state in such danger, that the obligation to endure ceases. This is most rare, however, and the theologian who authorizes violence under this pretext should take care against excess; excess being infinitely more dangerous than deficiency.[175]

In 1677, Leibniz called for a European confederation, governed by a council or senate, whose members would represent entire nations and would be free to vote their consciences;[176] this is sometimes considered an anticipation of the European Union. He believed that Europe would adopt a uniform religion. He reiterated these proposals in 1715.

But at the same time, he arrived to propose an interreligious and multicultural project to create a universal system of justice, which required from him a broad interdisciplinary perspective. In order to propose it, he combined linguistics (especially sinology), moral and legal philosophy, management, economics, and politics.[177]

Law edit

Leibniz trained as a legal academic, but under the tutelage of Cartesian-sympathiser Erhard Weigel we already see an attempt to solve legal problems by rationalist mathematical methods (Weigel's influence being most explicit in the Specimen Quaestionum Philosophicarum ex Jure collectarum (An Essay of Collected Philosophical Problems of Right)). For example, the Inaugural Disputation on Perplexing Cases[178] uses early combinatorics to solve some legal disputes, while the 1666 Dissertation on the Combinatorial Art[179] includes simple legal problems by way of illustration.

The use of combinatorial methods to solve legal and moral problems seems, via Athanasius Kircher and Daniel Schwenter to be of Llullist inspiration: Ramón Llull attempted to solve ecumenical disputes through recourse to a combinatorial mode of reasoning he regarded as universal (a mathesis universalis).[180]

In the late 1660s the enlightened Prince-Bishop of Mainz Johann Philipp von Schönborn announced a review of the legal system and made available a position to support his current law commissioner. Leibniz left Franconia and made for Mainz before even winning the role. On reaching Frankfurt am Main Leibniz penned The New Method of Teaching and Learning the Law, by way of application.[181] The text proposed a reform of legal education and is characteristically syncretic, integrating aspects of Thomism, Hobbesianism, Cartesianism and traditional jurisprudence. Leibniz's argument that the function of legal teaching was not to impress rules as one might train a dog, but to aid the student in discovering their own public reason, evidently impressed von Schönborn as he secured the job.

Leibniz's next major attempt to find a universal rational core to law and so found a legal "science of right",[182] came when Leibniz worked in Mainz from 1667–72. Starting initially from Hobbes' mechanistic doctrine of power, Leibniz reverted to logico-combinatorial methods in an attempt to define justice.[183] As Leibniz's so-called Elementa Juris Naturalis advanced, he built in modal notions of right (possibility) and obligation (necessity) in which we see perhaps the earliest elaboration of his possible worlds doctrine within a deontic frame.[184] While ultimately the Elementa remained unpublished, Leibniz continued to work on his drafts and promote their ideas to correspondents up until his death.

Ecumenism edit

Leibniz devoted considerable intellectual and diplomatic effort to what would now be called an ecumenical endeavor, seeking to reconcile the Roman Catholic and Lutheran churches. In this respect, he followed the example of his early patrons, Baron von Boyneburg and the Duke John Frederick—both cradle Lutherans who converted to Catholicism as adults—who did what they could to encourage the reunion of the two faiths, and who warmly welcomed such endeavors by others. (The House of Brunswick remained Lutheran, because the Duke's children did not follow their father.) These efforts included corresponding with French bishop Jacques-Bénigne Bossuet, and involved Leibniz in some theological controversy. He evidently thought that the thoroughgoing application of reason would suffice to heal the breach caused by the Reformation.

Philology edit

Leibniz the philologist was an avid student of languages, eagerly latching on to any information about vocabulary and grammar that came his way. In 1710, he applied ideas of gradualism and uniformitarianism to linguistics in a short essay.[185] He refuted the belief, widely held by Christian scholars of the time, that Hebrew was the primeval language of the human race. At the same time, he rejected the idea of unrelated language groups and considered them all to have a common source.[186] He also refuted the argument, advanced by Swedish scholars in his day, that a form of proto-Swedish was the ancestor of the Germanic languages. He puzzled over the origins of the Slavic languages and was fascinated by classical Chinese. Leibniz was also an expert in the Sanskrit language.[104]

He published the princeps editio (first modern edition) of the late medieval Chronicon Holtzatiae, a Latin chronicle of the County of Holstein.

Sinophology edit

 
A diagram of I Ching hexagrams sent to Leibniz from Joachim Bouvet. The Arabic numerals were added by Leibniz.[187]

Leibniz was perhaps the first major European intellectual to take a close interest in Chinese civilization, which he knew by corresponding with, and reading other works by, European Christian missionaries posted in China. He apparently read Confucius Sinarum Philosophus in the first year of its publication.[188] He came to the conclusion that Europeans could learn much from the Confucian ethical tradition. He mulled over the possibility that the Chinese characters were an unwitting form of his universal characteristic. He noted how the I Ching hexagrams correspond to the binary numbers from 000000 to 111111, and concluded that this mapping was evidence of major Chinese accomplishments in the sort of philosophical mathematics he admired.[189] Leibniz communicated his ideas of the binary system representing Christianity to the Emperor of China, hoping it would convert him.[104] Leibniz was one of the western philosophers of the time who attempted to accommodate Confucian ideas to prevailing European beliefs.[190]

Leibniz's attraction to Chinese philosophy originates from his perception that Chinese philosophy was similar to his own.[188] The historian E.R. Hughes suggests that Leibniz's ideas of "simple substance" and "pre-established harmony" were directly influenced by Confucianism, pointing to the fact that they were conceived during the period when he was reading Confucius Sinarum Philosophus.[188]

Polymath edit

While making his grand tour of European archives to research the Brunswick family history that he never completed, Leibniz stopped in Vienna between May 1688 and February 1689, where he did much legal and diplomatic work for the Brunswicks. He visited mines, talked with mine engineers, and tried to negotiate export contracts for lead from the ducal mines in the Harz mountains. His proposal that the streets of Vienna be lit with lamps burning rapeseed oil was implemented. During a formal audience with the Austrian Emperor and in subsequent memoranda, he advocated reorganizing the Austrian economy, reforming the coinage of much of central Europe, negotiating a Concordat between the Habsburgs and the Vatican, and creating an imperial research library, official archive, and public insurance fund. He wrote and published an important paper on mechanics.

Posthumous reputation edit

 
Leibnizstrasse street sign Berlin

When Leibniz died, his reputation was in decline. He was remembered for only one book, the Théodicée,[191] whose supposed central argument Voltaire lampooned in his popular book Candide, which concludes with the character Candide saying, "Non liquet" (it is not clear), a term that was applied during the Roman Republic to a legal verdict of "not proven". Voltaire's depiction of Leibniz's ideas was so influential that many believed it to be an accurate description. Thus Voltaire and his Candide bear some of the blame for the lingering failure to appreciate and understand Leibniz's ideas. Leibniz had an ardent disciple, Christian Wolff, whose dogmatic and facile outlook did Leibniz's reputation much harm. He also influenced David Hume, who read his Théodicée and used some of his ideas.[192] In any event, philosophical fashion was moving away from the rationalism and system building of the 17th century, of which Leibniz had been such an ardent proponent. His work on law, diplomacy, and history was seen as of ephemeral interest. The vastness and richness of his correspondence went unrecognized.

Leibniz's reputation began to recover with the 1765 publication of the Nouveaux Essais. In 1768, Louis Dutens edited the first multi-volume edition of Leibniz's writings, followed in the 19th century by a number of editions, including those edited by Erdmann, Foucher de Careil, Gerhardt, Gerland, Klopp, and Mollat. Publication of Leibniz's correspondence with notables such as Antoine Arnauld, Samuel Clarke, Sophia of Hanover, and her daughter Sophia Charlotte of Hanover, began.

In 1900, Bertrand Russell published a critical study of Leibniz's metaphysics.[193] Shortly thereafter, Louis Couturat published an important study of Leibniz, and edited a volume of Leibniz's heretofore unpublished writings, mainly on logic. They made Leibniz somewhat respectable among 20th-century analytical and linguistic philosophers in the English-speaking world (Leibniz had already been of great influence to many Germans such as Bernhard Riemann). For example, Leibniz's phrase salva veritate, meaning interchangeability without loss of or compromising the truth, recurs in Willard Quine's writings. Nevertheless, the secondary literature on Leibniz did not really blossom until after World War II. This is especially true of English speaking countries; in Gregory Brown's bibliography fewer than 30 of the English language entries were published before 1946. American Leibniz studies owe much to Leroy Loemker (1904–1985) through his translations and his interpretive essays in LeClerc (1973).

Nicholas Jolley has surmised that Leibniz's reputation as a philosopher is now perhaps higher than at any time since he was alive.[194] Analytic and contemporary philosophy continue to invoke his notions of identity, individuation, and possible worlds. Work in the history of 17th- and 18th-century ideas has revealed more clearly the 17th-century "Intellectual Revolution" that preceded the better-known Industrial and commercial revolutions of the 18th and 19th centuries.

In Germany, various important institutions were named after Leibniz. In Hanover in particular, he is the namesake for some of the most important institutions in the town:

  • Leibniz University Hannover
  • Leibniz-Akademie, Institution for academic and non-academic training and further education in the business sector
  • Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek – Niedersächsische Landesbibliothek, one of the largest regional and academic libraries in Germany and, alongside the Oldenburg State Library and the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbüttel, one of the three state libraries in Lower Saxony
  • Gottfried-Wilhelm-Leibniz-Gesellschaft, Society for the cultivation and dissemination of Leibniz's teachings

outside of Hanover:

  • Leibniz Association, Berlin
  • Leibniz-Sozietät der Wissenschaften zu Berlin, Association of scientists founded in Berlin in 1993 with the legal form of a registered association; It continues the activities of the Academy of Sciences of the GDR with personnel continuity
  • Leibniz Kolleg of Tübingen University, central propaedeutic institution of the university, which aims to enable high school graduates to make a well-founded study decision through a ten-month, comprehensive general course of study and at the same time to introduce them to academic work
  • Leibniz Supercomputing Centre, Munich
  • more than 20 schools all over Germany

Awards:

In 1985, the German government created the Leibniz Prize, offering an annual award of 1.55 million euros for experimental results and 770,000 euros for theoretical ones. It was the world's largest prize for scientific achievement prior to the Fundamental Physics Prize.

The collection of manuscript papers of Leibniz at the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek – Niedersächische Landesbibliothek was inscribed on UNESCO's Memory of the World Register in 2007.[195]

Cultural references edit

Leibniz still receives popular attention. The Google Doodle for 1 July 2018 celebrated Leibniz's 372nd birthday.[196][197][198] Using a quill, his hand is shown writing "Google" in binary ASCII code.

One of the earliest popular but indirect expositions of Leibniz was Voltaire's satire Candide, published in 1759. Leibniz was lampooned as Professor Pangloss, described as "the greatest philosopher of the Holy Roman Empire".

Leibniz also appears as one of the main historical figures in Neal Stephenson's series of novels The Baroque Cycle. Stephenson credits readings and discussions concerning Leibniz for inspiring him to write the series.[199]

Leibniz also stars in Adam Ehrlich Sachs's novel The Organs of Sense.

The German biscuit Choco Leibniz is named after Leibniz, a famous resident of Hanover where the manufacturer Bahlsen is based.

Writings and publication edit

Leibniz mainly wrote in three languages: scholastic Latin, French and German. During his lifetime, he published many pamphlets and scholarly articles, but only two "philosophical" books, the Combinatorial Art and the Théodicée. (He published numerous pamphlets, often anonymous, on behalf of the House of Brunswick-Lüneburg, most notably the "De jure suprematum" a major consideration of the nature of sovereignty.) One substantial book appeared posthumously, his Nouveaux essais sur l'entendement humain, which Leibniz had withheld from publication after the death of John Locke. Only in 1895, when Bodemann completed his catalogue of Leibniz's manuscripts and correspondence, did the enormous extent of Leibniz's Nachlass become clear: about 15,000 letters to more than 1000 recipients plus more than 40,000 other items. Moreover, quite a few of these letters are of essay length. Much of his vast correspondence, especially the letters dated after 1700, remains unpublished, and much of what is published has appeared only in recent decades. The more than 67,000 records of the Leibniz Edition's Catalogue cover almost all of his known writings and the letters from him and to him. The amount, variety, and disorder of Leibniz's writings are a predictable result of a situation he described in a letter as follows:

I cannot tell you how extraordinarily distracted and spread out I am. I am trying to find various things in the archives; I look at old papers and hunt up unpublished documents. From these I hope to shed some light on the history of the [House of] Brunswick. I receive and answer a huge number of letters. At the same time, I have so many mathematical results, philosophical thoughts, and other literary innovations that should not be allowed to vanish that I often do not know where to begin.[200]

The extant parts of the critical edition[201] of Leibniz's writings are organized as follows:

  • Series 1. Political, Historical, and General Correspondence. 25 vols., 1666–1706.
  • Series 2. Philosophical Correspondence. 3 vols., 1663–1700.
  • Series 3. Mathematical, Scientific, and Technical Correspondence. 8 vols., 1672–1698.
  • Series 4. Political Writings. 9 vols., 1667–1702.
  • Series 5. Historical and Linguistic Writings. In preparation.
  • Series 6. Philosophical Writings. 7 vols., 1663–90, and Nouveaux essais sur l'entendement humain.
  • Series 7. Mathematical Writings. 6 vols., 1672–76.
  • Series 8. Scientific, Medical, and Technical Writings. 1 vol., 1668–76.

The systematic cataloguing of all of Leibniz's Nachlass began in 1901. It was hampered by two world wars and then by decades of German division into two states with the Cold War's "iron curtain" in between, separating scholars, and also scattering portions of his literary estates. The ambitious project has had to deal with writings in seven languages, contained in some 200,000 written and printed pages. In 1985 it was reorganized and included in a joint program of German federal and state (Länder) academies. Since then the branches in Potsdam, Münster, Hanover and Berlin have jointly published 57 volumes of the critical edition, with an average of 870 pages, and prepared index and concordance works.

Selected works edit

The year given is usually that in which the work was completed, not of its eventual publication.

  • 1666 (publ. 1690). De Arte Combinatoria (On the Art of Combination); partially translated in Loemker §1 and Parkinson (1966)
  • 1667. Nova Methodus Discendae Docendaeque Iurisprudentiae (A New Method for Learning and Teaching Jurisprudence)
  • 1667. "Dialogus de connexione inter res et verba"
  • 1671. Hypothesis Physica Nova (New Physical Hypothesis); Loemker §8.I (part)
  • 1673 Confessio philosophi (A Philosopher's Creed); an English translation is available online.
  • Oct. 1684. "Meditationes de cognitione, veritate et ideis" ("Meditations on Knowledge, Truth, and Ideas")
  • Nov. 1684. "Nova methodus pro maximis et minimis" ("New method for maximums and minimums"); translated in Struik, D. J., 1969. A Source Book in Mathematics, 1200–1800. Harvard University Press: 271–81.
  • 1686. Discours de métaphysique; Martin and Brown (1988), Ariew and Garber 35, Loemker §35, Wiener III.3, Woolhouse and Francks 1
  • 1686. Generales inquisitiones de analysi notionum et veritatum (General Inquiries About the Analysis of Concepts and of Truths)
  • 1694. "De primae philosophiae Emendatione, et de Notione Substantiae" ("On the Correction of First Philosophy and the Notion of Substance")
  • 1695. Système nouveau de la nature et de la communication des substances (New System of Nature)
  • 1700. Accessiones historicae[202]
  • 1703. "Explication de l'Arithmétique Binaire" ("Explanation of Binary Arithmetic"); Carl Immanuel Gerhardt, Mathematical Writings VII.223. An English translation by Lloyd Strickland is available online.
  • 1704 (publ. 1765). Nouveaux essais sur l'entendement humain. Translated in: Remnant, Peter, and Bennett, Jonathan, trans., 1996. New Essays on Human Understanding Langley translation 1896. Cambridge University Press. Wiener III.6 (part)
  • 1707–1710. Scriptores rerum Brunsvicensium[202] (3 Vols.)
  • 1710. Théodicée; Farrer, A. M., and Huggard, E. M., trans., 1985 (1952). Wiener III.11 (part). An English translation is available online at Project Gutenberg.
  • 1714. "Principes de la nature et de la Grâce fondés en raison"
  • 1714. Monadologie; translated by Nicholas Rescher, 1991. The Monadology: An Edition for Students. University of Pittsburgh Press. Ariew and Garber 213, Loemker §67, Wiener III.13, Woolhouse and Francks 19. An English translation by Robert Latta is online.

Posthumous works edit

 
Commercium philosophicum et mathematicum (1745), a collection of letters between Leibnitz and Johann Bernoulli

Collections edit

Six important collections of English translations are Wiener (1951), Parkinson (1966), Loemker (1969), Ariew and Garber (1989), Woolhouse and Francks (1998), and Strickland (2006). The ongoing critical edition of all of Leibniz's writings is Sämtliche Schriften und Briefe.[201]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Sometimes spelled Leibnitz. Pronunciation: /ˈlbnɪts/ LYBE-nits,[10] German: [ˈɡɔtfʁiːt ˈvɪlhɛlm ˈlaɪbnɪts] [11][12] or German: [ˈlaɪpnɪts] ;[13] French: Godefroi Guillaume Leibnitz[14] [ɡɔdfʁwa ɡijom lɛbnits].
  2. ^ There is no complete gathering of the writings of Leibniz translated into English.[18]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Michael Blamauer (ed.), The Mental as Fundamental: New Perspectives on Panpsychism, Walter de Gruyter, 2013, p. 111.
  2. ^ Fumerton, Richard (21 February 2000). "Foundationalist Theories of Epistemic Justification". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 19 August 2018.
  3. ^ Stefano Di Bella, Tad M. Schmaltz (eds.), The Problem of Universals in Early Modern Philosophy, Oxford University Press, 2017, p. 207 n. 25: "Leibniz's conceptualism [is related to] the Ockhamist tradition..."
  4. ^ A. B. Dickerson, Kant on Representation and Objectivity, Cambridge University Press, 2003, p. 85.
  5. ^ David, Marian (10 July 2022). Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University – via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  6. ^ Kurt Huber, Leibniz: Der Philosoph der universalen Harmonie, Severus Verlag, 2014, p. 29.
  7. ^ Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  8. ^ a b c Arthur 2014, p. 16.
  9. ^ a b Arthur 2014, p. 13.
  10. ^ "Leibniz" entry in Collins English Dictionary.
  11. ^ Mangold, Max, ed. (2005). Duden-Aussprachewörterbuch (Duden Pronunciation Dictionary) (in German) (7th ed.). Mannheim: Bibliographisches Institut GmbH. ISBN 978-3-411-04066-7.
  12. ^ Wells, John C. (2008), Longman Pronunciation Dictionary (3rd ed.), Longman, ISBN 9781405881180
  13. ^ Eva-Maria Krech; et al., eds. (2010). Deutsches Aussprachewörterbuch (German Pronunciation Dictionary) (in German) (1st ed.). Berlin: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG. ISBN 978-3-11-018203-3.
  14. ^ See inscription of the engraving depicted in the "1666–1676" section.
  15. ^ Dunne, Luke (21 December 2022). "Gottfried W. Leibniz: The Last True Genius". TheCollector. Retrieved 1 October 2023.
  16. ^ Murray, Stuart A.P. (2009). The library : an illustrated history. New York, NY: Skyhorse Pub. ISBN 978-1-60239-706-4.
  17. ^ Roughly 40%, 35% and 25%, respectively.www.gwlb.de 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Leibniz-Nachlass (i.e. Legacy of Leibniz), Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek (one of the three Official Libraries of the German state Lower Saxony).
  18. ^ Baird, Forrest E.; Kaufmann, Walter (2008). From Plato to Derrida. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-158591-1.
  19. ^ Russell, Bertrand (15 April 2013). History of Western Philosophy: Collectors Edition (revised ed.). Routledge. p. 469. ISBN 978-1-135-69284-1. Extract of page 469.
  20. ^ Handley, Lindsey D.; Foster, Stephen R. (2020). Don't Teach Coding: Until You Read This Book. John Wiley & Sons. p. 29. ISBN 9781119602620. Extract of page 29
  21. ^ Apostol, Tom M. (1991). Calculus, Volume 1 (illustrated ed.). John Wiley & Sons. p. 172. ISBN 9780471000051. Extract of page 172
  22. ^ Maor, Eli (2003). The Facts on File Calculus Handbook. The Facts on File Calculus Handbook. p. 58. ISBN 9781438109541. Extract of page 58
  23. ^ David Smith, pp. 173–181 (1929)
  24. ^ Sariel, Aviram. "Diabolic Philosophy." Studia Leibnitiana H. 1 (2019): 99-118.
  25. ^ Kurt Müller, Gisela Krönert, Leben und Werk von Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz: Eine Chronik. Frankfurt a.M., Klostermann 1969, p. 3.
  26. ^ Mates, Benson (1989). The Philosophy of Leibniz: Metaphysics and Language. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-505946-5.
  27. ^ Mackie (1845), 21
  28. ^ Mackie (1845), 22
  29. ^ "Leibniz biography". www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk. Retrieved 8 May 2018.
  30. ^ Mackie (1845), 26
  31. ^ a b c d e Arthur 2014, p. x.
  32. ^ Hubertus Busche, Leibniz' Weg ins perspektivische Universum: Eine Harmonie im Zeitalter der Berechnung, Meiner Verlag, 1997, p. 120.
  33. ^ A few copies of De Arte Combinatoria were produced as requested for the habilitation procedure; it was reprinted without his consent in 1690.
  34. ^ Jolley, Nicholas (1995). The Cambridge Companion to Leibniz. Cambridge University Press.:20
  35. ^ Simmons, George (2007). Calculus Gems: Brief Lives and Memorable Mathematics. MAA.:143
  36. ^ Mackie (1845), 38
  37. ^ Mackie (1845), 39
  38. ^ Mackie (1845), 40
  39. ^ Aiton 1985: 312
  40. ^ Ariew R., G.W. Leibniz, life and works, p. 21 in The Cambridge Companion to Leibniz, ed. by N. Jolley, Cambridge University Press, 1994, ISBN 0-521-36588-0. Extract of page 21
  41. ^ Mackie (1845), 43
  42. ^ Mackie (1845), 44–45
  43. ^ Benaroya, Haym; Han, Seon Mi; Nagurka, Mark (2 May 2013). Probabilistic Models for Dynamical Systems. CRC Press. ISBN 978-1-4398-5015-2.
  44. ^ Mackie (1845), 58–61
  45. ^ Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University. 2017. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  46. ^ Mackie (1845), 69–70
  47. ^ Mackie (1845), 73–74
  48. ^ a b Davis, Martin (2018). The Universal Computer : The Road from Leibniz to Turing. CRC Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-138-50208-6.
  49. ^ On the encounter between Newton and Leibniz and a review of the evidence, see Alfred Rupert Hall, Philosophers at War: The Quarrel Between Newton and Leibniz, (Cambridge, 2002), pp. 44–69.
  50. ^ Mackie (1845), 117–118
  51. ^ For a study of Leibniz's correspondence with Sophia Charlotte, see MacDonald Ross, George, 1990, "Leibniz's Exposition of His System to Queen Sophie Charlotte and Other Ladies." In Leibniz in Berlin, ed. H. Poser and A. Heinekamp, Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 1990, 61–69.
  52. ^ Mackie (1845), 109
  53. ^ Brown, Stuart (2023). Historical Dictionary of Leibniz's Philosophy (2nd ed.). Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield. p. 1. ISBN 9781538178447.
  54. ^ Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm Freiherr von (1920). The Early Mathematical Manuscripts of Leibniz: Translated from the Latin Texts Published by Carl Immanuel Gerhardt with Critical and Historical Notes. Open court publishing Company. ISBN 9780598818461.
  55. ^ See Wir IV.6 and Loemker §50. Also see a curious passage titled "Leibniz's Philosophical Dream", first published by Bodemann in 1895 and translated on p. 253 of Morris, Mary, ed. and trans., 1934. Philosophical Writings. Dent & Sons Ltd.
  56. ^ "Christian Mathematicians – Leibniz – God & Math – Thinking Christianly About Math Education". 31 January 2012.
  57. ^ Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (2012). Loptson, Peter (ed.). Discourse on Metaphysics and Other Writings. Broadview Press. pp. 23–24. ISBN 978-1-55481-011-6. The answer is unknowable, but it may not be unreasonable to see him, at least in theological terms, as essentially a deist. He is a determinist: there are no miracles (the events so called being merely instances of infrequently occurring natural laws); Christ has no real role in the system; we live forever, and hence we carry on after our deaths, but then everything—every individual substance—carries on forever. Nonetheless, Leibniz is a theist. His system is generated from, and needs, the postulate of a creative god. In fact, though, despite Leibniz's protestations, his God is more the architect and engineer of the vast complex world-system than the embodiment of love of Christian orthodoxy.
  58. ^ Christopher Ernest Cosans (2009). Owen's Ape & Darwin's Bulldog: Beyond Darwinism and Creationism. Indiana University Press. pp. 102–103. ISBN 978-0-253-22051-6. In advancing his system of mechanics, Newton claimed that collisions of celestial objects would cause a loss of energy that would require God to intervene from time to time to maintain order in the solar system (Vailati 1997, 37–42). In criticizing this implication, Leibniz remarks: "Sir Isaac Newton and his followers have also a very odd opinion concerning the work of God. According to their doctrine, God Almighty wants to wind up his watch from time to time; otherwise it would cease to move." (Leibniz 1715, 675) Leibniz argues that any scientific theory that relies on God to perform miracles after He had first made the universe indicates that God lacked sufficient foresight or power to establish adequate natural laws in the first place. In defense of Newton's theism, Clarke is unapologetic: "'tis not a diminution but the true glory of his workmanship that nothing is done without his continual government and inspection"' (Leibniz 1715, 676–677). Clarke is believed to have consulted closely with Newton on how to respond to Leibniz. He asserts that Leibniz's deism leads to "the notion of materialism and fate" (1715, 677), because it excludes God from the daily workings of nature.
  59. ^ Hunt, Shelby D. (2003). Controversy in Marketing Theory: For Reason, Realism, Truth, and Objectivity. M. E. Sharpe. p. 33. ISBN 978-0-7656-0931-1. Consistent with the liberal views of the Enlightenment, Leibniz was an optimist with respect to human reasoning and scientific progress (Popper 1963, p. 69). Although he was a great reader and admirer of Spinoza, Leibniz, being a confirmed deist, rejected emphatically Spinoza's pantheism: God and nature, for Leibniz, were not simply two different "labels" for the same "thing".
  60. ^ Leibniz on the Trinity and the Incarnation: Reason and Revelation in the Seventeenth Century (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2007, pp. xix–xx).
  61. ^ Ariew & Garber, 69; Loemker, §§36, 38
  62. ^ Ariew & Garber, 138; Loemker, §47; Wiener, II.4
  63. ^ Later translated as Loemker 267 and Woolhouse and Francks 30
  64. ^ A VI, 4, n. 324, pp. 1643–1649 with the title: Principia Logico-Metaphysica
  65. ^ Ariew & Garber, 272–284; Loemker, §§14, 20, 21; Wiener, III.8
  66. ^ Mates (1986), chpts. 7.3, 9
  67. ^ Loemker 717
  68. ^ See Jolley (1995: 129–131), Woolhouse and Francks (1998), and Mercer (2001).
  69. ^ a b Gottfried Leibniz, New Essays, IV, 16: "la nature ne fait jamais des sauts". Natura non-facit saltus is the Latin translation of the phrase (originally put forward by Linnaeus' Philosophia Botanica, 1st ed., 1751, Chapter III, § 77, p. 27; see also Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy: "Continuity and Infinitesimals" and Alexander Baumgarten, Metaphysics: A Critical Translation with Kant's Elucidations, Translated and Edited by Courtney D. Fugate and John Hymers, Bloomsbury, 2013, "Preface of the Third Edition (1750)", p. 79 n.d.: "[Baumgarten] must also have in mind Leibniz's "natura non-facit saltus [nature does not make leaps]" (NE IV, 16)."). A variant translation is "natura non-saltum facit" (literally, "Nature does not make a jump") (Britton, Andrew; Sedgwick, Peter H.; Bock, Burghard (2008). Ökonomische Theorie und christlicher Glaube. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 289. ISBN 978-3-8258-0162-5. Extract of page 289.)
  70. ^ Loemker 311
  71. ^ Arthur Lovejoy, The Great Chain of Being. Harvard University Press, 1936, Chapter V "Plenitude and Sufficient Reason in Leibniz and Spinoza", pp. 144–182.
  72. ^ For a precis of what Leibniz meant by these and other Principles, see Mercer (2001: 473–484). For a classic discussion of Sufficient Reason and Plenitude, see Lovejoy (1957).
  73. ^ O'Leary-Hawthorne, John; Cover, J. A. (4 September 2008). Substance and Individuation in Leibniz. Cambridge University Press. p. 65. ISBN 978-0-521-07303-5.
  74. ^ Rescher, Nicholas (1991). G. W. Leibniz's Monadology: an edition for students. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-8229-5449-1.
  75. ^ Ferraro, Rafael (2007). Einstein's Space-Time: An Introduction to Special and General Relativity. Springer. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-387-69946-2.
  76. ^ a b See H. G. Alexander, ed., The Leibniz-Clarke Correspondence, Manchester: Manchester University Press, pp. 25–26.
  77. ^ Agassi, Joseph (September 1969). "Leibniz's Place in the History of Physics". Journal of the History of Ideas. 30 (3): 331–344. doi:10.2307/2708561. JSTOR 2708561.
  78. ^ a b Perkins, Franklin (10 July 2007). Leibniz: A Guide for the Perplexed. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-8264-8921-0.
  79. ^ Perkins, Franklin (10 July 2007). Leibniz: A Guide for the Perplexed. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 23. ISBN 978-0-8264-8921-0.
  80. ^ Rutherford (1998) is a detailed scholarly study of Leibniz's theodicy.
  81. ^ Franklin, James (2022). "The global/local distinction vindicates Leibniz's theodicy". Theology and Science. 20 (4): 445–462. doi:10.1080/14746700.2022.2124481. S2CID 252979403.
  82. ^ Magill, Frank (ed.). Masterpieces of World Philosophy. New York: Harper Collins (1990).
  83. ^ Magill, Frank (ed.) (1990)
  84. ^ Anderson Csiszar, Sean (26 July 2015). The Golden Book About Leibniz. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. p. 20. ISBN 978-1515243915.
  85. ^ Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm. Discourse on Metaphysics. The Rationalists: Rene Descartes – Discourse on Method, Meditations. N.Y.: Dolphin., n.d., n.p.,
  86. ^ Monadologie (1714). Nicholas Rescher, trans., 1991. The Monadology: An Edition for Students. Uni. of Pittsburgh Press, p. 135.
  87. ^ "The Fundamental Question". hedweb.com. Retrieved 26 April 2017.
  88. ^ Geier, Manfred (17 February 2017). Wittgenstein und Heidegger: Die letzten Philosophen (in German). Rowohlt Verlag. ISBN 978-3-644-04511-8. Retrieved 26 April 2017.
  89. ^ Kulstad, Mark; Carlin, Laurence (2020), "Leibniz's Philosophy of Mind", in Zalta, Edward N. (ed.), The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2020 ed.), Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, retrieved 22 June 2023
  90. ^ Gray, Jonathan. ""Let us Calculate!": Leibniz, Llull, and the Computational Imagination". The Public Domain Review. Retrieved 22 June 2023.
  91. ^ The Art of Discovery 1685, Wiener 51
  92. ^ Many of his memoranda are translated in Parkinson 1966.
  93. ^ Marcelo Dascal, Leibniz. Language, Signs and Thought: A Collection of Essays (Foundations of Semiotics series), John Benjamins Publishing Company, 1987, p. 42.
  94. ^ Loemker, however, who translated some of Leibniz's works into English, said that the symbols of chemistry were real characters, so there is disagreement among Leibniz scholars on this point.
  95. ^ Preface to the General Science, 1677. Revision of Rutherford's translation in Jolley 1995: 234. Also Wiener I.4
  96. ^ A good introductory discussion of the "characteristic" is Jolley (1995: 226–240). An early, yet still classic, discussion of the "characteristic" and "calculus" is Couturat (1901: chpts. 3, 4).
  97. ^ Lenzen, W., 2004, "Leibniz's Logic," in Handbook of the History of Logic by D. M. Gabbay/J. Woods (eds.), volume 3: The Rise of Modern Logic: From Leibniz to Frege, Amsterdam et al.: Elsevier-North-Holland, pp. 1–83.
  98. ^ Russell, Bertrand (1900). A Critical Exposition of the Philosophy of Leibniz. The University Press, Cambridge.
  99. ^ Leibniz: Die philosophischen Schriften VII, 1890, pp. 236–247; translated as "A Study in the Calculus of Real Addition" (1690) 19 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine by G. H. R. Parkinson, Leibniz: Logical Papers – A Selection, Oxford 1966, pp. 131–144.
  100. ^ Edward N. Zalta, "A (Leibnizian) Theory of Concepts", Philosophiegeschichte und logische Analyse / Logical Analysis and History of Philosophy, 3 (2000): 137–183.
  101. ^ Lenzen, Wolfgang. "Leibniz: Logic". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  102. ^ Jesse Alama, Paul E. Oppenheimer, Edward N. Zalta, "Automating Leibniz's Theory of Concepts", in A. Felty and A. Middeldorp (eds.), Automated Deduction – CADE 25: Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Automated Deduction (Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence: Volume 9195), Berlin: Springer, 2015, pp. 73–97.
  103. ^ Struik (1969), 367
  104. ^ a b c Agarwal, Ravi P; Sen, Syamal K (2014). Creators of Mathematical and Computational Sciences. Springer, Cham. p. 186. ISBN 978-3-319-10870-4.
  105. ^ Gowers, Timothy; Barrow-Green, June; Leader, Imre (2008). The Princeton Companion to Mathematics. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 745. ISBN 978-0-691-11880-2.
  106. ^ Jesseph, Douglas M. (1998). "Leibniz on the Foundations of the Calculus: The Question of the Reality of Infinitesimal Magnitudes". Perspectives on Science. 6.1&2 (1–2): 6–40. doi:10.1162/posc_a_00543. S2CID 118227996. Retrieved 31 December 2011.
  107. ^ Goldstine, Herman H. (1972). The Computer from Pascal to von Neumann. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 8. ISBN 0-691-08104-2.
  108. ^ Jones, Matthew L. (1 October 2006). The Good Life in the Scientific Revolution: Descartes, Pascal, Leibniz, and the Cultivation of Virtue. University of Chicago Press. pp. 237–239. ISBN 978-0-226-40955-9.
  109. ^ Agarwal, Ravi P; Sen, Syamal K (2014). Creators of Mathematical and Computational Sciences. Springer, Cham. p. 180. ISBN 978-3-319-10870-4.
  110. ^ a b Gowers, Timothy; Barrow-Green, June; Leader, Imre, eds. (2008). The Princeton Companion to Mathematics. Princeton: Princeton University Press. p. 744. ISBN 978-0-691-11880-2.
  111. ^ Knobloch, Eberhard (13 March 2013). Leibniz's Theory of Elimination and Determinants. Springer. pp. 230–237. ISBN 978-4-431-54272-8.
  112. ^ Concise Dictionary of Mathematics. V&S Publishers. April 2012. pp. 113–114. ISBN 978-93-81588-83-3.
  113. ^ Lay, David C. (2012). Linear algebra and its applications (4th ed.). Boston: Addison-Wesley. ISBN 978-0-321-38517-8.
  114. ^ Tokuyama, Takeshi; et al. (2007). Algorithms and Computation: 18th International Symposium, ISAAC 2007, Sendai, Japan, December 17–19, 2007 : proceedings. Berlin [etc.]: Springer. p. 599. ISBN 978-3-540-77120-3.
  115. ^ Jones, Matthew L. (2006). The Good Life in the Scientific Revolution : Descartes, Pascal, Leibniz, and the Cultivation of Virtue ([Online-Ausg.] ed.). Chicago [u.a.]: Univ. of Chicago Press. p. 169. ISBN 978-0-226-40954-2.
  116. ^ Davis, Martin (28 February 2018). The Universal Computer : The Road from Leibniz to Turing, Third Edition. CRC Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-138-50208-6.
  117. ^ De Risi, Vincenzo (2016). Leibniz on the Parallel Postulate and the Foundations of Geometry. Birkhäuser. p. 4. ISBN 978-3-319-19863-7.
  118. ^ De Risi, Vincenzo (10 February 2016). Leibniz on the Parallel Postulate and the Foundations of Geometry. Birkhäuser, Cham. p. 58. ISBN 978-3-319-19862-0.
  119. ^ Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm Freiherr von; Gerhardt, Carl Immanuel (trans.) (1920). The Early Mathematical Manuscripts of Leibniz. Open Court Publishing. p. 93. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
  120. ^ For an English translation of this paper, see Struik (1969: 271–284), who also translates parts of two other key papers by Leibniz on calculus.
  121. ^ Dirk Jan Struik, A Source Book in Mathematics (1969) pp. 282–284
  122. ^ Supplementum geometriae dimensoriae, seu generalissima omnium tetragonismorum effectio per motum: similiterque multiplex constructio lineae ex data tangentium conditione, Acta Euriditorum (Sep. 1693) pp. 385–392
  123. ^ John Stillwell, Mathematics and its History (1989, 2002) p.159
  124. ^ Katz, Mikhail; Sherry, David (2012), "Leibniz's Infinitesimals: Their Fictionality, Their Modern Implementations, and Their Foes from Berkeley to Russell and Beyond", Erkenntnis, 78 (3): 571–625, arXiv:1205.0174, doi:10.1007/s10670-012-9370-y, S2CID 119329569
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  126. ^ Hockney, Mike (29 March 2016). How to Create the Universe. Lulu Press, Inc. ISBN 978-1-326-61200-9.
  127. ^ Loemker §27
  128. ^ Mates (1986), 240
  129. ^ Hirano, Hideaki. . Archived from the original on 22 May 2009. Retrieved 10 March 2010.
  130. ^ Mandelbrot (1977), 419. Quoted in Hirano (1997).
  131. ^ Ariew and Garber 117, Loemker §46, W II.5. On Leibniz and physics, see the chapter by Garber in Jolley (1995) and Wilson (1989).
  132. ^ Futch, Michael. Leibniz's Metaphysics of Time and Space. New York: Springer, 2008.
  133. ^ Ray, Christopher. Time, Space and Philosophy. London: Routledge, 1991.
  134. ^ Rickles, Dean. Symmetry, Structure and Spacetime. Oxford: Elsevier, 2008.
  135. ^ a b Arthur 2014, p. 56.
  136. ^ See Ariew and Garber 155–86, Loemker §§53–55, W II.6–7a
  137. ^ On Leibniz and biology, see Loemker (1969a: VIII).
  138. ^ L. E. Loemker: Introduction to Philosophical papers and letters: A selection. Gottfried W. Leibniz (transl. and ed., by Leroy E. Loemker). Dordrecht: Riedel (2nd ed. 1969).
  139. ^ T. Verhave: Contributions to the history of psychology: III. G. W. Leibniz (1646–1716). On the Association of Ideas and Learning. Psychological Report, 1967, Vol. 20, 11–116.
  140. ^ R. E. Fancher & H. Schmidt: Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz: Underappreciated pioneer of psychology. In: G. A. Kimble & M. Wertheimer (Eds.). Portraits of pioneers in psychology, Vol. V. American Psychological Association, Washington, DC, 2003, pp. 1–17.
  141. ^ Leibniz, G. W. (2007) [1714/1720]. The Principles of Philosophy known as Monadology. Translated by Jonathan Bennett. p. 11.
  142. ^ Larry M. Jorgensen, The Principle of Continuity and Leibniz's Theory of Consciousness.
  143. ^ The German scholar Johann Thomas Freigius was the first to use this Latin term 1574 in print: Quaestiones logicae et ethicae, Basel, Henricpetri.
  144. ^ Leibniz, Nouveaux essais, 1765, Livre II, Des Idées, Chapitre 1, § 6. New Essays on Human Understanding Book 2. p. 36; transl. by Jonathan Bennett, 2009.
  145. ^ Wundt: Leibniz zu seinem zweihundertjährigen Todestag, 14. November 1916. Alfred Kröner Verlag, Leipzig 1917.
  146. ^ Wundt (1917), p. 117.
  147. ^ Fahrenberg, Jochen (2017). "The influence of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the Psychology, philosophy, and Ethics of Wilhelm Wundt" (PDF). Retrieved 28 June 2022.
  148. ^ D. Brett King, Wayne Viney and William Woody. A History of Psychology: Ideas and Context (2009), 150–153.
  149. ^ Nicholls and Leibscher Thinking the Unconscious: Nineteenth-Century German Thought (2010), 6.
  150. ^ Nicholls and Leibscher (2010).
  151. ^ King et al. (2009), 150–153.
  152. ^ Klempe, SH (2011). "The role of tone sensation and musical stimuli in early experimental psychology". Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. 47 (2): 187–199. doi:10.1002/jhbs.20495. PMID 21462196.
  153. ^ Aiton (1985), 107–114, 136
  154. ^ Davis (2000) discusses Leibniz's prophetic role in the emergence of calculating machines and of formal languages.
  155. ^ See Couturat (1901): 473–478.
  156. ^ Ryan, James A. (1996). "Leibniz' Binary System and Shao Yong's "Yijing"". Philosophy East and West. 46 (1): 59–90. doi:10.2307/1399337. JSTOR 1399337.
  157. ^ Ares, J.; Lara, J.; Lizcano, D.; Martínez, M. (2017). "Who Discovered the Binary System and Arithmetic?". Science and Engineering Ethics. 24 (1): 173–188. doi:10.1007/s11948-017-9890-6. hdl:20.500.12226/69. PMID 28281152. S2CID 35486997.
  158. ^ Navarro-Loidi, Juan (May 2008). "The Introductions of Logarithms into Spain". Historia Mathematica. 35 (2): 83–101. doi:10.1016/j.hm.2007.09.002.
  159. ^ Booth, Michael (2003). "Thomas Harriot's Translations". The Yale Journal of Criticism. 16 (2): 345–361. doi:10.1353/yale.2003.0013. ISSN 0893-5378. S2CID 161603159.
  160. ^ Lande, Daniel. "Development of the Binary Number System and the Foundations of Computer Science". The Mathematics Enthusiast: 513–540.
  161. ^ Wiener, N., Cybernetics (2nd edition with revisions and two additional chapters), The MIT Press and Wiley, New York, 1961, p. 12.
  162. ^ Wiener, Norbert (1948). . Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 50 (4 Teleological): 197–220. Bibcode:1948NYASA..50..197W. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.1948.tb39853.x. PMID 18886381. S2CID 28452205. Archived from the original on 23 July 2021. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  163. ^ Couturat (1901), 115
  164. ^ See N. Rescher, Leibniz and Cryptography (Pittsburgh, University Library Systems, University of Pittsburgh, 2012).
  165. ^ "The discoveries of principle of the calculus in Acta Eruditorum" (commentary, pp. 60–61), translated by Pierre Beaudry, amatterofmind.org, Leesburg, Va., September 2000. (pdf)
  166. ^ . www.edge.org. Archived from the original on 28 December 2005. Retrieved 11 January 2006.
  167. ^ Agarwal, Ravi P; Sen, Syamal K (2014). Creators of Mathematical and Computational Sciences. Springer, Cham. p. 28. ISBN 978-3-319-10870-4.
  168. ^ "Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz | Biography & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 18 February 2019.
  169. ^ a b Schulte-Albert, H. (April 1971). "Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Library Classification". The Journal of Library History. 6 (2): 133–152. JSTOR 25540286.
  170. ^ a b Schulte-Albert, H. G. (1971). "Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Library Classification". The Journal of Library History. 6 (2): 133–152. JSTOR 25540286.
  171. ^ Otivm Hanoveranvm Sive Miscellanea Ex ore & schedis Illustris Viri, piæ memoriæ, Godofr. Gvilielmi Leibnitii ... / Quondam notata & descripta, Cum ipsi in collendis & excerpendis rebus ad Historiam Brunsvicensem pertinentibus operam navaret, Joachimvs Fridericvs Fellervs, Secretarius Ducalis Saxo-Vinariensis. Additæ sunt coronidis loco Epistolæ Gallicæ amœbeæ Leibnitii & Pellissonii de Tolerantia Religionum & de controversiis quibusdam Theologicis ... 1737.
  172. ^ On Leibniz's projects for scientific societies, see Couturat (1901), App. IV.
  173. ^ See, for example, Ariew and Garber 19, 94, 111, 193; Riley 1988; Loemker §§2, 7, 20, 29, 44, 59, 62, 65; W I.1, IV.1–3
  174. ^ See (in order of difficulty) Jolley (2005: ch. 7), Gregory Brown's chapter in Jolley (1995), Hostler (1975), Connelly (2021), and Riley (1996).
  175. ^ Loemker: 59, fn 16. Translation revised.
  176. ^ Loemker: 58, fn 9
  177. ^ Andrés-Gallego, José (2015). . Journal of Mixed Methods Research. 29 (2): 118–132. doi:10.1177/1558689813515332. S2CID 147266697. Archived from the original on 27 August 2016. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
  178. ^ Artosi ed.(2013)
  179. ^ Loemker, 1
  180. ^ Connelly, 2018, ch.5; Artosi et al. 2013, pref.
  181. ^ Connelly, 2021, ch.6
  182. ^ Christopher Johns, 2018
  183. ^ (Akademie Ed VI ii 35–93)
  184. ^ Connelly, 2021, chs.6–8
  185. ^ Gottfried Leibniz, "Brevis designatio meditationum de originibus gentium, ductis potissimum ex indicio linguarum", Miscellanea Berolinensia. 1710.
  186. ^ Henry Hoenigswald, "Descent, Perfection and the Comparative Method since Leibniz", Leibniz, Humboldt, and the Origins of Comparativism, eds. Tullio De Mauro & Lia Formigari (Amsterdam–Philadelphia: John Benjamins, 1990), 119–134.
  187. ^ Perkins (2004), 117
  188. ^ a b c Mungello, David E. (1971). "Leibniz's Interpretation of Neo-Confucianism". Philosophy East and West. 21 (1): 3–22. doi:10.2307/1397760. JSTOR 1397760.
  189. ^ On Leibniz, the I Ching, and binary numbers, see Aiton (1985: 245–248). Leibniz's writings on Chinese civilization are collected and translated in Cook and Rosemont (1994), and discussed in Perkins (2004).
  190. ^ Cook, Daniel (2015). "Leibniz, China, and the Problem of Pagan Wisdom". Philosophy East and West. 65 (3): 936–947. doi:10.1353/pew.2015.0074. S2CID 170208696.
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  192. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 February 2011. Retrieved 12 June 2010.
  193. ^ Russell, 1900
  194. ^ Jolley, 217–219
  195. ^ . UNESCO Memory of the World Programme. 16 May 2008. Archived from the original on 19 July 2010. Retrieved 15 December 2009.
  196. ^ "Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's 372nd Birthday". Google Doodle Archive. 1 July 2018. Retrieved 23 July 2021.
  197. ^ Musil, Steven (1 July 2018). "Google Doodle celebrates mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibni". CNET.
  198. ^ Smith, Kiona N. (30 June 2018). "Sunday's Google Doodle Celebrates Mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz". Forbes.
  199. ^ Stephenson, Neal. "How the Baroque Cycle Began" in P.S. of Quicksilver Perennial ed. 2004.
  200. ^ Letter to Vincent Placcius, 15 September 1695, in Louis Dutens (ed.), Gothofridi Guillemi Leibnitii Opera Omnia, vol. 6.1, 1768, pp. 59–60.
  201. ^ a b (in German). Archived from the original on 7 January 2008.
  202. ^ a b c Holland, Arthur William (1911). "Germany/History" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 828–901, see page 899, para two. The two chief collections which were issued by the philosopher are the Accessiones historicae (1698–1700) and the Scriptores rerum Brunsvicensium.....

Sources edit

Bibliographies edit

  • Bodemann, Eduard, Die Leibniz-Handschriften der Königlichen öffentlichen Bibliothek zu Hannover, 1895, (anastatic reprint: Hildesheim, Georg Olms, 1966).
  • Bodemann, Eduard, Der Briefwechsel des Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in der Königlichen öffentliche Bibliothek zu Hannover, 1895, (anastatic reprint: Hildesheim, Georg Olms, 1966).
  • Cerqueiro, Daniel (2014). Leibnitz y la ciencia del infinito. Buenos Aires: Pequeña Venecia. ISBN 978-987-9239-24-7
  • Ravier, Émile, Bibliographie des œuvres de Leibniz, Paris: Alcan, 1937 (anastatic reprint Hildesheim: Georg Olms, 1966).
  • Heinekamp, Albert and Mertens, Marlen. Leibniz-Bibliographie. Die Literatur über Leibniz bis 1980, Frankfurt: Vittorio Klostermann, 1984.
  • Heinekamp, Albert and Mertens, Marlen. Leibniz-Bibliographie. Die Literatur über Leibniz. Band II: 1981–1990, Frankfurt: Vittorio Klostermann, 1996.

An updated bibliography of more than 25.000 titles is available at Leibniz Bibliographie.

Primary literature (chronologically) edit

  • Wiener, Philip, (ed.), 1951. Leibniz: Selections. Scribner.
  • Schrecker, Paul & Schrecker, Anne Martin, (eds.), 1965. Monadology and other Philosophical Essays. Prentice-Hall.
  • Parkinson, G. H. R. (ed.), 1966. Logical Papers. Clarendon Press.
  • Mason, H. T. & Parkinson, G. H. R. (eds.), 1967. The Leibniz-Arnauld Correspondence. Manchester University Press.
  • Loemker, Leroy, (ed.), 1969 [1956]. Leibniz: Philosophical Papers and Letters. Reidel.
  • Morris, Mary & Parkinson, G. H. R. (eds.), 1973. Philosophical Writings. Everyman's University Library.
  • Riley, Patrick, (ed.), 1988. Leibniz: Political Writings. Cambridge University Press.
  • Niall, R. Martin, D. & Brown, Stuart (eds.), 1988. Discourse on Metaphysics and Related Writings. Manchester University Press.
  • Ariew, Roger and Garber, Daniel. (eds.), 1989. Leibniz: Philosophical Essays. Hackett.
  • Rescher, Nicholas (ed.), 1991. G. W. Leibniz's Monadology. An Edition for Students, University of Pittsburgh Press.
  • Rescher, Nicholas, On Leibniz, (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2013).
  • Parkinson, G. H. R. (ed.) 1992. De Summa Rerum. Metaphysical Papers, 1675–1676. Yale University Press.
  • Cook, Daniel, & Rosemont, Henry Jr., (eds.), 1994. Leibniz: Writings on China. Open Court.
  • Farrer, Austin (ed.), 1995. Theodicy, Open Court.
  • Remnant, Peter, & Bennett, Jonathan, (eds.), 1996 (1981). Leibniz: New Essays on Human Understanding. Cambridge University Press.
  • Woolhouse, R. S., and Francks, R., (eds.), 1997. Leibniz's 'New System' and Associated Contemporary Texts. Oxford University Press.
  • Woolhouse, R. S., and Francks, R., (eds.), 1998. Leibniz: Philosophical Texts. Oxford University Press.
  • Ariew, Roger, (ed.), 2000. G. W. Leibniz and Samuel Clarke: Correspondence. Hackett.
  • Richard T. W. Arthur, (ed.), 2001. The Labyrinth of the Continuum: Writings on the Continuum Problem, 1672–1686. Yale University Press.
  • Richard T. W. Arthur, 2014. Leibniz. John Wiley & Sons.
  • Robert C. Sleigh Jr., (ed.), 2005. Confessio Philosophi: Papers Concerning the Problem of Evil, 1671–1678. Yale University Press.
  • Dascal, Marcelo (ed.), 2006. G. W. Leibniz. The Art of Controversies, Springer.
  • Strickland, Lloyd, 2006 (ed.). The Shorter Leibniz Texts: A Collection of New Translations. Continuum.
  • Look, Brandon and Rutherford, Donald (eds.), 2007. The Leibniz-Des Bosses Correspondence, Yale University Press.
  • Cohen, Claudine and Wakefield, Andre, (eds.), 2008. Protogaea. University of Chicago Press.
  • Murray, Michael, (ed.) 2011. Dissertation on Predestination and Grace, Yale University Press.
  • Strickand, Lloyd (ed.), 2011. Leibniz and the two Sophies. The Philosophical Correspondence, Toronto.
  • Lodge, Paul (ed.), 2013. The Leibniz-De Volder Correspondence: With Selections from the Correspondence Between Leibniz and Johann Bernoulli, Yale University Press.
  • Artosi, Alberto, Pieri, Bernardo, Sartor, Giovanni (eds.), 2014. Leibniz: Logico-Philosophical Puzzles in the Law, Springer.
  • De Iuliis, Carmelo Massimo, (ed.), 2017. Leibniz: The New Method of Learning and Teaching Jurisprudence, Talbot, Clark NJ.

Secondary literature up to 1950 edit

  • Du Bois-Reymond, Emil, 1912. Leibnizsche Gedanken in der neueren Naturwissenschaft, Berlin: Dummler, 1871 (reprinted in Reden, Leipzig: Veit, vol. 1).
  • Couturat, Louis, 1901. La Logique de Leibniz. Paris: Felix Alcan.
  • Heidegger, Martin, 1983. The Metaphysical Foundations of Logic. Indiana University Press (lecture course, 1928).
  • Lovejoy, Arthur O., 1957 (1936). "Plenitude and Sufficient Reason in Leibniz and Spinoza" in his The Great Chain of Being. Harvard University Press: 144–182. Reprinted in Frankfurt, H. G., (ed.), 1972. Leibniz: A Collection of Critical Essays. Anchor Books 1972.
  • Mackie, John Milton; Guhrauer, Gottschalk Eduard, 1845. Life of Godfrey William von Leibnitz. Gould, Kendall and Lincoln.
  • Russell, Bertrand, 1900, A Critical Exposition of the Philosophy of Leibniz, Cambridge: The University Press.
  • Smith, David Eugene (1929). A Source Book in Mathematics. New York and London: McGraw-Hill Book Company, Inc.
  • Trendelenburg, F. A., 1857, "Über Leibnizens Entwurf einer allgemeinen Charakteristik," Philosophische Abhandlungen der Königlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin. Aus dem Jahr 1856, Berlin: Commission Dümmler, pp. 36–69.
  • Adolphus William Ward (1911), Leibniz as a Politician: The Adamson Lecture, 1910 (1st ed.), Manchester, Wikidata Q19095295{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (lecture)

Secondary literature post-1950 edit

  • Adams, Robert Merrihew. 1994. Leibniz: Determinist, Theist, Idealist. New York: Oxford, Oxford University Press.
  • Aiton, Eric J., 1985. Leibniz: A Biography. Hilger (UK).
  • Antognazza, Maria Rosa, 2008. Leibniz: An Intellectual Biography. Cambridge Univ. Press.
  • Barrow, John D.; Tipler, Frank J. (1986). The Anthropic Cosmological Principle (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-282147-8. LCCN 87028148.
  • Borowski, Audrey, 2024. Leibniz in His World: The Making of a Savant. Princeton University Press. (https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691260747/leibniz-in-his-world)
  • Bos, H. J. M. (1974). "Differentials, higher-order differentials and the derivative in the Leibnizian calculus". Archive for History of Exact Sciences. 14: 1–90. doi:10.1007/bf00327456. S2CID 120779114.
  • Brown, Stuart (ed.), 1999. The Young Leibniz and His Philosophy (1646–76), Dordrecht, Kluwer.
  • Cerqueiro, Daniel. Leibnitz y la ciencia del infinito(2014).Pequeña Venecia. Buenos Aires. ISBN 978-987-9239-24-7
  • Connelly, Stephen, 2021. ‘’Leibniz: A Contribution to the Archaeology of Power’’, Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978-1-4744-1808-9.
  • Davis, Martin, 2000. The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing. WW Norton.
  • Deleuze, Gilles, 1993. The Fold: Leibniz and the Baroque. University of Minnesota Press.
  • Fahrenberg, Jochen, 2017. PsyDok ZPID The influence of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the Psychology, Philosophy, and Ethics of Wilhelm Wundt.
  • Fahrenberg, Jochen, 2020. Wilhelm Wundt (1832–1920). Introduction, Quotations, Reception, Commentaries, Attempts at Reconstruction. Pabst Science Publishers, Lengerich 2020, ISBN 978-3-95853-574-9.
  • Finster, Reinhard & van den Heuvel, Gerd 2000. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Mit Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. 4. Auflage. Rowohlt, Reinbek bei Hamburg (Rowohlts Monographien, 50481), ISBN 3-499-50481-2.
  • Grattan-Guinness, Ivor, 1997. The Norton History of the Mathematical Sciences. W W Norton.
  • Hall, A. R., 1980. Philosophers at War: The Quarrel between Newton and Leibniz. Cambridge University Press.
  • Hamza, Gabor, 2005. "Le développement du droit privé européen". ELTE Eotvos Kiado Budapest.
  • Hoeflich, M. H. (1986). "Law & Geometry: Legal Science from Leibniz to Langdell". American Journal of Legal History. 30 (2): 95–121. doi:10.2307/845705. JSTOR 845705.
  • Hostler, John, 1975. Leibniz's Moral Philosophy. UK: Duckworth.
  • Ishiguro, Hidé 1990. Leibniz's Philosophy of Logic and Language. Cambridge University Press.
  • Jolley, Nicholas, (ed.), 1995. The Cambridge Companion to Leibniz. Cambridge University Press.
  • Kaldis, Byron, 2011. Leibniz' Argument for Innate Ideas in Just the Arguments: 100 of the Most Important Arguments in Western Philosophy edited by M Bruce & S Barbone. Blackwell.
  • Karabell, Zachary (2003). Parting the desert: the creation of the Suez Canal. Alfred A. Knopf. ISBN 978-0-375-40883-0.
  • LeClerc, Ivor (ed.), 1973. The Philosophy of Leibniz and the Modern World. Vanderbilt University Press.
  • Luchte, James (2006). "Mathesis and Analysis: Finitude and the Infinite in the Monadology of Leibniz". Heythrop Journal. 47 (4): 519–543. doi:10.1111/j.1468-2265.2006.00296.x.
  • Mates, Benson, 1986. The Philosophy of Leibniz: Metaphysics and Language. Oxford University Press.
  • Mercer, Christia, 2001. Leibniz's Metaphysics: Its Origins and Development. Cambridge University Press.
  • Perkins, Franklin, 2004. Leibniz and China: A Commerce of Light. Cambridge University Press.
  • Riley, Patrick, 1996. Leibniz's Universal Jurisprudence: Justice as the Charity of the Wise. Harvard University Press.
  • Rutherford, Donald, 1998. Leibniz and the Rational Order of Nature. Cambridge University Press.
  • Schulte-Albert, H. G. (1971). Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Library Classification. The Journal of Library History (1966–1972), (2). 133–152.
  • Smith, Justin E. H., 2011. Divine Machines. Leibniz and the Sciences of Life, Princeton University Press.
  • Wilson, Catherine, 1989. Leibniz's Metaphysics: A Historical and Comparative Study. Princeton University Press.
  • Zalta, E. N. (2000). "A (Leibnizian) Theory of Concepts" (PDF). Philosophiegeschichte und Logische Analyse / Logical Analysis and History of Philosophy. 3: 137–183. doi:10.30965/26664275-00301008.

External links edit

gottfried, wilhelm, leibniz, leibniz, redirects, here, other, uses, leibniz, disambiguation, july, 1646, june, november, 1716, german, polymath, active, mathematician, philosopher, scientist, diplomat, invented, calculus, addition, many, other, branches, mathe. Leibniz redirects here For other uses see Leibniz disambiguation Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz a 1 July 1646 O S 21 June 14 November 1716 was a German polymath active as a mathematician philosopher scientist and diplomat who invented calculus in addition to many other branches of mathematics and statistics Leibniz has been called the last universal genius due to his knowledge and skills in different fields and because such people became less common during the Industrial Revolution and spread of specialized labor after his lifetime 15 He is a prominent figure in both the history of philosophy and the history of mathematics He wrote works on philosophy theology ethics politics law history philology games music and other studies Leibniz also made major contributions to physics and technology and anticipated notions that surfaced much later in probability theory biology medicine geology psychology linguistics and computer science In addition he contributed to the field of library science by devising a cataloguing system whilst working at the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbuttel Germany that would have served as a guide for many of Europe s largest libraries 16 Leibniz s contributions to a wide range of subjects were scattered in various learned journals in tens of thousands of letters and in unpublished manuscripts He wrote in several languages primarily in Latin French and German 17 b Gottfried Wilhelm LeibnizPortrait 1695Born1 July 1646Leipzig Saxony Holy Roman EmpireDied14 November 1716 1716 11 14 aged 70 Hanover Electorate of Hanover Holy Roman EmpireEducationAlte Nikolaischule de Leipzig University BA 1662 MA 1664 LLB 1665 Dr phil hab 1666 University of Jena 1663 8 University of Altdorf Dr jur 1666 Era17th 18th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolRationalismPluralistic idealism 1 Foundationalism 2 Conceptualism 3 OptimismIndirect realism 4 Correspondence theory of truth 5 RelationismThesesDe Arte Combinatoria On the Combinatorial Art March 1666 Disputatio Inauguralis de Casibus Perplexis in Jure Inaugural Disputation on Ambiguous Legal Cases November 1666 Doctoral advisorBartholomaus Leonhard von Schwendendorffer de Dr jur thesis advisor 6 7 Other academic advisorsErhard Weigel Jena 8 Jakob Thomasius B A advisor 9 Johann Adam Schertzer B A advisor Christiaan HuygensNotable studentsJacob Bernoulli epistolary correspondent Christian Wolff epistolary correspondent Main interestsMathematics physics geology medicine biology embryology epidemiology veterinary medicine paleontology psychology engineering librarianship linguistics philology sociology metaphysics ethics economics diplomacy history politics music theory poetry logic theodicy universal language universal scienceNotable ideas Algebraic logicBinary codeCalculusDifferential equationsMathesis universalisMonadsBest of all possible worldsPre established harmonyIdentity of indiscerniblesMathematical matrixMathematical functionNewton Leibniz axiomLeibniz s notationLeibniz integral ruleIntegral symbolLeibniz harmonic triangleLeibniz s testLeibniz formula for pLeibniz formula for determinantsFractional derivativeChain ruleQuotient ruleProduct ruleLeibniz wheelLeibniz s gapAlgebra of conceptsVis viva principle of conservation of energy Principle of least actionSalva veritateStepped reckonerSymbolic logicAnalysis situsPrinciple of sufficient reasonLaw of continuityTranscendental law of homogeneityArs combinatoria alphabet of human thought Characteristica universalisCalculus ratiocinatorCompossibilityPartial fraction decompositionProtogaeaProblem of why there is anything at allPluralistic idealismMetaphysical dynamismRelationismApperceptionA priori a posteriori distinctionDeontic logicWell founded phenomenonSignatureAs a philosopher he was a leading representative of 17th century rationalism and idealism As a mathematician his major achievement was the development of the main ideas of differential and integral calculus independently of Isaac Newton s contemporaneous developments 19 Mathematicians have consistently favored Leibniz s notation as the conventional and more exact expression of calculus 20 21 22 In the 20th century Leibniz s notions of the law of continuity and transcendental law of homogeneity found a consistent mathematical formulation by means of non standard analysis He was also a pioneer in the field of mechanical calculators While working on adding automatic multiplication and division to Pascal s calculator he was the first to describe a pinwheel calculator in 1685 23 and invented the Leibniz wheel later used in the arithmometer the first mass produced mechanical calculator In philosophy and theology Leibniz is most noted for his optimism i e his conclusion that our world is in a qualified sense the best possible world that God could have created a view sometimes lampooned by other thinkers such as Voltaire in his satirical novella Candide Leibniz along with Rene Descartes and Baruch Spinoza was one of the three influential early modern rationalists His philosophy also assimilates elements of the scholastic tradition notably the assumption that some substantive knowledge of reality can be achieved by reasoning from first principles or prior definitions The work of Leibniz anticipated modern logic and still influences contemporary analytic philosophy such as its adopted use of the term possible world to define modal notions Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 1666 1676 1 3 House of Hanover 1676 1716 1 4 Death 1 5 Personal life 2 Philosophy 2 1 Principles 2 2 Monads 2 3 Theodicy and optimism 2 4 Discourse on Metaphysics 2 5 Symbolic thought and rational resolution of disputes 2 6 Formal logic 3 Mathematics 3 1 Linear systems 3 2 Geometry 3 3 Calculus 3 4 Topology 4 Science and engineering 4 1 Physics 4 1 1 The vis viva 4 2 Other natural science 4 3 Psychology 4 4 Social science 4 5 Technology 4 5 1 Computation 4 6 Librarian 4 7 Advocate of scientific societies 5 Law and Morality 5 1 Law 5 2 Ecumenism 6 Philology 7 Sinophology 8 Polymath 9 Posthumous reputation 9 1 Cultural references 10 Writings and publication 10 1 Selected works 10 1 1 Posthumous works 10 2 Collections 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 13 2 1 Bibliographies 13 2 2 Primary literature chronologically 13 2 3 Secondary literature up to 1950 13 2 4 Secondary literature post 1950 14 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Gottfried Leibniz was born on July 1 OS June 21 1646 in Leipzig Saxony to Friedrich Leibniz and Catharina Schmuck 24 He was baptized two days later at St Nicholas Church Leipzig his godfather was the Lutheran theologian Martin Geier de 25 His father died when he was six years old and Leibniz was raised by his mother 26 Leibniz s father had been a Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Leipzig where he also served as dean of philosophy The boy inherited his father s personal library He was given free access to it from the age of seven While Leibniz s schoolwork was largely confined to the study of a small canon of authorities his father s library enabled him to study a wide variety of advanced philosophical and theological works ones that he would not have otherwise been able to read until his college years 27 Access to his father s library largely written in Latin also led to his proficiency in the Latin language which he achieved by the age of 12 At the age of 13 he composed 300 hexameters of Latin verse in a single morning for a special event at school 28 In April 1661 he enrolled in his father s former university at age 14 29 8 30 There he was guided among others by Jakob Thomasius previously a student of Friedrich Leibniz completed his bachelor s degree in Philosophy in December 1662 He defended his Disputatio Metaphysica de Principio Individui Metaphysical Disputation on the Principle of Individuation 31 which addressed the principle of individuation on 9 June 1663 O S 30 May presenting an early version of monadic substance theory Leibniz earned his master s degree in Philosophy on 7 February 1664 In December 1664 he published and defended a dissertation Specimen Quaestionum Philosophicarum ex Jure collectarum An Essay of Collected Philosophical Problems of Right 31 arguing for both a theoretical and a pedagogical relationship between philosophy and law After one year of legal studies he was awarded his bachelor s degree in Law on 28 September 1665 32 His dissertation was titled De conditionibus On Conditions 31 In early 1666 at age 19 Leibniz wrote his first book De Arte Combinatoria On the Combinatorial Art the first part of which was also his habilitation thesis in Philosophy which he defended in March 1666 31 33 De Arte Combinatoria was inspired by Ramon Llull s Ars Magna and contained a proof of the existence of God cast in geometrical form and based on the argument from motion His next goal was to earn his license and Doctorate in Law which normally required three years of study In 1666 the University of Leipzig turned down Leibniz s doctoral application and refused to grant him a Doctorate in Law most likely due to his relative youth 34 35 Leibniz subsequently left Leipzig 36 Leibniz then enrolled in the University of Altdorf and quickly submitted a thesis which he had probably been working on earlier in Leipzig 37 The title of his thesis was Disputatio Inauguralis de Casibus Perplexis in Jure Inaugural Disputation on Ambiguous Legal Cases 31 Leibniz earned his license to practice law and his Doctorate in Law in November 1666 He next declined the offer of an academic appointment at Altdorf saying that my thoughts were turned in an entirely different direction 38 As an adult Leibniz often introduced himself as Gottfried von Leibniz Many posthumously published editions of his writings presented his name on the title page as Freiherr G W von Leibniz However no document has ever been found from any contemporary government that stated his appointment to any form of nobility 39 1666 1676 edit nbsp Engraving of Gottfried Wilhelm LeibnizLeibniz s first position was as a salaried secretary to an alchemical society in Nuremberg 40 He knew fairly little about the subject at that time but presented himself as deeply learned He soon met Johann Christian von Boyneburg 1622 1672 the dismissed chief minister of the Elector of Mainz Johann Philipp von Schonborn 41 Von Boyneburg hired Leibniz as an assistant and shortly thereafter reconciled with the Elector and introduced Leibniz to him Leibniz then dedicated an essay on law to the Elector in the hope of obtaining employment The stratagem worked the Elector asked Leibniz to assist with the redrafting of the legal code for the Electorate 42 In 1669 Leibniz was appointed assessor in the Court of Appeal Although von Boyneburg died late in 1672 Leibniz remained under the employment of his widow until she dismissed him in 1674 43 Von Boyneburg did much to promote Leibniz s reputation and the latter s memoranda and letters began to attract favorable notice After Leibniz s service to the Elector there soon followed a diplomatic role He published an essay under the pseudonym of a fictitious Polish nobleman arguing unsuccessfully for the German candidate for the Polish crown The main force in European geopolitics during Leibniz s adult life was the ambition of Louis XIV of France backed by French military and economic might Meanwhile the Thirty Years War had left German speaking Europe exhausted fragmented and economically backward Leibniz proposed to protect German speaking Europe by distracting Louis as follows France would be invited to take Egypt as a stepping stone towards an eventual conquest of the Dutch East Indies In return France would agree to leave Germany and the Netherlands undisturbed This plan obtained the Elector s cautious support In 1672 the French government invited Leibniz to Paris for discussion 44 but the plan was soon overtaken by the outbreak of the Franco Dutch War and became irrelevant Napoleon s failed invasion of Egypt in 1798 can be seen as an unwitting late implementation of Leibniz s plan after the Eastern hemisphere colonial supremacy in Europe had already passed from the Dutch to the British Thus Leibniz went to Paris in 1672 Soon after arriving he met Dutch physicist and mathematician Christiaan Huygens and realised that his own knowledge of mathematics and physics was patchy With Huygens as his mentor he began a program of self study that soon pushed him to making major contributions to both subjects including discovering his version of the differential and integral calculus He met Nicolas Malebranche and Antoine Arnauld the leading French philosophers of the day and studied the writings of Descartes and Pascal unpublished as well as published 45 He befriended a German mathematician Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus they corresponded for the rest of their lives nbsp Stepped reckonerWhen it became clear that France would not implement its part of Leibniz s Egyptian plan the Elector sent his nephew escorted by Leibniz on a related mission to the English government in London early in 1673 46 There Leibniz came into acquaintance of Henry Oldenburg and John Collins He met with the Royal Society where he demonstrated a calculating machine that he had designed and had been building since 1670 The machine was able to execute all four basic operations adding subtracting multiplying and dividing and the society quickly made him an external member The mission ended abruptly when news of the Elector s death 12 February 1673 reached them Leibniz promptly returned to Paris and not as had been planned to Mainz 47 The sudden deaths of his two patrons in the same winter meant that Leibniz had to find a new basis for his career In this regard a 1669 invitation from Duke John Frederick of Brunswick to visit Hanover proved to have been fateful Leibniz had declined the invitation but had begun corresponding with the duke in 1671 In 1673 the duke offered Leibniz the post of counsellor Leibniz very reluctantly accepted the position two years later only after it became clear that no employment was forthcoming in Paris whose intellectual stimulation he relished or with the Habsburg imperial court 48 In 1675 he tried to get admitted to the French Academy of Sciences as a foreign honorary member but it was considered that there were already enough foreigners there and so no invitation came He left Paris in October 1676 House of Hanover 1676 1716 edit Leibniz managed to delay his arrival in Hanover until the end of 1676 after making one more short journey to London where Newton accused him of having seen his unpublished work on calculus in advance 49 This was alleged to be evidence supporting the accusation made decades later that he had stolen calculus from Newton On the journey from London to Hanover Leibniz stopped in The Hague where he met van Leeuwenhoek the discoverer of microorganisms He also spent several days in intense discussion with Spinoza who had just completed his masterwork the Ethics 50 In 1677 he was promoted at his request to Privy Counselor of Justice a post he held for the rest of his life Leibniz served three consecutive rulers of the House of Brunswick as historian political adviser and most consequentially as librarian of the ducal library He thenceforth employed his pen on all the various political historical and theological matters involving the House of Brunswick the resulting documents form a valuable part of the historical record for the period Leibniz began promoting a project to use windmills to improve the mining operations in the Harz Mountains This project did little to improve mining operations and was shut down by Duke Ernst August in 1685 48 Among the few people in north Germany to accept Leibniz were the Electress Sophia of Hanover 1630 1714 her daughter Sophia Charlotte of Hanover 1668 1705 the Queen of Prussia and his avowed disciple and Caroline of Ansbach the consort of her grandson the future George II To each of these women he was correspondent adviser and friend In turn they all approved of Leibniz more than did their spouses and the future king George I of Great Britain 51 The population of Hanover was only about 10 000 and its provinciality eventually grated on Leibniz Nevertheless to be a major courtier to the House of Brunswick was quite an honor especially in light of the meteoric rise in the prestige of that House during Leibniz s association with it In 1692 the Duke of Brunswick became a hereditary Elector of the Holy Roman Empire The British Act of Settlement 1701 designated the Electress Sophia and her descent as the royal family of England once both King William III and his sister in law and successor Queen Anne were dead Leibniz played a role in the initiatives and negotiations leading up to that Act but not always an effective one For example something he published anonymously in England thinking to promote the Brunswick cause was formally censured by the British Parliament The Brunswicks tolerated the enormous effort Leibniz devoted to intellectual pursuits unrelated to his duties as a courtier pursuits such as perfecting calculus writing about other mathematics logic physics and philosophy and keeping up a vast correspondence He began working on calculus in 1674 the earliest evidence of its use in his surviving notebooks is 1675 By 1677 he had a coherent system in hand but did not publish it until 1684 Leibniz s most important mathematical papers were published between 1682 and 1692 usually in a journal which he and Otto Mencke founded in 1682 the Acta Eruditorum That journal played a key role in advancing his mathematical and scientific reputation which in turn enhanced his eminence in diplomacy history theology and philosophy nbsp Pages from Leibniz s papers in the National Library of PolandThe Elector Ernest Augustus commissioned Leibniz to write a history of the House of Brunswick going back to the time of Charlemagne or earlier hoping that the resulting book would advance his dynastic ambitions From 1687 to 1690 Leibniz traveled extensively in Germany Austria and Italy seeking and finding archival materials bearing on this project Decades went by but no history appeared the next Elector became quite annoyed at Leibniz s apparent dilatoriness Leibniz never finished the project in part because of his huge output on many other fronts but also because he insisted on writing a meticulously researched and erudite book based on archival sources when his patrons would have been quite happy with a short popular book one perhaps little more than a genealogy with commentary to be completed in three years or less They never knew that he had in fact carried out a fair part of his assigned task when the material Leibniz had written and collected for his history of the House of Brunswick was finally published in the 19th century it filled three volumes Leibniz was appointed Librarian of the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbuttel Lower Saxony in 1691 In 1708 John Keill writing in the journal of the Royal Society and with Newton s presumed blessing accused Leibniz of having plagiarised Newton s calculus 52 Thus began the calculus priority dispute which darkened the remainder of Leibniz s life A formal investigation by the Royal Society in which Newton was an unacknowledged participant undertaken in response to Leibniz s demand for a retraction upheld Keill s charge Historians of mathematics writing since 1900 or so have tended to acquit Leibniz pointing to important differences between Leibniz s and Newton s versions of calculus In 1711 while traveling in northern Europe the Russian Tsar Peter the Great stopped in Hanover and met Leibniz who then took some interest in Russian matters for the rest of his life In 1712 Leibniz began a two year residence in Vienna where he was appointed Imperial Court Councillor to the Habsburgs On the death of Queen Anne in 1714 Elector George Louis became King George I of Great Britain under the terms of the 1701 Act of Settlement Even though Leibniz had done much to bring about this happy event it was not to be his hour of glory Despite the intercession of the Princess of Wales Caroline of Ansbach George I forbade Leibniz to join him in London until he completed at least one volume of the history of the Brunswick family his father had commissioned nearly 30 years earlier Moreover for George I to include Leibniz in his London court would have been deemed insulting to Newton who was seen as having won the calculus priority dispute and whose standing in British official circles could not have been higher Finally his dear friend and defender the Dowager Electress Sophia died in 1714 Death edit Leibniz died in Hanover in 1716 At the time he was so out of favor that neither George I who happened to be near Hanover at that time nor any fellow courtier other than his personal secretary attended the funeral Even though Leibniz was a life member of the Royal Society and the Berlin Academy of Sciences neither organization saw fit to honor his death His grave went unmarked for more than 50 years He was however eulogized by Fontenelle before the French Academy of Sciences in Paris which had admitted him as a foreign member in 1700 The eulogy was composed at the behest of the Duchess of Orleans a niece of the Electress Sophia Personal life edit Leibniz never married He proposed to an unknown woman at age 50 but changed his mind when she took too long to decide 53 He complained on occasion about money but the fair sum he left to his sole heir his sister s stepson proved that the Brunswicks had by and large paid him well In his diplomatic endeavors he at times verged on the unscrupulous as was all too often the case with professional diplomats of his day On several occasions Leibniz backdated and altered personal manuscripts actions which put him in a bad light during the calculus controversy 54 He was charming well mannered and not without humor and imagination 55 He had many friends and admirers all over Europe He was identified as a Protestant and a philosophical theist 56 57 58 59 Leibniz remained committed to Trinitarian Christianity throughout his life 60 Philosophy editLeibniz s philosophical thinking appears fragmented because his philosophical writings consist mainly of a multitude of short pieces journal articles manuscripts published long after his death and many letters to many correspondents He wrote only two book length philosophical treatises of which only the Theodicee of 1710 was published in his lifetime Leibniz dated his beginning as a philosopher to his Discourse on Metaphysics which he composed in 1686 as a commentary on a running dispute between Nicolas Malebranche and Antoine Arnauld This led to an extensive and valuable correspondence with Arnauld 61 it and the Discourse were not published until the 19th century In 1695 Leibniz made his public entree into European philosophy with a journal article titled New System of the Nature and Communication of Substances 62 Between 1695 and 1705 he composed his New Essays on Human Understanding a lengthy commentary on John Locke s 1690 An Essay Concerning Human Understanding but upon learning of Locke s 1704 death lost the desire to publish it so that the New Essays were not published until 1765 The Monadologie composed in 1714 and published posthumously consists of 90 aphorisms Leibniz also wrote a short paper Primae veritates First Truths first published by Louis Couturat in 1903 pp 518 523 63 summarizing his views on metaphysics The paper is undated that he wrote it while in Vienna in 1689 was determined only in 1999 when the ongoing critical edition finally published Leibniz s philosophical writings for the period 1677 90 64 Couturat s reading of this paper was the launching point for much 20th century thinking about Leibniz especially among analytic philosophers But after a meticulous study of all of Leibniz s philosophical writings up to 1688 a study the 1999 additions to the critical edition made possible Mercer 2001 begged to differ with Couturat s reading the jury is still out Leibniz met Spinoza in 1676 read some of his unpublished writings and had since been influenced by some of Spinoza s ideas While Leibniz befriended him and admired Spinoza s powerful intellect he was also forthrightly dismayed by Spinoza s conclusions 65 especially when these were inconsistent with Christian orthodoxy Unlike Descartes and Spinoza Leibniz had a thorough university education in philosophy He was influenced by his Leipzig professor Jakob Thomasius who also supervised his BA thesis in philosophy 9 Leibniz also eagerly read Francisco Suarez a Spanish Jesuit respected even in Lutheran universities Leibniz was deeply interested in the new methods and conclusions of Descartes Huygens Newton and Boyle but viewed their work through a lens heavily tinted by scholastic notions Yet it remains the case that Leibniz s methods and concerns often anticipate the logic and analytic and linguistic philosophy of the 20th century Principles edit Leibniz variously invoked one or another of seven fundamental philosophical Principles 66 Identity contradiction If a proposition is true then its negation is false and vice versa Identity of indiscernibles Two distinct things cannot have all their properties in common If every predicate possessed by x is also possessed by y and vice versa then entities x and y are identical to suppose two things indiscernible is to suppose the same thing under two names Frequently invoked in modern logic and philosophy the identity of indiscernibles is often referred to as Leibniz s Law It has attracted the most controversy and criticism especially from corpuscular philosophy and quantum mechanics Sufficient reason There must be a sufficient reason for anything to exist for any event to occur for any truth to obtain 67 Pre established harmony 68 T he appropriate nature of each substance brings it about that what happens to one corresponds to what happens to all the others without however their acting upon one another directly Discourse on Metaphysics XIV A dropped glass shatters because it knows it has hit the ground and not because the impact with the ground compels the glass to split Law of continuity Natura non facit saltus 69 literally Nature does not make jumps Optimism God assuredly always chooses the best 70 Plenitude Leibniz believed that the best of all possible worlds would actualize every genuine possibility and argued in Theodicee that this best of all possible worlds will contain all possibilities with our finite experience of eternity giving no reason to dispute nature s perfection 71 Leibniz would on occasion give a rational defense of a specific principle but more often took them for granted 72 Monads edit nbsp A page from Leibniz s manuscript of the MonadologyLeibniz s best known contribution to metaphysics is his theory of monads as exposited in Monadologie He proposes his theory that the universe is made of an infinite number of simple substances known as monads 73 Monads can also be compared to the corpuscles of the mechanical philosophy of Rene Descartes and others These simple substances or monads are the ultimate units of existence in nature Monads have no parts but still exist by the qualities that they have These qualities are continuously changing over time and each monad is unique They are also not affected by time and are subject to only creation and annihilation 74 Monads are centers of force substance is force while space matter and motion are merely phenomenal It is said that he anticipated Albert Einstein by arguing against Newton that space time and motion are completely relative as he quipped 75 As for my own opinion I have said more than once that I hold space to be something merely relative as time is that I hold it to be an order of coexistences as time is an order of successions 76 Einstein who called himself a Leibnizian even wrote in the introduction to Max Jammer s book Concepts of Space that Leibnizianism was superior to Newtonianism and his ideas would have dominated over Newton s had it not been for the poor technological tools of the time it has been argued that Leibniz paved the way for Einstein s theory of relativity 77 Leibniz s proof of God can be summarized in the Theodicee 78 Reason is governed by the principle of contradiction and the principle of sufficient reason Using the principle of reasoning Leibniz concluded that the first reason of all things is God 78 All that we see and experience is subject to change and the fact that this world is contingent can be explained by the possibility of the world being arranged differently in space and time The contingent world must have some necessary reason for its existence Leibniz uses a geometry book as an example to explain his reasoning If this book was copied from an infinite chain of copies there must be some reason for the content of the book 79 Leibniz concluded that there must be the monas monadum or God The ontological essence of a monad is its irreducible simplicity Unlike atoms monads possess no material or spatial character They also differ from atoms by their complete mutual independence so that interactions among monads are only apparent Instead by virtue of the principle of pre established harmony each monad follows a pre programmed set of instructions peculiar to itself so that a monad knows what to do at each moment By virtue of these intrinsic instructions each monad is like a little mirror of the universe Monads need not be small e g each human being constitutes a monad in which case free will is problematic Monads are purported to have gotten rid of the problematic interaction between mind and matter arising in the system of Descartes lack of individuation inherent to the system of Spinoza which represents individual creatures as merely accidental Theodicy and optimism edit Further information Best of all possible worlds and Philosophical optimism The Theodicy 80 tries to justify the apparent imperfections of the world by claiming that it is optimal among all possible worlds It must be the best possible and most balanced world because it was created by an all powerful and all knowing God who would not choose to create an imperfect world if a better world could be known to him or possible to exist In effect apparent flaws that can be identified in this world must exist in every possible world because otherwise God would have chosen to create the world that excluded those flaws 81 Leibniz asserted that the truths of theology religion and philosophy cannot contradict each other since reason and faith are both gifts of God so that their conflict would imply God contending against himself The Theodicy is Leibniz s attempt to reconcile his personal philosophical system with his interpretation of the tenets of Christianity 82 This project was motivated in part by Leibniz s belief shared by many philosophers and theologians during the Enlightenment in the rational and enlightened nature of the Christian religion It was also shaped by Leibniz s belief in the perfectibility of human nature if humanity relied on correct philosophy and religion as a guide and by his belief that metaphysical necessity must have a rational or logical foundation even if this metaphysical causality seemed inexplicable in terms of physical necessity the natural laws identified by science Because reason and faith must be entirely reconciled any tenet of faith which could not be defended by reason must be rejected Leibniz then approached one of the central criticisms of Christian theism 83 if God is all good all wise and all powerful then how did evil come into the world The answer according to Leibniz is that while God is indeed unlimited in wisdom and power his human creations as creations are limited both in their wisdom and in their will power to act This predisposes humans to false beliefs wrong decisions and ineffective actions in the exercise of their free will God does not arbitrarily inflict pain and suffering on humans rather he permits both moral evil sin and physical evil pain and suffering as the necessary consequences of metaphysical evil imperfection as a means by which humans can identify and correct their erroneous decisions and as a contrast to true good 84 Further although human actions flow from prior causes that ultimately arise in God and therefore are known to God as metaphysical certainties an individual s free will is exercised within natural laws where choices are merely contingently necessary and to be decided in the event by a wonderful spontaneity that provides individuals with an escape from rigorous predestination Discourse on Metaphysics edit For Leibniz God is an absolutely perfect being He describes this perfection later in section VI as the simplest form of something with the most substantial outcome VI Along these lines he declares that every type of perfection pertains to him God in the highest degree I Even though his types of perfections are not specifically drawn out Leibniz highlights the one thing that to him does certify imperfections and proves that God is perfect that one acts imperfectly if he acts with less perfection than he is capable of and since God is a perfect being he cannot act imperfectly III Because God cannot act imperfectly the decisions he makes pertaining to the world must be perfect Leibniz also comforts readers stating that because he has done everything to the most perfect degree those who love him cannot be injured However to love God is a subject of difficulty as Leibniz believes that we are not disposed to wish for that which God desires because we have the ability to alter our disposition IV In accordance with this many act as rebels but Leibniz says that the only way we can truly love God is by being content with all that comes to us according to his will IV Because God is an absolutely perfect being I Leibniz argues that God would be acting imperfectly if he acted with any less perfection than what he is able of III His syllogism then ends with the statement that God has made the world perfectly in all ways This also affects how we should view God and his will Leibniz states that in lieu of God s will we have to understand that God is the best of all masters and he will know when his good succeeds so we therefore must act in conformity to his good will or as much of it as we understand IV In our view of God Leibniz declares that we cannot admire the work solely because of the maker lest we mar the glory and love God in doing so Instead we must admire the maker for the work he has done II Effectively Leibniz states that if we say the earth is good because of the will of God and not good according to some standards of goodness then how can we praise God for what he has done if contrary actions are also praiseworthy by this definition II Leibniz then asserts that different principles and geometry cannot simply be from the will of God but must follow from his understanding 85 Leibniz wrote Why is there something rather than nothing The sufficient reason is found in a substance which is a necessary being bearing the reason for its existence within itself 86 Martin Heidegger called this question the fundamental question of metaphysics 87 88 Symbolic thought and rational resolution of disputes edit Leibniz believed that much of human reasoning could be reduced to calculations of a sort and that such calculations could resolve many differences of opinion The only way to rectify our reasonings is to make them as tangible as those of the Mathematicians so that we can find our error at a glance and when there are disputes among persons we can simply say Let us calculate without further ado to see who is right 89 90 91 Leibniz s calculus ratiocinator which resembles symbolic logic can be viewed as a way of making such calculations feasible Leibniz wrote memoranda 92 that can now be read as groping attempts to get symbolic logic and thus his calculus off the ground These writings remained unpublished until the appearance of a selection edited by Carl Immanuel Gerhardt 1859 Louis Couturat published a selection in 1901 by this time the main developments of modern logic had been created by Charles Sanders Peirce and by Gottlob Frege Leibniz thought symbols were important for human understanding He attached so much importance to the development of good notations that he attributed all his discoveries in mathematics to this His notation for calculus is an example of his skill in this regard Leibniz s passion for symbols and notation as well as his belief that these are essential to a well running logic and mathematics made him a precursor of semiotics 93 But Leibniz took his speculations much further Defining a character as any written sign he then defined a real character as one that represents an idea directly and not simply as the word embodying the idea Some real characters such as the notation of logic serve only to facilitate reasoning Many characters well known in his day including Egyptian hieroglyphics Chinese characters and the symbols of astronomy and chemistry he deemed not real 94 Instead he proposed the creation of a characteristica universalis or universal characteristic built on an alphabet of human thought in which each fundamental concept would be represented by a unique real character It is obvious that if we could find characters or signs suited for expressing all our thoughts as clearly and as exactly as arithmetic expresses numbers or geometry expresses lines we could do in all matters insofar as they are subject to reasoning all that we can do in arithmetic and geometry For all investigations which depend on reasoning would be carried out by transposing these characters and by a species of calculus 95 Complex thoughts would be represented by combining characters for simpler thoughts Leibniz saw that the uniqueness of prime factorization suggests a central role for prime numbers in the universal characteristic a striking anticipation of Godel numbering Granted there is no intuitive or mnemonic way to number any set of elementary concepts using the prime numbers Because Leibniz was a mathematical novice when he first wrote about the characteristic at first he did not conceive it as an algebra but rather as a universal language or script Only in 1676 did he conceive of a kind of algebra of thought modeled on and including conventional algebra and its notation The resulting characteristic included a logical calculus some combinatorics algebra his analysis situs geometry of situation a universal concept language and more What Leibniz actually intended by his characteristica universalis and calculus ratiocinator and the extent to which modern formal logic does justice to calculus may never be established 96 Leibniz s idea of reasoning through a universal language of symbols and calculations remarkably foreshadows great 20th century developments in formal systems such as Turing completeness where computation was used to define equivalent universal languages see Turing degree Formal logic edit Main article Algebraic logic Leibniz has been noted as one of the most important logicians between the times of Aristotle and Gottlob Frege 97 Leibniz enunciated the principal properties of what we now call conjunction disjunction negation identity set inclusion and the empty set The principles of Leibniz s logic and arguably of his whole philosophy reduce to two All our ideas are compounded from a very small number of simple ideas which form the alphabet of human thought Complex ideas proceed from these simple ideas by a uniform and symmetrical combination analogous to arithmetical multiplication The formal logic that emerged early in the 20th century also requires at minimum unary negation and quantified variables ranging over some universe of discourse Leibniz published nothing on formal logic in his lifetime most of what he wrote on the subject consists of working drafts In his History of Western Philosophy Bertrand Russell went so far as to claim that Leibniz had developed logic in his unpublished writings to a level which was reached only 200 years later Russell s principal work on Leibniz found that many of Leibniz s most startling philosophical ideas and claims e g that each of the fundamental monads mirrors the whole universe follow logically from Leibniz s conscious choice to reject relations between things as unreal He regarded such relations as real qualities of things Leibniz admitted unary predicates only For him Mary is the mother of John describes separate qualities of Mary and of John This view contrasts with the relational logic of De Morgan Peirce Schroder and Russell himself now standard in predicate logic Notably Leibniz also declared space and time to be inherently relational 98 Leibniz s 1690 discovery of his algebra of concepts 99 100 deductively equivalent to the Boolean algebra 101 and the associated metaphysics are of interest in present day computational metaphysics 102 Mathematics editAlthough the mathematical notion of function was implicit in trigonometric and logarithmic tables which existed in his day Leibniz was the first in 1692 and 1694 to employ it explicitly to denote any of several geometric concepts derived from a curve such as abscissa ordinate tangent chord and the perpendicular see History of the function concept 103 In the 18th century function lost these geometrical associations Leibniz also believed that the sum of an infinite number of zeros would be equal to one half using the analogy of the creation of the world from nothing 104 Leibniz was also one of the pioneers in actuarial science calculating the purchase price of life annuities and the liquidation of a state s debt 105 Leibniz s research into formal logic also relevant to mathematics is discussed in the preceding section The best overview of Leibniz s writings on calculus may be found in Bos 1974 106 Leibniz who invented one of the earliest mechanical calculators said of calculation For it is unworthy of excellent men to lose hours like slaves in the labor of calculation which could safely be relegated to anyone else if machines were used 107 Linear systems edit Leibniz arranged the coefficients of a system of linear equations into an array now called a matrix in order to find a solution to the system if it existed 108 This method was later called Gaussian elimination Leibniz laid down the foundations and theory of determinants although the Japanese mathematician Seki Takakazu also discovered determinants independently of Leibniz 109 110 His works show calculating the determinants using cofactors 111 Calculating the determinant using cofactors is named the Leibniz formula Finding the determinant of a matrix using this method proves impractical with large n requiring to calculate n products and the number of n permutations 112 He also solved systems of linear equations using determinants which is now called Cramer s rule This method for solving systems of linear equations based on determinants was found in 1684 by Leibniz Cramer published his findings in 1750 110 Although Gaussian elimination requires O n 3 displaystyle O n 3 nbsp arithmetic operations linear algebra textbooks still teach cofactor expansion before LU factorization 113 114 Geometry edit The Leibniz formula for p states that 1 1 3 1 5 1 7 p 4 displaystyle 1 frac 1 3 frac 1 5 frac 1 7 cdots frac pi 4 nbsp Leibniz wrote that circles can most simply be expressed by this series that is the aggregate of fractions alternately added and subtracted 115 However this formula is only accurate with a large number of terms using 10 000 000 terms to obtain the correct value of p 4 to 8 decimal places 116 Leibniz attempted to create a definition for a straight line while attempting to prove the parallel postulate 117 While most mathematicians defined a straight line as the shortest line between two points Leibniz believed that this was merely a property of a straight line rather than the definition 118 Calculus edit Leibniz is credited along with Isaac Newton with the discovery of calculus differential and integral calculus According to Leibniz s notebooks a critical breakthrough occurred on 11 November 1675 when he employed integral calculus for the first time to find the area under the graph of a function y f x 119 He introduced several notations used to this day for instance the integral sign f x d x displaystyle displaystyle int f x dx nbsp representing an elongated S from the Latin word summa and the d used for differentials d y d x displaystyle frac dy dx nbsp from the Latin word differentia Leibniz did not publish anything about his calculus until 1684 120 Leibniz expressed the inverse relation of integration and differentiation later called the fundamental theorem of calculus by means of a figure 121 in his 1693 paper Supplementum geometriae dimensoriae 122 However James Gregory is credited for the theorem s discovery in geometric form Isaac Barrow proved a more generalized geometric version and Newton developed supporting theory The concept became more transparent as developed through Leibniz s formalism and new notation 123 The product rule of differential calculus is still called Leibniz s law In addition the theorem that tells how and when to differentiate under the integral sign is called the Leibniz integral rule Leibniz exploited infinitesimals in developing calculus manipulating them in ways suggesting that they had paradoxical algebraic properties George Berkeley in a tract called The Analyst and also in De Motu criticized these A recent study argues that Leibnizian calculus was free of contradictions and was better grounded than Berkeley s empiricist criticisms 124 From 1711 until his death Leibniz was engaged in a dispute with John Keill Newton and others over whether Leibniz had invented calculus independently of Newton The use of infinitesimals in mathematics was frowned upon by followers of Karl Weierstrass 125 126 but survived in science and engineering and even in rigorous mathematics via the fundamental computational device known as the differential Beginning in 1960 Abraham Robinson worked out a rigorous foundation for Leibniz s infinitesimals using model theory in the context of a field of hyperreal numbers The resulting non standard analysis can be seen as a belated vindication of Leibniz s mathematical reasoning Robinson s transfer principle is a mathematical implementation of Leibniz s heuristic law of continuity while the standard part function implements the Leibnizian transcendental law of homogeneity Topology edit Leibniz was the first to use the term analysis situs 127 later used in the 19th century to refer to what is now known as topology There are two takes on this situation On the one hand Mates citing a 1954 paper in German by Jacob Freudenthal argues Although for Leibniz the situs of a sequence of points is completely determined by the distance between them and is altered if those distances are altered his admirer Euler in the famous 1736 paper solving the Konigsberg Bridge Problem and its generalizations used the term geometria situs in such a sense that the situs remains unchanged under topological deformations He mistakenly credits Leibniz with originating this concept It is sometimes not realized that Leibniz used the term in an entirely different sense and hence can hardly be considered the founder of that part of mathematics 128 But Hideaki Hirano argues differently quoting Mandelbrot 129 To sample Leibniz scientific works is a sobering experience Next to calculus and to other thoughts that have been carried out to completion the number and variety of premonitory thrusts is overwhelming We saw examples in packing My Leibniz mania is further reinforced by finding that for one moment its hero attached importance to geometric scaling In Euclidis Prota which is an attempt to tighten Euclid s axioms he states I have diverse definitions for the straight line The straight line is a curve any part of which is similar to the whole and it alone has this property not only among curves but among sets This claim can be proved today 130 Thus the fractal geometry promoted by Mandelbrot drew on Leibniz s notions of self similarity and the principle of continuity Natura non facit saltus 69 We also see that when Leibniz wrote in a metaphysical vein that the straight line is a curve any part of which is similar to the whole he was anticipating topology by more than two centuries As for packing Leibniz told his friend and correspondent Des Bosses to imagine a circle then to inscribe within it three congruent circles with maximum radius the latter smaller circles could be filled with three even smaller circles by the same procedure This process can be continued infinitely from which arises a good idea of self similarity Leibniz s improvement of Euclid s axiom contains the same concept Science and engineering editLeibniz s writings are currently discussed not only for their anticipations and possible discoveries not yet recognized but as ways of advancing present knowledge Much of his writing on physics is included in Gerhardt s Mathematical Writings Physics edit See also Dynamism metaphysics and Conatus In Leibniz Leibniz contributed a fair amount to the statics and dynamics emerging around him often disagreeing with Descartes and Newton He devised a new theory of motion dynamics based on kinetic energy and potential energy which posited space as relative whereas Newton was thoroughly convinced that space was absolute An important example of Leibniz s mature physical thinking is his Specimen Dynamicum of 1695 131 Until the discovery of subatomic particles and the quantum mechanics governing them many of Leibniz s speculative ideas about aspects of nature not reducible to statics and dynamics made little sense For instance he anticipated Albert Einstein by arguing against Newton that space time and motion are relative not absolute As for my own opinion I have said more than once that I hold space to be something merely relative as time is that I hold it to be an order of coexistences as time is an order of successions 76 Leibniz held a relationist notion of space and time against Newton s substantivalist views 132 133 134 According to Newton s substantivalism space and time are entities in their own right existing independently of things Leibniz s relationism in contrast describes space and time as systems of relations that exist between objects The rise of general relativity and subsequent work in the history of physics has put Leibniz s stance in a more favorable light One of Leibniz s projects was to recast Newton s theory as a vortex theory 135 However his project went beyond vortex theory since at its heart there was an attempt to explain one of the most difficult problems in physics that of the origin of the cohesion of matter 135 The principle of sufficient reason has been invoked in recent cosmology and his identity of indiscernibles in quantum mechanics a field some even credit him with having anticipated in some sense In addition to his theories about the nature of reality Leibniz s contributions to the development of calculus have also had a major impact on physics The vis viva edit Leibniz s vis viva Latin for living force is mv2 twice the modern kinetic energy He realized that the total energy would be conserved in certain mechanical systems so he considered it an innate motive characteristic of matter 136 Here too his thinking gave rise to another regrettable nationalistic dispute His vis viva was seen as rivaling the conservation of momentum championed by Newton in England and by Descartes and Voltaire in France hence academics in those countries tended to neglect Leibniz s idea Leibniz knew of the validity of conservation of momentum In reality both energy and momentum are conserved in closed systems so both approaches are valid Other natural science edit By proposing that the earth has a molten core he anticipated modern geology In embryology he was a preformationist but also proposed that organisms are the outcome of a combination of an infinite number of possible microstructures and of their powers In the life sciences and paleontology he revealed an amazing transformist intuition fueled by his study of comparative anatomy and fossils One of his principal works on this subject Protogaea unpublished in his lifetime has recently been published in English for the first time He worked out a primal organismic theory 137 In medicine he exhorted the physicians of his time with some results to ground their theories in detailed comparative observations and verified experiments and to distinguish firmly scientific and metaphysical points of view Psychology edit Psychology had been a central interest of Leibniz 138 139 He appears to be an underappreciated pioneer of psychology 140 He wrote on topics which are now regarded as fields of psychology attention and consciousness memory learning association motivation the act of striving emergent individuality the general dynamics of development evolutionary psychology His discussions in the New Essays and Monadology often rely on everyday observations such as the behaviour of a dog or the noise of the sea and he develops intuitive analogies the synchronous running of clocks or the balance spring of a clock He also devised postulates and principles that apply to psychology the continuum of the unnoticed petites perceptions to the distinct self aware apperception and psychophysical parallelism from the point of view of causality and of purpose Souls act according to the laws of final causes through aspirations ends and means Bodies act according to the laws of efficient causes i e the laws of motion And these two realms that of efficient causes and that of final causes harmonize with one another 141 This idea refers to the mind body problem stating that the mind and brain do not act upon each other but act alongside each other separately but in harmony 142 Leibniz however did not use the term psychologia 143 Leibniz s epistemological position against John Locke and English empiricism sensualism was made clear Nihil est in intellectu quod non fuerit in sensu nisi intellectu ipse Nothing is in the intellect that was not first in the senses except the intellect itself 144 Principles that are not present in sensory impressions can be recognised in human perception and consciousness logical inferences categories of thought the principle of causality and the principle of purpose teleology Leibniz found his most important interpreter in Wilhelm Wundt founder of psychology as a discipline Wundt used the nisi intellectu ipse quotation 1862 on the title page of his Beitrage zur Theorie der Sinneswahrnehmung Contributions on the Theory of Sensory Perception and published a detailed and aspiring monograph on Leibniz 145 Wundt shaped the term apperception introduced by Leibniz into an experimental psychologically based apperception psychology that included neuropsychological modelling an excellent example of how a concept created by a great philosopher could stimulate a psychological research program One principle in the thinking of Leibniz played a fundamental role the principle of equality of separate but corresponding viewpoints Wundt characterized this style of thought perspectivism in a way that also applied for him viewpoints that supplement one another while also being able to appear as opposites that only resolve themselves when considered more deeply 146 147 Much of Leibniz s work went on to have a great impact on the field of psychology 148 Leibniz thought that there are many petites perceptions or small perceptions of which we perceive but of which we are unaware He believed that by the principle that phenomena found in nature were continuous by default it was likely that the transition between conscious and unconscious states had intermediary steps 149 For this to be true there must also be a portion of the mind of which we are unaware at any given time His theory regarding consciousness in relation to the principle of continuity can be seen as an early theory regarding the stages of sleep In this way Leibniz s theory of perception can be viewed as one of many theories leading up to the idea of the unconscious Leibniz was a direct influence on Ernst Platner who is credited with originally coining the term Unbewusstseyn unconscious 150 Additionally the idea of subliminal stimuli can be traced back to his theory of small perceptions 151 Leibniz s ideas regarding music and tonal perception went on to influence the laboratory studies of Wilhelm Wundt 152 Social science edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In public health he advocated establishing a medical administrative authority with powers over epidemiology and veterinary medicine He worked to set up a coherent medical training program oriented towards public health and preventive measures In economic policy he proposed tax reforms and a national insurance program and discussed the balance of trade He even proposed something akin to what much later emerged as game theory In sociology he laid the ground for communication theory Technology edit In 1906 Garland published a volume of Leibniz s writings bearing on his many practical inventions and engineering work To date few of these writings have been translated into English Nevertheless it is well understood that Leibniz was a serious inventor engineer and applied scientist with great respect for practical life Following the motto theoria cum praxi he urged that theory be combined with practical application and thus has been claimed as the father of applied science He designed wind driven propellers and water pumps mining machines to extract ore hydraulic presses lamps submarines clocks etc With Denis Papin he created a steam engine He even proposed a method for desalinating water From 1680 to 1685 he struggled to overcome the chronic flooding that afflicted the ducal silver mines in the Harz Mountains but did not succeed 153 Computation edit Leibniz may have been the first computer scientist and information theorist 154 Early in life he documented the binary numeral system base 2 then revisited that system throughout his career 155 While Leibniz was examining other cultures to compare his metaphysical views he encountered an ancient Chinese book I Ching Leibniz interpreted a diagram which showed yin and yang and corresponded it to a zero and one 156 More information can be found in the Sinophology section Leibniz had similarities with Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz and Thomas Harriot who independently developed the binary system as he was familiar with their works on the binary system 157 Juan Caramuel y Lobkowitz worked extensively on logarithms including logarithms with base 2 158 Thomas Harriot s manuscripts contained a table of binary numbers and their notation which demonstrated that any number could be written on a base 2 system 159 Regardless Leibniz simplified the binary system and articulated logical properties such as conjunction disjunction negation identity inclusion and the empty set 160 He anticipated Lagrangian interpolation and algorithmic information theory His calculus ratiocinator anticipated aspects of the universal Turing machine In 1961 Norbert Wiener suggested that Leibniz should be considered the patron saint of cybernetics 161 Wiener is quoted with Indeed the general idea of a computing machine is nothing but a mechanization of Leibniz s Calculus Ratiocinator 162 In 1671 Leibniz began to invent a machine that could execute all four arithmetic operations gradually improving it over a number of years This stepped reckoner attracted fair attention and was the basis of his election to the Royal Society in 1673 A number of such machines were made during his years in Hanover by a craftsman working under his supervision They were not an unambiguous success because they did not fully mechanize the carry operation Couturat reported finding an unpublished note by Leibniz dated 1674 describing a machine capable of performing some algebraic operations 163 Leibniz also devised a now reproduced cipher machine recovered by Nicholas Rescher in 2010 164 In 1693 Leibniz described a design of a machine which could in theory integrate differential equations which he called integraph 165 Leibniz was groping towards hardware and software concepts worked out much later by Charles Babbage and Ada Lovelace In 1679 while mulling over his binary arithmetic Leibniz imagined a machine in which binary numbers were represented by marbles governed by a rudimentary sort of punched cards 166 167 Modern electronic digital computers replace Leibniz s marbles moving by gravity with shift registers voltage gradients and pulses of electrons but otherwise they run roughly as Leibniz envisioned in 1679 Librarian edit Later in Leibniz s career after the death of von Boyneburg Leibniz moved to Paris and accepted a position as a librarian in the Hanoverian court of Johann Friedrich Duke of Brunswick Luneburg 168 Leibniz s predecessor Tobias Fleischer had already created a cataloging system for the Duke s library but it was a clumsy attempt At this library Leibniz focused more on advancing the library than on the cataloging For instance within a month of taking the new position he developed a comprehensive plan to expand the library He was one of the first to consider developing a core collection for a library and felt that a library for display and ostentation is a luxury and indeed superfluous but a well stocked and organized library is important and useful for all areas of human endeavor and is to be regarded on the same level as schools and churches 169 Leibniz lacked the funds to develop the library in this manner After working at this library by the end of 1690 Leibniz was appointed as privy councilor and librarian of the Bibliotheca Augusta at Wolfenbuttel It was an extensive library with at least 25 946 printed volumes 169 At this library Leibniz sought to improve the catalog He was not allowed to make complete changes to the existing closed catalog but was allowed to improve upon it so he started on that task immediately He created an alphabetical author catalog and had also created other cataloging methods that were not implemented While serving as librarian of the ducal libraries in Hanover and Wolfenbuttel Leibniz effectively became one of the founders of library science Seemingly Leibniz paid a good deal of attention to the classification of subject matter favoring a well balance library covering a host of numerous subjects and interests 170 Leibniz for example proposed the following classification system in the Otivm Hanoveranvm Sive Miscellanea 1737 170 171 Leibniz s Idea of Arranging a Narrower Library Theology Jurisprudence Medicine Intellectual Philosophy Philosophy of the Imagination or Mathematics Philosophy of Sensible Things or Physics Philology or Language Civil History Literary History and Libraries General and MiscellaneousHe also designed a book indexing system in ignorance of the only other such system then extant that of the Bodleian Library at Oxford University He also called on publishers to distribute abstracts of all new titles they produced each year in a standard form that would facilitate indexing He hoped that this abstracting project would eventually include everything printed from his day back to Gutenberg Neither proposal met with success at the time but something like them became standard practice among English language publishers during the 20th century under the aegis of the Library of Congress and the British Library citation needed He called for the creation of an empirical database as a way to further all sciences His characteristica universalis calculus ratiocinator and a community of minds intended among other things to bring political and religious unity to Europe can be seen as distant unwitting anticipations of artificial languages e g Esperanto and its rivals symbolic logic even the World Wide Web Advocate of scientific societies edit Leibniz emphasized that research was a collaborative endeavor Hence he warmly advocated the formation of national scientific societies along the lines of the British Royal Society and the French Academie Royale des Sciences More specifically in his correspondence and travels he urged the creation of such societies in Dresden Saint Petersburg Vienna and Berlin Only one such project came to fruition in 1700 the Berlin Academy of Sciences was created Leibniz drew up its first statutes and served as its first President for the remainder of his life That Academy evolved into the German Academy of Sciences the publisher of the ongoing critical edition of his works 172 Law and Morality editLeibniz s writings on law ethics and politics 173 were long overlooked by English speaking scholars but this has changed of late 174 While Leibniz was no apologist for absolute monarchy like Hobbes or for tyranny in any form neither did he echo the political and constitutional views of his contemporary John Locke views invoked in support of liberalism in 18th century America and later elsewhere The following excerpt from a 1695 letter to Baron J C Boyneburg s son Philipp is very revealing of Leibniz s political sentiments As for the great question of the power of sovereigns and the obedience their peoples owe them I usually say that it would be good for princes to be persuaded that their people have the right to resist them and for the people on the other hand to be persuaded to obey them passively I am however quite of the opinion of Grotius that one ought to obey as a rule the evil of revolution being greater beyond comparison than the evils causing it Yet I recognize that a prince can go to such excess and place the well being of the state in such danger that the obligation to endure ceases This is most rare however and the theologian who authorizes violence under this pretext should take care against excess excess being infinitely more dangerous than deficiency 175 In 1677 Leibniz called for a European confederation governed by a council or senate whose members would represent entire nations and would be free to vote their consciences 176 this is sometimes considered an anticipation of the European Union He believed that Europe would adopt a uniform religion He reiterated these proposals in 1715 But at the same time he arrived to propose an interreligious and multicultural project to create a universal system of justice which required from him a broad interdisciplinary perspective In order to propose it he combined linguistics especially sinology moral and legal philosophy management economics and politics 177 Law edit Leibniz trained as a legal academic but under the tutelage of Cartesian sympathiser Erhard Weigel we already see an attempt to solve legal problems by rationalist mathematical methods Weigel s influence being most explicit in the Specimen Quaestionum Philosophicarum ex Jure collectarum An Essay of Collected Philosophical Problems of Right For example the Inaugural Disputation on Perplexing Cases 178 uses early combinatorics to solve some legal disputes while the 1666 Dissertation on the Combinatorial Art 179 includes simple legal problems by way of illustration The use of combinatorial methods to solve legal and moral problems seems via Athanasius Kircher and Daniel Schwenter to be of Llullist inspiration Ramon Llull attempted to solve ecumenical disputes through recourse to a combinatorial mode of reasoning he regarded as universal a mathesis universalis 180 In the late 1660s the enlightened Prince Bishop of Mainz Johann Philipp von Schonborn announced a review of the legal system and made available a position to support his current law commissioner Leibniz left Franconia and made for Mainz before even winning the role On reaching Frankfurt am Main Leibniz penned The New Method of Teaching and Learning the Law by way of application 181 The text proposed a reform of legal education and is characteristically syncretic integrating aspects of Thomism Hobbesianism Cartesianism and traditional jurisprudence Leibniz s argument that the function of legal teaching was not to impress rules as one might train a dog but to aid the student in discovering their own public reason evidently impressed von Schonborn as he secured the job Leibniz s next major attempt to find a universal rational core to law and so found a legal science of right 182 came when Leibniz worked in Mainz from 1667 72 Starting initially from Hobbes mechanistic doctrine of power Leibniz reverted to logico combinatorial methods in an attempt to define justice 183 As Leibniz s so called Elementa Juris Naturalis advanced he built in modal notions of right possibility and obligation necessity in which we see perhaps the earliest elaboration of his possible worlds doctrine within a deontic frame 184 While ultimately the Elementa remained unpublished Leibniz continued to work on his drafts and promote their ideas to correspondents up until his death Ecumenism edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Leibniz devoted considerable intellectual and diplomatic effort to what would now be called an ecumenical endeavor seeking to reconcile the Roman Catholic and Lutheran churches In this respect he followed the example of his early patrons Baron von Boyneburg and the Duke John Frederick both cradle Lutherans who converted to Catholicism as adults who did what they could to encourage the reunion of the two faiths and who warmly welcomed such endeavors by others The House of Brunswick remained Lutheran because the Duke s children did not follow their father These efforts included corresponding with French bishop Jacques Benigne Bossuet and involved Leibniz in some theological controversy He evidently thought that the thoroughgoing application of reason would suffice to heal the breach caused by the Reformation Philology editLeibniz the philologist was an avid student of languages eagerly latching on to any information about vocabulary and grammar that came his way In 1710 he applied ideas of gradualism and uniformitarianism to linguistics in a short essay 185 He refuted the belief widely held by Christian scholars of the time that Hebrew was the primeval language of the human race At the same time he rejected the idea of unrelated language groups and considered them all to have a common source 186 He also refuted the argument advanced by Swedish scholars in his day that a form of proto Swedish was the ancestor of the Germanic languages He puzzled over the origins of the Slavic languages and was fascinated by classical Chinese Leibniz was also an expert in the Sanskrit language 104 He published the princeps editio first modern edition of the late medieval Chronicon Holtzatiae a Latin chronicle of the County of Holstein Sinophology edit nbsp A diagram of I Ching hexagrams sent to Leibniz from Joachim Bouvet The Arabic numerals were added by Leibniz 187 Leibniz was perhaps the first major European intellectual to take a close interest in Chinese civilization which he knew by corresponding with and reading other works by European Christian missionaries posted in China He apparently read Confucius Sinarum Philosophus in the first year of its publication 188 He came to the conclusion that Europeans could learn much from the Confucian ethical tradition He mulled over the possibility that the Chinese characters were an unwitting form of his universal characteristic He noted how the I Ching hexagrams correspond to the binary numbers from 000000 to 111111 and concluded that this mapping was evidence of major Chinese accomplishments in the sort of philosophical mathematics he admired 189 Leibniz communicated his ideas of the binary system representing Christianity to the Emperor of China hoping it would convert him 104 Leibniz was one of the western philosophers of the time who attempted to accommodate Confucian ideas to prevailing European beliefs 190 Leibniz s attraction to Chinese philosophy originates from his perception that Chinese philosophy was similar to his own 188 The historian E R Hughes suggests that Leibniz s ideas of simple substance and pre established harmony were directly influenced by Confucianism pointing to the fact that they were conceived during the period when he was reading Confucius Sinarum Philosophus 188 Polymath editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message While making his grand tour of European archives to research the Brunswick family history that he never completed Leibniz stopped in Vienna between May 1688 and February 1689 where he did much legal and diplomatic work for the Brunswicks He visited mines talked with mine engineers and tried to negotiate export contracts for lead from the ducal mines in the Harz mountains His proposal that the streets of Vienna be lit with lamps burning rapeseed oil was implemented During a formal audience with the Austrian Emperor and in subsequent memoranda he advocated reorganizing the Austrian economy reforming the coinage of much of central Europe negotiating a Concordat between the Habsburgs and the Vatican and creating an imperial research library official archive and public insurance fund He wrote and published an important paper on mechanics Posthumous reputation edit nbsp Leibnizstrasse street sign BerlinWhen Leibniz died his reputation was in decline He was remembered for only one book the Theodicee 191 whose supposed central argument Voltaire lampooned in his popular book Candide which concludes with the character Candide saying Non liquet it is not clear a term that was applied during the Roman Republic to a legal verdict of not proven Voltaire s depiction of Leibniz s ideas was so influential that many believed it to be an accurate description Thus Voltaire and his Candide bear some of the blame for the lingering failure to appreciate and understand Leibniz s ideas Leibniz had an ardent disciple Christian Wolff whose dogmatic and facile outlook did Leibniz s reputation much harm He also influenced David Hume who read his Theodicee and used some of his ideas 192 In any event philosophical fashion was moving away from the rationalism and system building of the 17th century of which Leibniz had been such an ardent proponent His work on law diplomacy and history was seen as of ephemeral interest The vastness and richness of his correspondence went unrecognized Leibniz s reputation began to recover with the 1765 publication of the Nouveaux Essais In 1768 Louis Dutens edited the first multi volume edition of Leibniz s writings followed in the 19th century by a number of editions including those edited by Erdmann Foucher de Careil Gerhardt Gerland Klopp and Mollat Publication of Leibniz s correspondence with notables such as Antoine Arnauld Samuel Clarke Sophia of Hanover and her daughter Sophia Charlotte of Hanover began In 1900 Bertrand Russell published a critical study of Leibniz s metaphysics 193 Shortly thereafter Louis Couturat published an important study of Leibniz and edited a volume of Leibniz s heretofore unpublished writings mainly on logic They made Leibniz somewhat respectable among 20th century analytical and linguistic philosophers in the English speaking world Leibniz had already been of great influence to many Germans such as Bernhard Riemann For example Leibniz s phrase salva veritate meaning interchangeability without loss of or compromising the truth recurs in Willard Quine s writings Nevertheless the secondary literature on Leibniz did not really blossom until after World War II This is especially true of English speaking countries in Gregory Brown s bibliography fewer than 30 of the English language entries were published before 1946 American Leibniz studies owe much to Leroy Loemker 1904 1985 through his translations and his interpretive essays in LeClerc 1973 Nicholas Jolley has surmised that Leibniz s reputation as a philosopher is now perhaps higher than at any time since he was alive 194 Analytic and contemporary philosophy continue to invoke his notions of identity individuation and possible worlds Work in the history of 17th and 18th century ideas has revealed more clearly the 17th century Intellectual Revolution that preceded the better known Industrial and commercial revolutions of the 18th and 19th centuries In Germany various important institutions were named after Leibniz In Hanover in particular he is the namesake for some of the most important institutions in the town Leibniz University Hannover Leibniz Akademie Institution for academic and non academic training and further education in the business sector Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek Niedersachsische Landesbibliothek one of the largest regional and academic libraries in Germany and alongside the Oldenburg State Library and the Herzog August Library in Wolfenbuttel one of the three state libraries in Lower Saxony Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Gesellschaft Society for the cultivation and dissemination of Leibniz s teachingsoutside of Hanover Leibniz Association Berlin Leibniz Sozietat der Wissenschaften zu Berlin Association of scientists founded in Berlin in 1993 with the legal form of a registered association It continues the activities of the Academy of Sciences of the GDR with personnel continuity Leibniz Kolleg of Tubingen University central propaedeutic institution of the university which aims to enable high school graduates to make a well founded study decision through a ten month comprehensive general course of study and at the same time to introduce them to academic work Leibniz Supercomputing Centre Munich more than 20 schools all over GermanyAwards Leibniz Ring Hannover Honor given since 1997 by the Hannover Press Club to personalities or institutions who have drawn attention to themselves through an outstanding performance or have made a special mark through their life s work Leibniz Medaille of the Berlin Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities established in 1906 and awarded previously by the Prussian Academy of Sciences and later the German Academy of Sciences at Berlin Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Medaille of the Leibniz Sozietat Leibniz Medaille der Akademie der Wissenschaften und der Literatur MainzIn 1985 the German government created the Leibniz Prize offering an annual award of 1 55 million euros for experimental results and 770 000 euros for theoretical ones It was the world s largest prize for scientific achievement prior to the Fundamental Physics Prize The collection of manuscript papers of Leibniz at the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek Niedersachische Landesbibliothek was inscribed on UNESCO s Memory of the World Register in 2007 195 Cultural references edit Leibniz still receives popular attention The Google Doodle for 1 July 2018 celebrated Leibniz s 372nd birthday 196 197 198 Using a quill his hand is shown writing Google in binary ASCII code One of the earliest popular but indirect expositions of Leibniz was Voltaire s satire Candide published in 1759 Leibniz was lampooned as Professor Pangloss described as the greatest philosopher of the Holy Roman Empire Leibniz also appears as one of the main historical figures in Neal Stephenson s series of novels The Baroque Cycle Stephenson credits readings and discussions concerning Leibniz for inspiring him to write the series 199 Leibniz also stars in Adam Ehrlich Sachs s novel The Organs of Sense The German biscuit Choco Leibniz is named after Leibniz a famous resident of Hanover where the manufacturer Bahlsen is based Writings and publication editLeibniz mainly wrote in three languages scholastic Latin French and German During his lifetime he published many pamphlets and scholarly articles but only two philosophical books the Combinatorial Art and the Theodicee He published numerous pamphlets often anonymous on behalf of the House of Brunswick Luneburg most notably the De jure suprematum a major consideration of the nature of sovereignty One substantial book appeared posthumously his Nouveaux essais sur l entendement humain which Leibniz had withheld from publication after the death of John Locke Only in 1895 when Bodemann completed his catalogue of Leibniz s manuscripts and correspondence did the enormous extent of Leibniz s Nachlass become clear about 15 000 letters to more than 1000 recipients plus more than 40 000 other items Moreover quite a few of these letters are of essay length Much of his vast correspondence especially the letters dated after 1700 remains unpublished and much of what is published has appeared only in recent decades The more than 67 000 records of the Leibniz Edition s Catalogue cover almost all of his known writings and the letters from him and to him The amount variety and disorder of Leibniz s writings are a predictable result of a situation he described in a letter as follows I cannot tell you how extraordinarily distracted and spread out I am I am trying to find various things in the archives I look at old papers and hunt up unpublished documents From these I hope to shed some light on the history of the House of Brunswick I receive and answer a huge number of letters At the same time I have so many mathematical results philosophical thoughts and other literary innovations that should not be allowed to vanish that I often do not know where to begin 200 The extant parts of the critical edition 201 of Leibniz s writings are organized as follows Series 1 Political Historical and General Correspondence 25 vols 1666 1706 Series 2 Philosophical Correspondence 3 vols 1663 1700 Series 3 Mathematical Scientific and Technical Correspondence 8 vols 1672 1698 Series 4 Political Writings 9 vols 1667 1702 Series 5 Historical and Linguistic Writings In preparation Series 6 Philosophical Writings 7 vols 1663 90 and Nouveaux essais sur l entendement humain Series 7 Mathematical Writings 6 vols 1672 76 Series 8 Scientific Medical and Technical Writings 1 vol 1668 76 The systematic cataloguing of all of Leibniz s Nachlass began in 1901 It was hampered by two world wars and then by decades of German division into two states with the Cold War s iron curtain in between separating scholars and also scattering portions of his literary estates The ambitious project has had to deal with writings in seven languages contained in some 200 000 written and printed pages In 1985 it was reorganized and included in a joint program of German federal and state Lander academies Since then the branches in Potsdam Munster Hanover and Berlin have jointly published 57 volumes of the critical edition with an average of 870 pages and prepared index and concordance works Selected works edit The year given is usually that in which the work was completed not of its eventual publication 1666 publ 1690 De Arte Combinatoria On the Art of Combination partially translated in Loemker 1 and Parkinson 1966 1667 Nova Methodus Discendae Docendaeque Iurisprudentiae A New Method for Learning and Teaching Jurisprudence 1667 Dialogus de connexione inter res et verba 1671 Hypothesis Physica Nova New Physical Hypothesis Loemker 8 I part 1673 Confessio philosophi A Philosopher s Creed an English translation is available online Oct 1684 Meditationes de cognitione veritate et ideis Meditations on Knowledge Truth and Ideas Nov 1684 Nova methodus pro maximis et minimis New method for maximums and minimums translated in Struik D J 1969 A Source Book in Mathematics 1200 1800 Harvard University Press 271 81 1686 Discours de metaphysique Martin and Brown 1988 Ariew and Garber 35 Loemker 35 Wiener III 3 Woolhouse and Francks 1 1686 Generales inquisitiones de analysi notionum et veritatum General Inquiries About the Analysis of Concepts and of Truths 1694 De primae philosophiae Emendatione et de Notione Substantiae On the Correction of First Philosophy and the Notion of Substance 1695 Systeme nouveau de la nature et de la communication des substances New System of Nature 1700 Accessiones historicae 202 1703 Explication de l Arithmetique Binaire Explanation of Binary Arithmetic Carl Immanuel Gerhardt Mathematical Writings VII 223 An English translation by Lloyd Strickland is available online 1704 publ 1765 Nouveaux essais sur l entendement humain Translated in Remnant Peter and Bennett Jonathan trans 1996 New Essays on Human Understanding Langley translation 1896 Cambridge University Press Wiener III 6 part 1707 1710 Scriptores rerum Brunsvicensium 202 3 Vols 1710 Theodicee Farrer A M and Huggard E M trans 1985 1952 Wiener III 11 part An English translation is available online at Project Gutenberg 1714 Principes de la nature et de la Grace fondes en raison 1714 Monadologie translated by Nicholas Rescher 1991 The Monadology An Edition for Students University of Pittsburgh Press Ariew and Garber 213 Loemker 67 Wiener III 13 Woolhouse and Francks 19 An English translation by Robert Latta is available online Posthumous works edit nbsp Commercium philosophicum et mathematicum 1745 a collection of letters between Leibnitz and Johann Bernoulli1717 Collectanea Etymologica edited by the secretary of Leibniz Johann Georg von Eckhart 1749 Protogaea 1750 Origines Guelficae 202 Collections edit Six important collections of English translations are Wiener 1951 Parkinson 1966 Loemker 1969 Ariew and Garber 1989 Woolhouse and Francks 1998 and Strickland 2006 The ongoing critical edition of all of Leibniz s writings is Samtliche Schriften und Briefe 201 See also edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp Mathematics portal nbsp Philosophy portal nbsp Science portal nbsp Art portal nbsp Literature portalGeneral Leibniz rule Leibniz Association Leibniz operator List of German inventors and discoverers List of pioneers in computer science List of things named after Gottfried Leibniz Mathesis universalis Scientific revolution Leibniz University Hannover Bartholomew Des Bosses Joachim Bouvet Outline of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz bibliographyNotes edit Sometimes spelled Leibnitz Pronunciation ˈ l aɪ b n ɪ t s LYBE nits 10 German ˈɡɔtfʁiːt ˈvɪlhɛlm ˈlaɪbnɪts 11 12 or German ˈlaɪpnɪts 13 French Godefroi Guillaume Leibnitz 14 ɡɔdfʁwa ɡijom lɛbnits There is no complete gathering of the writings of Leibniz translated into English 18 References editCitations edit Michael Blamauer ed The Mental as Fundamental New Perspectives on Panpsychism Walter de Gruyter 2013 p 111 Fumerton Richard 21 February 2000 Foundationalist Theories of Epistemic Justification Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Retrieved 19 August 2018 Stefano Di Bella Tad M Schmaltz eds The Problem of Universals in Early Modern Philosophy Oxford University Press 2017 p 207 n 25 Leibniz s conceptualism is related to the Ockhamist tradition A B Dickerson Kant on Representation and Objectivity Cambridge University Press 2003 p 85 David Marian 10 July 2022 Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University via Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Kurt Huber Leibniz Der Philosoph der universalen Harmonie Severus Verlag 2014 p 29 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz at the Mathematics Genealogy Project a b c Arthur 2014 p 16 a b Arthur 2014 p 13 Leibniz entry in Collins English Dictionary Mangold Max ed 2005 Duden Ausspracheworterbuch Duden Pronunciation Dictionary in German 7th ed Mannheim Bibliographisches Institut GmbH ISBN 978 3 411 04066 7 Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 9781405881180 Eva Maria Krech et al eds 2010 Deutsches Ausspracheworterbuch German Pronunciation Dictionary in German 1st ed Berlin Walter de Gruyter GmbH amp Co KG ISBN 978 3 11 018203 3 See inscription of the engraving depicted in the 1666 1676 section Dunne Luke 21 December 2022 Gottfried W Leibniz The Last True Genius TheCollector Retrieved 1 October 2023 Murray Stuart A P 2009 The library an illustrated history New York NY Skyhorse Pub ISBN 978 1 60239 706 4 Roughly 40 35 and 25 respectively www gwlb de Archived 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Leibniz Nachlass i e Legacy of Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Bibliothek one of the three Official Libraries of the German state Lower Saxony Baird Forrest E Kaufmann Walter 2008 From Plato to Derrida Upper Saddle River New Jersey Pearson Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 158591 1 Russell Bertrand 15 April 2013 History of Western Philosophy Collectors Edition revised ed Routledge p 469 ISBN 978 1 135 69284 1 Extract of page 469 Handley Lindsey D Foster Stephen R 2020 Don t Teach Coding Until You Read This Book John Wiley amp Sons p 29 ISBN 9781119602620 Extract of page 29 Apostol Tom M 1991 Calculus Volume 1 illustrated ed John Wiley amp Sons p 172 ISBN 9780471000051 Extract of page 172 Maor Eli 2003 The Facts on File Calculus Handbook The Facts on File Calculus Handbook p 58 ISBN 9781438109541 Extract of page 58 David Smith pp 173 181 1929 Sariel Aviram Diabolic Philosophy Studia Leibnitiana H 1 2019 99 118 Kurt Muller Gisela Kronert Leben und Werk von Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Eine Chronik Frankfurt a M Klostermann 1969 p 3 Mates Benson 1989 The Philosophy of Leibniz Metaphysics and Language Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 505946 5 Mackie 1845 21 Mackie 1845 22 Leibniz biography www history mcs st andrews ac uk Retrieved 8 May 2018 Mackie 1845 26 a b c d e Arthur 2014 p x Hubertus Busche Leibniz Weg ins perspektivische Universum Eine Harmonie im Zeitalter der Berechnung Meiner Verlag 1997 p 120 A few copies of De Arte Combinatoria were produced as requested for the habilitation procedure it was reprinted without his consent in 1690 Jolley Nicholas 1995 The Cambridge Companion to Leibniz Cambridge University Press 20 Simmons George 2007 Calculus Gems Brief Lives and Memorable Mathematics MAA 143 Mackie 1845 38 Mackie 1845 39 Mackie 1845 40 Aiton 1985 312 Ariew R G W Leibniz life and works p 21 in The Cambridge Companion to Leibniz ed by N Jolley Cambridge University Press 1994 ISBN 0 521 36588 0 Extract of page 21 Mackie 1845 43 Mackie 1845 44 45 Benaroya Haym Han Seon Mi Nagurka Mark 2 May 2013 Probabilistic Models for Dynamical Systems CRC Press ISBN 978 1 4398 5015 2 Mackie 1845 58 61 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Mackie 1845 69 70 Mackie 1845 73 74 a b Davis Martin 2018 The Universal Computer The Road from Leibniz to Turing CRC Press p 9 ISBN 978 1 138 50208 6 On the encounter between Newton and Leibniz and a review of the evidence see Alfred Rupert Hall Philosophers at War The Quarrel Between Newton and Leibniz Cambridge 2002 pp 44 69 Mackie 1845 117 118 For a study of Leibniz s correspondence with Sophia Charlotte see MacDonald Ross George 1990 Leibniz s Exposition of His System to Queen Sophie Charlotte and Other Ladies In Leibniz in Berlin ed H Poser and A Heinekamp Stuttgart Franz Steiner 1990 61 69 Mackie 1845 109 Brown Stuart 2023 Historical Dictionary of Leibniz s Philosophy 2nd ed Lanham Rowman and Littlefield p 1 ISBN 9781538178447 Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm Freiherr von 1920 The Early Mathematical Manuscripts of Leibniz Translated from the Latin Texts Published by Carl Immanuel Gerhardt with Critical and Historical Notes Open court publishing Company ISBN 9780598818461 See Wir IV 6 and Loemker 50 Also see a curious passage titled Leibniz s Philosophical Dream first published by Bodemann in 1895 and translated on p 253 of Morris Mary ed and trans 1934 Philosophical Writings Dent amp Sons Ltd Christian Mathematicians Leibniz God amp Math Thinking Christianly About Math Education 31 January 2012 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz 2012 Loptson Peter ed Discourse on Metaphysics and Other Writings Broadview Press pp 23 24 ISBN 978 1 55481 011 6 The answer is unknowable but it may not be unreasonable to see him at least in theological terms as essentially a deist He is a determinist there are no miracles the events so called being merely instances of infrequently occurring natural laws Christ has no real role in the system we live forever and hence we carry on after our deaths but then everything every individual substance carries on forever Nonetheless Leibniz is a theist His system is generated from and needs the postulate of a creative god In fact though despite Leibniz s protestations his God is more the architect and engineer of the vast complex world system than the embodiment of love of Christian orthodoxy Christopher Ernest Cosans 2009 Owen s Ape amp Darwin s Bulldog Beyond Darwinism and Creationism Indiana University Press pp 102 103 ISBN 978 0 253 22051 6 In advancing his system of mechanics Newton claimed that collisions of celestial objects would cause a loss of energy that would require God to intervene from time to time to maintain order in the solar system Vailati 1997 37 42 In criticizing this implication Leibniz remarks Sir Isaac Newton and his followers have also a very odd opinion concerning the work of God According to their doctrine God Almighty wants to wind up his watch from time to time otherwise it would cease to move Leibniz 1715 675 Leibniz argues that any scientific theory that relies on God to perform miracles after He had first made the universe indicates that God lacked sufficient foresight or power to establish adequate natural laws in the first place In defense of Newton s theism Clarke is unapologetic tis not a diminution but the true glory of his workmanship that nothing is done without his continual government and inspection Leibniz 1715 676 677 Clarke is believed to have consulted closely with Newton on how to respond to Leibniz He asserts that Leibniz s deism leads to the notion of materialism and fate 1715 677 because it excludes God from the daily workings of nature Hunt Shelby D 2003 Controversy in Marketing Theory For Reason Realism Truth and Objectivity M E Sharpe p 33 ISBN 978 0 7656 0931 1 Consistent with the liberal views of the Enlightenment Leibniz was an optimist with respect to human reasoning and scientific progress Popper 1963 p 69 Although he was a great reader and admirer of Spinoza Leibniz being a confirmed deist rejected emphatically Spinoza s pantheism God and nature for Leibniz were not simply two different labels for the same thing Leibniz on the Trinity and the Incarnation Reason and Revelation in the Seventeenth Century New Haven Yale University Press 2007 pp xix xx Ariew amp Garber 69 Loemker 36 38 Ariew amp Garber 138 Loemker 47 Wiener II 4 Later translated as Loemker 267 and Woolhouse and Francks 30 A VI 4 n 324 pp 1643 1649 with the title Principia Logico Metaphysica Ariew amp Garber 272 284 Loemker 14 20 21 Wiener III 8 Mates 1986 chpts 7 3 9 Loemker 717 See Jolley 1995 129 131 Woolhouse and Francks 1998 and Mercer 2001 a b Gottfried Leibniz New Essays IV 16 la nature ne fait jamais des sauts Natura non facit saltus is the Latin translation of the phrase originally put forward by Linnaeus Philosophia Botanica 1st ed 1751 Chapter III 77 p 27 see also Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Continuity and Infinitesimals and Alexander Baumgarten Metaphysics A Critical Translation with Kant s Elucidations Translated and Edited by Courtney D Fugate and John Hymers Bloomsbury 2013 Preface of the Third Edition 1750 p 79 n d Baumgarten must also have in mind Leibniz s natura non facit saltus nature does not make leaps NE IV 16 A variant translation is natura non saltum facit literally Nature does not make a jump Britton Andrew Sedgwick Peter H Bock Burghard 2008 Okonomische Theorie und christlicher Glaube LIT Verlag Munster p 289 ISBN 978 3 8258 0162 5 Extract of page 289 Loemker 311 Arthur Lovejoy The Great Chain of Being Harvard University Press 1936 Chapter V Plenitude and Sufficient Reason in Leibniz and Spinoza pp 144 182 For a precis of what Leibniz meant by these and other Principles see Mercer 2001 473 484 For a classic discussion of Sufficient Reason and Plenitude see Lovejoy 1957 O Leary Hawthorne John Cover J A 4 September 2008 Substance and Individuation in Leibniz Cambridge University Press p 65 ISBN 978 0 521 07303 5 Rescher Nicholas 1991 G W Leibniz s Monadology an edition for students Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press p 40 ISBN 978 0 8229 5449 1 Ferraro Rafael 2007 Einstein s Space Time An Introduction to Special and General Relativity Springer p 1 ISBN 978 0 387 69946 2 a b See H G Alexander ed The Leibniz Clarke Correspondence Manchester Manchester University Press pp 25 26 Agassi Joseph September 1969 Leibniz s Place in the History of Physics Journal of the History of Ideas 30 3 331 344 doi 10 2307 2708561 JSTOR 2708561 a b Perkins Franklin 10 July 2007 Leibniz A Guide for the Perplexed Bloomsbury Academic p 22 ISBN 978 0 8264 8921 0 Perkins Franklin 10 July 2007 Leibniz A Guide for the Perplexed Bloomsbury Academic p 23 ISBN 978 0 8264 8921 0 Rutherford 1998 is a detailed scholarly study of Leibniz s theodicy Franklin James 2022 The global local distinction vindicates Leibniz s theodicy Theology and Science 20 4 445 462 doi 10 1080 14746700 2022 2124481 S2CID 252979403 Magill Frank ed Masterpieces of World Philosophy New York Harper Collins 1990 Magill Frank ed 1990 Anderson Csiszar Sean 26 July 2015 The Golden Book About Leibniz CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform p 20 ISBN 978 1515243915 Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm Discourse on Metaphysics The Rationalists Rene Descartes Discourse on Method Meditations N Y Dolphin n d n p Monadologie 1714 Nicholas Rescher trans 1991 The Monadology An Edition for Students Uni of Pittsburgh Press p 135 The Fundamental Question hedweb com Retrieved 26 April 2017 Geier Manfred 17 February 2017 Wittgenstein und Heidegger Die letzten Philosophen in German Rowohlt Verlag ISBN 978 3 644 04511 8 Retrieved 26 April 2017 Kulstad Mark Carlin Laurence 2020 Leibniz s Philosophy of Mind in Zalta Edward N ed The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Winter 2020 ed Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University retrieved 22 June 2023 Gray Jonathan Let us Calculate Leibniz Llull and the Computational Imagination The Public Domain Review Retrieved 22 June 2023 The Art of Discovery 1685 Wiener 51 Many of his memoranda are translated in Parkinson 1966 Marcelo Dascal Leibniz Language Signs and Thought A Collection of Essays Foundations of Semiotics series John Benjamins Publishing Company 1987 p 42 Loemker however who translated some of Leibniz s works into English said that the symbols of chemistry were real characters so there is disagreement among Leibniz scholars on this point Preface to the General Science 1677 Revision of Rutherford s translation in Jolley 1995 234 Also Wiener I 4 A good introductory discussion of the characteristic is Jolley 1995 226 240 An early yet still classic discussion of the characteristic and calculus is Couturat 1901 chpts 3 4 Lenzen W 2004 Leibniz s Logic in Handbook of the History of Logic by D M Gabbay J Woods eds volume 3 The Rise of Modern Logic From Leibniz to Frege Amsterdam et al Elsevier North Holland pp 1 83 Russell Bertrand 1900 A Critical Exposition of the Philosophy of Leibniz The University Press Cambridge Leibniz Die philosophischen Schriften VII 1890 pp 236 247 translated as A Study in the Calculus of Real Addition 1690 Archived 19 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine by G H R Parkinson Leibniz Logical Papers A Selection Oxford 1966 pp 131 144 Edward N Zalta A Leibnizian Theory of Concepts Philosophiegeschichte und logische Analyse Logical Analysis and History of Philosophy 3 2000 137 183 Lenzen Wolfgang Leibniz Logic Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Jesse Alama Paul E Oppenheimer Edward N Zalta Automating Leibniz s Theory of Concepts in A Felty and A Middeldorp eds Automated Deduction CADE 25 Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Automated Deduction Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence Volume 9195 Berlin Springer 2015 pp 73 97 Struik 1969 367 a b c Agarwal Ravi P Sen Syamal K 2014 Creators of Mathematical and Computational Sciences Springer Cham p 186 ISBN 978 3 319 10870 4 Gowers Timothy Barrow Green June Leader Imre 2008 The Princeton Companion to Mathematics Princeton Princeton University Press p 745 ISBN 978 0 691 11880 2 Jesseph Douglas M 1998 Leibniz on the Foundations of the Calculus The Question of the Reality of Infinitesimal Magnitudes Perspectives on Science 6 1 amp 2 1 2 6 40 doi 10 1162 posc a 00543 S2CID 118227996 Retrieved 31 December 2011 Goldstine Herman H 1972 The Computer from Pascal to von Neumann Princeton Princeton University Press p 8 ISBN 0 691 08104 2 Jones Matthew L 1 October 2006 The Good Life in the Scientific Revolution Descartes Pascal Leibniz and the Cultivation of Virtue University of Chicago Press pp 237 239 ISBN 978 0 226 40955 9 Agarwal Ravi P Sen Syamal K 2014 Creators of Mathematical and Computational Sciences Springer Cham p 180 ISBN 978 3 319 10870 4 a b Gowers Timothy Barrow Green June Leader Imre eds 2008 The Princeton Companion to Mathematics Princeton Princeton University Press p 744 ISBN 978 0 691 11880 2 Knobloch Eberhard 13 March 2013 Leibniz s Theory of Elimination and Determinants Springer pp 230 237 ISBN 978 4 431 54272 8 Concise Dictionary of Mathematics V amp S Publishers April 2012 pp 113 114 ISBN 978 93 81588 83 3 Lay David C 2012 Linear algebra and its applications 4th ed Boston Addison Wesley ISBN 978 0 321 38517 8 Tokuyama Takeshi et al 2007 Algorithms and Computation 18th International Symposium ISAAC 2007 Sendai Japan December 17 19 2007 proceedings Berlin etc Springer p 599 ISBN 978 3 540 77120 3 Jones Matthew L 2006 The Good Life in the Scientific Revolution Descartes Pascal Leibniz and the Cultivation of Virtue Online Ausg ed Chicago u a Univ of Chicago Press p 169 ISBN 978 0 226 40954 2 Davis Martin 28 February 2018 The Universal Computer The Road from Leibniz to Turing Third Edition CRC Press p 7 ISBN 978 1 138 50208 6 De Risi Vincenzo 2016 Leibniz on the Parallel Postulate and the Foundations of Geometry Birkhauser p 4 ISBN 978 3 319 19863 7 De Risi Vincenzo 10 February 2016 Leibniz on the Parallel Postulate and the Foundations of Geometry Birkhauser Cham p 58 ISBN 978 3 319 19862 0 Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm Freiherr von Gerhardt Carl Immanuel trans 1920 The Early Mathematical Manuscripts of Leibniz Open Court Publishing p 93 Retrieved 10 November 2013 For an English translation of this paper see Struik 1969 271 284 who also translates parts of two other key papers by Leibniz on calculus Dirk Jan Struik A Source Book in Mathematics 1969 pp 282 284 Supplementum geometriae dimensoriae seu generalissima omnium tetragonismorum effectio per motum similiterque multiplex constructio lineae ex data tangentium conditione Acta Euriditorum Sep 1693 pp 385 392 John Stillwell Mathematics and its History 1989 2002 p 159 Katz Mikhail Sherry David 2012 Leibniz s Infinitesimals Their Fictionality Their Modern Implementations and Their Foes from Berkeley to Russell and Beyond Erkenntnis 78 3 571 625 arXiv 1205 0174 doi 10 1007 s10670 012 9370 y S2CID 119329569 Dauben Joseph W December 2003 Mathematics ideology and the politics of infinitesimals mathematical logic and nonstandard analysis in modern China History and Philosophy of Logic 24 4 327 363 doi 10 1080 01445340310001599560 ISSN 0144 5340 S2CID 120089173 Hockney Mike 29 March 2016 How to Create the Universe Lulu Press Inc ISBN 978 1 326 61200 9 Loemker 27 Mates 1986 240 Hirano Hideaki Leibniz s Cultural Pluralism And Natural Law Archived from the original on 22 May 2009 Retrieved 10 March 2010 Mandelbrot 1977 419 Quoted in Hirano 1997 Ariew and Garber 117 Loemker 46 W II 5 On Leibniz and physics see the chapter by Garber in Jolley 1995 and Wilson 1989 Futch Michael Leibniz s Metaphysics of Time and Space New York Springer 2008 Ray Christopher Time Space and Philosophy London Routledge 1991 Rickles Dean Symmetry Structure and Spacetime Oxford Elsevier 2008 a b Arthur 2014 p 56 See Ariew and Garber 155 86 Loemker 53 55 W II 6 7a On Leibniz and biology see Loemker 1969a VIII L E Loemker Introduction to Philosophical papers and letters A selection Gottfried W Leibniz transl and ed by Leroy E Loemker Dordrecht Riedel 2nd ed 1969 T Verhave Contributions to the history of psychology III G W Leibniz 1646 1716 On the Association of Ideas and Learning Psychological Report 1967 Vol 20 11 116 R E Fancher amp H Schmidt Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Underappreciated pioneer of psychology In G A Kimble amp M Wertheimer Eds Portraits of pioneers in psychology Vol V American Psychological Association Washington DC 2003 pp 1 17 Leibniz G W 2007 1714 1720 The Principles of Philosophy known as Monadology Translated by Jonathan Bennett p 11 Larry M Jorgensen The Principle of Continuity and Leibniz s Theory of Consciousness The German scholar Johann Thomas Freigius was the first to use this Latin term 1574 in print Quaestiones logicae et ethicae Basel Henricpetri Leibniz Nouveaux essais 1765 Livre II Des Idees Chapitre 1 6 New Essays on Human Understanding Book 2 p 36 transl by Jonathan Bennett 2009 Wundt Leibniz zu seinem zweihundertjahrigen Todestag 14 November 1916 Alfred Kroner Verlag Leipzig 1917 Wundt 1917 p 117 Fahrenberg Jochen 2017 The influence of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the Psychology philosophy and Ethics of Wilhelm Wundt PDF Retrieved 28 June 2022 D Brett King Wayne Viney and William Woody A History of Psychology Ideas and Context 2009 150 153 Nicholls and Leibscher Thinking the Unconscious Nineteenth Century German Thought 2010 6 Nicholls and Leibscher 2010 King et al 2009 150 153 Klempe SH 2011 The role of tone sensation and musical stimuli in early experimental psychology Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 47 2 187 199 doi 10 1002 jhbs 20495 PMID 21462196 Aiton 1985 107 114 136 Davis 2000 discusses Leibniz s prophetic role in the emergence of calculating machines and of formal languages See Couturat 1901 473 478 Ryan James A 1996 Leibniz Binary System and Shao Yong s Yijing Philosophy East and West 46 1 59 90 doi 10 2307 1399337 JSTOR 1399337 Ares J Lara J Lizcano D Martinez M 2017 Who Discovered the Binary System and Arithmetic Science and Engineering Ethics 24 1 173 188 doi 10 1007 s11948 017 9890 6 hdl 20 500 12226 69 PMID 28281152 S2CID 35486997 Navarro Loidi Juan May 2008 The Introductions of Logarithms into Spain Historia Mathematica 35 2 83 101 doi 10 1016 j hm 2007 09 002 Booth Michael 2003 Thomas Harriot s Translations The Yale Journal of Criticism 16 2 345 361 doi 10 1353 yale 2003 0013 ISSN 0893 5378 S2CID 161603159 Lande Daniel Development of the Binary Number System and the Foundations of Computer Science The Mathematics Enthusiast 513 540 Wiener N Cybernetics 2nd edition with revisions and two additional chapters The MIT Press and Wiley New York 1961 p 12 Wiener Norbert 1948 Time Communication and the Nervous System Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 50 4 Teleological 197 220 Bibcode 1948NYASA 50 197W doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 1948 tb39853 x PMID 18886381 S2CID 28452205 Archived from the original on 23 July 2021 Retrieved 23 July 2021 Couturat 1901 115 See N Rescher Leibniz and Cryptography Pittsburgh University Library Systems University of Pittsburgh 2012 The discoveries of principle of the calculus in Acta Eruditorum commentary pp 60 61 translated by Pierre Beaudry amatterofmind org Leesburg Va September 2000 pdf The Reality Club Wake Up Call for Europe Tech www edge org Archived from the original on 28 December 2005 Retrieved 11 January 2006 Agarwal Ravi P Sen Syamal K 2014 Creators of Mathematical and Computational Sciences Springer Cham p 28 ISBN 978 3 319 10870 4 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Biography amp Facts Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 18 February 2019 a b Schulte Albert H April 1971 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Library Classification The Journal of Library History 6 2 133 152 JSTOR 25540286 a b Schulte Albert H G 1971 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Library Classification The Journal of Library History 6 2 133 152 JSTOR 25540286 Otivm Hanoveranvm Sive Miscellanea Ex ore amp schedis Illustris Viri piae memoriae Godofr Gvilielmi Leibnitii Quondam notata amp descripta Cum ipsi in collendis amp excerpendis rebus ad Historiam Brunsvicensem pertinentibus operam navaret Joachimvs Fridericvs Fellervs Secretarius Ducalis Saxo Vinariensis Additae sunt coronidis loco Epistolae Gallicae amœbeae Leibnitii amp Pellissonii de Tolerantia Religionum amp de controversiis quibusdam Theologicis 1737 On Leibniz s projects for scientific societies see Couturat 1901 App IV See for example Ariew and Garber 19 94 111 193 Riley 1988 Loemker 2 7 20 29 44 59 62 65 W I 1 IV 1 3 See in order of difficulty Jolley 2005 ch 7 Gregory Brown s chapter in Jolley 1995 Hostler 1975 Connelly 2021 and Riley 1996 Loemker 59 fn 16 Translation revised Loemker 58 fn 9 Andres Gallego Jose 2015 Are Humanism and Mixed Methods Related Leibniz s Universal Chinese Dream Journal of Mixed Methods Research 29 2 118 132 doi 10 1177 1558689813515332 S2CID 147266697 Archived from the original on 27 August 2016 Retrieved 24 June 2015 Artosi ed 2013 Loemker 1 Connelly 2018 ch 5 Artosi et al 2013 pref Connelly 2021 ch 6 Christopher Johns 2018 Akademie Ed VI ii 35 93 Connelly 2021 chs 6 8 Gottfried Leibniz Brevis designatio meditationum de originibus gentium ductis potissimum ex indicio linguarum Miscellanea Berolinensia 1710 Henry Hoenigswald Descent Perfection and the Comparative Method since Leibniz Leibniz Humboldt and the Origins of Comparativism eds Tullio De Mauro amp Lia Formigari Amsterdam Philadelphia John Benjamins 1990 119 134 Perkins 2004 117 a b c Mungello David E 1971 Leibniz s Interpretation of Neo Confucianism Philosophy East and West 21 1 3 22 doi 10 2307 1397760 JSTOR 1397760 On Leibniz the I Ching and binary numbers see Aiton 1985 245 248 Leibniz s writings on Chinese civilization are collected and translated in Cook and Rosemont 1994 and discussed in Perkins 2004 Cook Daniel 2015 Leibniz China and the Problem of Pagan Wisdom Philosophy East and West 65 3 936 947 doi 10 1353 pew 2015 0074 S2CID 170208696 See also Irenaean theodicy Gottfried Leibniz Vasilyev 1993 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 February 2011 Retrieved 12 June 2010 Russell 1900 Jolley 217 219 Letters from and to Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz within the collection of manuscript papers of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz UNESCO Memory of the World Programme 16 May 2008 Archived from the original on 19 July 2010 Retrieved 15 December 2009 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz s 372nd Birthday Google Doodle Archive 1 July 2018 Retrieved 23 July 2021 Musil Steven 1 July 2018 Google Doodle celebrates mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibni CNET Smith Kiona N 30 June 2018 Sunday s Google Doodle Celebrates Mathematician Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Forbes Stephenson Neal How the Baroque Cycle Began in P S of Quicksilver Perennial ed 2004 Letter to Vincent Placcius 15 September 1695 in Louis Dutens ed Gothofridi Guillemi Leibnitii Opera Omnia vol 6 1 1768 pp 59 60 a b Leibniz Edition in German Archived from the original on 7 January 2008 a b c Holland Arthur William 1911 Germany History In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 828 901 see page 899 para two The two chief collections which were issued by the philosopher are the Accessiones historicae 1698 1700 and the Scriptores rerum Brunsvicensium Sources edit Bibliographies edit Bodemann Eduard Die Leibniz Handschriften der Koniglichen offentlichen Bibliothek zu Hannover 1895 anastatic reprint Hildesheim Georg Olms 1966 Bodemann Eduard Der Briefwechsel des Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in der Koniglichen offentliche Bibliothek zu Hannover 1895 anastatic reprint Hildesheim Georg Olms 1966 Cerqueiro Daniel 2014 Leibnitz y la ciencia del infinito Buenos Aires Pequena Venecia ISBN 978 987 9239 24 7 Ravier Emile Bibliographie des œuvres de Leibniz Paris Alcan 1937 anastatic reprint Hildesheim Georg Olms 1966 Heinekamp Albert and Mertens Marlen Leibniz Bibliographie Die Literatur uber Leibniz bis 1980 Frankfurt Vittorio Klostermann 1984 Heinekamp Albert and Mertens Marlen Leibniz Bibliographie Die Literatur uber Leibniz Band II 1981 1990 Frankfurt Vittorio Klostermann 1996 An updated bibliography of more than 25 000 titles is available at Leibniz Bibliographie Primary literature chronologically edit Wiener Philip ed 1951 Leibniz Selections Scribner Schrecker Paul amp Schrecker Anne Martin eds 1965 Monadology and other Philosophical Essays Prentice Hall Parkinson G H R ed 1966 Logical Papers Clarendon Press Mason H T amp Parkinson G H R eds 1967 The Leibniz Arnauld Correspondence Manchester University Press Loemker Leroy ed 1969 1956 Leibniz Philosophical Papers and Letters Reidel Morris Mary amp Parkinson G H R eds 1973 Philosophical Writings Everyman s University Library Riley Patrick ed 1988 Leibniz Political Writings Cambridge University Press Niall R Martin D amp Brown Stuart eds 1988 Discourse on Metaphysics and Related Writings Manchester University Press Ariew Roger and Garber Daniel eds 1989 Leibniz Philosophical Essays Hackett Rescher Nicholas ed 1991 G W Leibniz s Monadology An Edition for Students University of Pittsburgh Press Rescher Nicholas On Leibniz Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press 2013 Parkinson G H R ed 1992 De Summa Rerum Metaphysical Papers 1675 1676 Yale University Press Cook Daniel amp Rosemont Henry Jr eds 1994 Leibniz Writings on China Open Court Farrer Austin ed 1995 Theodicy Open Court Remnant Peter amp Bennett Jonathan eds 1996 1981 Leibniz New Essays on Human Understanding Cambridge University Press Woolhouse R S and Francks R eds 1997 Leibniz s New System and Associated Contemporary Texts Oxford University Press Woolhouse R S and Francks R eds 1998 Leibniz Philosophical Texts Oxford University Press Ariew Roger ed 2000 G W Leibniz and Samuel Clarke Correspondence Hackett Richard T W Arthur ed 2001 The Labyrinth of the Continuum Writings on the Continuum Problem 1672 1686 Yale University Press Richard T W Arthur 2014 Leibniz John Wiley amp Sons Robert C Sleigh Jr ed 2005 Confessio Philosophi Papers Concerning the Problem of Evil 1671 1678 Yale University Press Dascal Marcelo ed 2006 G W Leibniz The Art of Controversies Springer Strickland Lloyd 2006 ed The Shorter Leibniz Texts A Collection of New Translations Continuum Look Brandon and Rutherford Donald eds 2007 The Leibniz Des Bosses Correspondence Yale University Press Cohen Claudine and Wakefield Andre eds 2008 Protogaea University of Chicago Press Murray Michael ed 2011 Dissertation on Predestination and Grace Yale University Press Strickand Lloyd ed 2011 Leibniz and the two Sophies The Philosophical Correspondence Toronto Lodge Paul ed 2013 The Leibniz De Volder Correspondence With Selections from the Correspondence Between Leibniz and Johann Bernoulli Yale University Press Artosi Alberto Pieri Bernardo Sartor Giovanni eds 2014 Leibniz Logico Philosophical Puzzles in the Law Springer De Iuliis Carmelo Massimo ed 2017 Leibniz The New Method of Learning and Teaching Jurisprudence Talbot Clark NJ Secondary literature up to 1950 edit Du Bois Reymond Emil 1912 Leibnizsche Gedanken in der neueren Naturwissenschaft Berlin Dummler 1871 reprinted in Reden Leipzig Veit vol 1 Couturat Louis 1901 La Logique de Leibniz Paris Felix Alcan Heidegger Martin 1983 The Metaphysical Foundations of Logic Indiana University Press lecture course 1928 Lovejoy Arthur O 1957 1936 Plenitude and Sufficient Reason in Leibniz and Spinoza in his The Great Chain of Being Harvard University Press 144 182 Reprinted in Frankfurt H G ed 1972 Leibniz A Collection of Critical Essays Anchor Books 1972 Mackie John Milton Guhrauer Gottschalk Eduard 1845 Life of Godfrey William von Leibnitz Gould Kendall and Lincoln Russell Bertrand 1900 A Critical Exposition of the Philosophy of Leibniz Cambridge The University Press Smith David Eugene 1929 A Source Book in Mathematics New York and London McGraw Hill Book Company Inc Trendelenburg F A 1857 Uber Leibnizens Entwurf einer allgemeinen Charakteristik Philosophische Abhandlungen der Koniglichen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin Aus dem Jahr 1856 Berlin Commission Dummler pp 36 69 Adolphus William Ward 1911 Leibniz as a Politician The Adamson Lecture 1910 1st ed Manchester Wikidata Q19095295 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link lecture Secondary literature post 1950 edit Adams Robert Merrihew 1994 Leibniz Determinist Theist Idealist New York Oxford Oxford University Press Aiton Eric J 1985 Leibniz A Biography Hilger UK Antognazza Maria Rosa 2008 Leibniz An Intellectual Biography Cambridge Univ Press Barrow John D Tipler Frank J 1986 The Anthropic Cosmological Principle 1st ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 282147 8 LCCN 87028148 Borowski Audrey 2024 Leibniz in His World The Making of a Savant Princeton University Press https press princeton edu books hardcover 9780691260747 leibniz in his world Bos H J M 1974 Differentials higher order differentials and the derivative in the Leibnizian calculus Archive for History of Exact Sciences 14 1 90 doi 10 1007 bf00327456 S2CID 120779114 Brown Stuart ed 1999 The Young Leibniz and His Philosophy 1646 76 Dordrecht Kluwer Cerqueiro Daniel Leibnitz y la ciencia del infinito 2014 Pequena Venecia Buenos Aires ISBN 978 987 9239 24 7 Connelly Stephen 2021 Leibniz A Contribution to the Archaeology of Power Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 1 4744 1808 9 Davis Martin 2000 The Universal Computer The Road from Leibniz to Turing WW Norton Deleuze Gilles 1993 The Fold Leibniz and the Baroque University of Minnesota Press Fahrenberg Jochen 2017 PsyDok ZPID The influence of Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the Psychology Philosophy and Ethics of Wilhelm Wundt Fahrenberg Jochen 2020 Wilhelm Wundt 1832 1920 Introduction Quotations Reception Commentaries Attempts at Reconstruction Pabst Science Publishers Lengerich 2020 ISBN 978 3 95853 574 9 Finster Reinhard amp van den Heuvel Gerd 2000 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Mit Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten 4 Auflage Rowohlt Reinbek bei Hamburg Rowohlts Monographien 50481 ISBN 3 499 50481 2 Grattan Guinness Ivor 1997 The Norton History of the Mathematical Sciences W W Norton Hall A R 1980 Philosophers at War The Quarrel between Newton and Leibniz Cambridge University Press Hamza Gabor 2005 Le developpement du droit prive europeen ELTE Eotvos Kiado Budapest Hoeflich M H 1986 Law amp Geometry Legal Science from Leibniz to Langdell American Journal of Legal History 30 2 95 121 doi 10 2307 845705 JSTOR 845705 Hostler John 1975 Leibniz s Moral Philosophy UK Duckworth Ishiguro Hide 1990 Leibniz s Philosophy of Logic and Language Cambridge University Press Jolley Nicholas ed 1995 The Cambridge Companion to Leibniz Cambridge University Press Kaldis Byron 2011 Leibniz Argument for Innate Ideas in Just the Arguments 100 of the Most Important Arguments in Western Philosophy edited by M Bruce amp S Barbone Blackwell Karabell Zachary 2003 Parting the desert the creation of the Suez Canal Alfred A Knopf ISBN 978 0 375 40883 0 LeClerc Ivor ed 1973 The Philosophy of Leibniz and the Modern World Vanderbilt University Press Luchte James 2006 Mathesis and Analysis Finitude and the Infinite in the Monadology of Leibniz Heythrop Journal 47 4 519 543 doi 10 1111 j 1468 2265 2006 00296 x Mates Benson 1986 The Philosophy of Leibniz Metaphysics and Language Oxford University Press Mercer Christia 2001 Leibniz s Metaphysics Its Origins and Development Cambridge University Press Perkins Franklin 2004 Leibniz and China A Commerce of Light Cambridge University Press Riley Patrick 1996 Leibniz s Universal Jurisprudence Justice as the Charity of the Wise Harvard University Press Rutherford Donald 1998 Leibniz and the Rational Order of Nature Cambridge University Press Schulte Albert H G 1971 Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Library Classification The Journal of Library History 1966 1972 2 133 152 Smith Justin E H 2011 Divine Machines Leibniz and the Sciences of Life Princeton University Press Wilson Catherine 1989 Leibniz s Metaphysics A Historical and Comparative Study Princeton University Press Zalta E N 2000 A Leibnizian Theory of Concepts PDF Philosophiegeschichte und Logische Analyse Logical Analysis and History of Philosophy 3 137 183 doi 10 30965 26664275 00301008 External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Leibnitz Gottfried Wilhelm nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Works by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz at Internet Archive Works by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Look Brandon C Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Peckhaus Volker Leibniz s Influence on 19th Century Logic In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Burnham Douglas Gottfried Leibniz Metaphysics Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Carlin Laurence Gottfried Leibniz Causation Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Horn Joshua Leibniz Modal Metaphysics Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Jorarti Julia Leibniz Philosophy of Mind Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Lenzen Wolfgang Leibniz Logic Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy O Connor John J Robertson Edmund F Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz MacTutor History of Mathematics Archive University of St Andrews Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz at the Mathematics Genealogy Project Translations by Jonathan Bennett of the New Essays the exchanges with Bayle Arnauld and Clarke and about 15 shorter works Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Texts and Translations compiled by Donald Rutherford UCSD Leibnitiana links and resources edited by Gregory Brown University of Houston Philosophical Works of Leibniz translated by G M Duncan 1890 The Best of All Possible Worlds Nicholas Rescher Talks About Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz s Versatility and Creativity Protogaea 1693 Latin in Acta eruditorum Linda Hall Library Protogaea 1749 German full digital facsimile from Linda Hall Library Leibniz s 1768 6 volume Opera omnia digital facsimile Leibniz s arithmetical machine 1710 online and analyzed on BibNum Archived 24 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine click a telecharger for English analysis Leibniz s binary numeral system De progressione dyadica 1679 online and analyzed on BibNum Archived 24 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine click a telecharger for English analysis Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Mathematics nbsp Philosophy nbsp Science nbsp Art nbsp Literature Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz amp oldid 1206232460, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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