Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz  Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz |
| Born | July 1 (June 21 Old Style) 1646 Leipzig, Electorate of Saxony |
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| Died | November 14 1716 Hannover, Hanover |
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| Nationality | German |
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| Field | Mathematician and Natural Philosopher |
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| Institutions | University of Leipzig |
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| Alma mater | University of Altdorf |
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| Academic advisor | Erhard Weigel |
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| Notable students | Jacob Bernoulli |
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| Known for | Infinitesimal calculus Calculus Monad Theodicy Optimism |
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| Influences | Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Suarez, Descartes, Spinoza, Ramon Llull |
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| Influenced | Many later mathematicians, Christian Wolff, Kant, Bertrand Russell, Martin Heidegger |
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Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (also
Leibnitz or
von Leibniz[1] (
July 1 (
June 21 Old Style)
1646 –
November 14 1716) was a
German polymath of
Sorbian origin
[2] who wrote primarily in
Latin and
French.
Educated in
law and
philosophy, and serving as
factotum to two major German noble houses (one becoming the British royal family while he served it), Leibniz played a major role in the European politics and diplomacy of his day. He occupies an equally large place in both the
history of philosophy and the
history of mathematics. He discovered
calculus independently of
Newton, and his notation is the one in general use since. He also discovered the
binary system, foundation of virtually all modern computer architectures. In philosophy, he is most remembered for
optimism, i.e., his conclusion that our universe is, in a restricted sense, the best possible one
God could have made. He was, along with
René Descartes and
Baruch Spinoza, one of the three great 17th century
rationalists, but his philosophy also looks back to the
Scholastic tradition and anticipates modern
logic and
analysis. Leibniz also made major contributions to
physics and
technology, and anticipated notions that surfaced much later in
biology,
medicine,
geology,
probability theory,
psychology,
linguistics, and
information science. He also wrote on
politics,
law,
ethics,
theology,
history, and
philology, even occasional verse. His contributions to this vast array of subjects are scattered in journals and in tens of thousands of letters and unpublished manuscripts. To date, there is no complete edition of Leibniz's writings, and a complete account of his accomplishments is not yet possible.
Biography
The outline of Leibniz's career is as follows:
- 1646-1666: Formation years
- 1666–74: Mainly in service to the Elector of Mainz, Johann Philipp von Schönborn, and his minister, Baron von Boineburg.
- 1672–76. Resides in Paris, making two important sojourns to London.
- 1676–1716. In service to the House of Hanover.
- 1677–98. Courtier, first to John Frederick, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, then to his brother, Duke, then Elector, Ernst August of Hanover.
- 1687–90. Travels extensively in Germany, Austria, and Italy, researching a book the Elector has commissioned him to write on the history of the House of Brunswick.
- 1698–1716: Courtier to Elector Georg Ludwig of Hanover.
- 1712–14. Resides in Vienna. Appointed Imperial Court Councillor in 1713 by Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, at the Hapsburg court in Vienna.
- 1714–16: Georg Ludwig, upon becoming George I of Great Britain, forbids Leibniz to follow him to London. Leibniz ends his days in relative neglect.
Early life
Gottfried Leibniz was born on 1 July 1646 in
Leipzig to Friedrich Leibniz and Catherina Schmuck. In later life, he often signed as "von Leibniz", and many posthumous editions of his works gave his name on the title page as "Freiherr [Baron] G. W. von Leibniz." But no document has been found confirming that he was ever granted a patent of nobility.
[3]
When Leibniz was six years old, his father, a Professor of Moral Philosophy at the
University of Leipzig, died, leaving a personal library to which Leibniz was granted free access from age seven onwards. By 12, he had taught himself
Latin, which he used freely all his life, and had begun
Greek.
He entered his father's university at age 14, and completed university studies by 20, specializing in law and mastering the standard university courses in classics, logic, and scholastic philosophy. However, his education in mathematics was not up to the French and British standards. In 1666 (age 20), he published his first book, also his
habilitation thesis in philosophy,
On the Art of Combinations. When
Leipzig declined to assure him a position teaching law upon graduation, Leibniz submitted the thesis he had intended to submit at Leipzig to the University of
Altdorf instead, and obtained his doctorate in law in five months. He then declined an offer of academic appointment at Altdorf, and spent the rest of his life in the service of two major German noble families.
1666–74
Leibniz's first position was as a salaried alchemist in
Nuremberg, even though he knew nothing about the subject. He soon met Johann Christian von Boineburg (1622–1672), the dismissed chief minister of the Elector of
Mainz,
Johann Philipp von Schönborn. Von Boineburg 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 his Electorate. In 1669, Leibniz was appointed Assessor in the Court of Appeal. Although von Boineburg died late in 1672, Leibniz remained under the employment of his widow until she dismissed him in 1674.
Von Boineburg did much to promote Leibniz's reputation, and the latter's memoranda and letters began to attract favorable notice. Leibniz's service to the Elector soon took on 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 European geopolitical reality 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, but the plan was soon overtaken by events and became irrelevant. Napoleon's failed invasion of Egypt in 1798 can be seen as an unwitting implementation of Leibniz's plan.
Thus Leibniz began several years in Paris, during which he greatly expanded his knowledge of mathematics and physics, and began contributing to both. He met
Malebranche and
Antoine Arnauld, the leading French philosophers of the day, and studied the writings of
Descartes and
Pascal, unpublished as well as published. He befriended a German mathematician,
Ehrenfried Walther von Tschirnhaus; they corresponded for the rest of their lives. Especially fateful was Leibniz's making the acquaintance of the
Dutch physicist and mathematician
Christiaan Huygens, then active in Paris. Soon after arriving in Paris, Leibniz received a rude awakening; his knowledge of mathematics and physics was spotty. With Huygens as mentor, he began a program of self-study that soon resulted in his making major contributions to both subjects, including inventing his version of the differential and integral
calculus.
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 British government in
London, early in 1673. There Leibniz made the acquaintance of
Henry Oldenburg and
John Collins. After demonstrating to the
Royal Society a calculating machine he had been designing and building since 1670, the first such machine that could execute all four basic arithmetical operations, the Society made him an external member. The mission ended abruptly when news reached it of the Elector's death, whereupon Leibniz promptly returned to Paris and not, as had been planned, to Mainz.
The sudden deaths of Leibniz's 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 the Duke of
Brunswick to visit Hanover proved fateful. Leibniz declined the invitation, but began corresponding with the Duke in 1671. In 1673,
the Duke offered him the post of Counsellor which Leibniz very reluctantly accepted two years later, only after it became clear that no employment in Paris, whose intellectual stimulation he relished, or with the
Hapsburg imperial court was forthcoming.
House of Hanover 1676–1716
Leibniz managed to delay his arrival in Hanover until the end of 1676, after making one more short journey to London, where he possibly was shown some of Newton's unpublished work on the calculus. This fact was deemed evidence supporting the accusation, made decades later, that he had stolen the calculus from Newton. On the journey from London to Hanover, Leibniz stopped in
The Hague where he met
Leeuwenhoek, the discoverer of microorganisms. He also spent several days in intense discussion with
Spinoza, who had just completed his masterwork, the
Ethics. Leibniz respected Spinoza's powerful intellect, but was dismayed by his conclusions that contradicted Christian orthodoxy.
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
Among the few people in north Germany to warm to Leibniz were the Electress
Sophia of Hanover (1630–1714), her daughter
Sophia Charlotte of Hanover (1668–1705), the Queen of Prussia and her 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 warmed to him more than did their spouses and the future king
George I of Great Britain.
[4]
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 the United Kingdom, 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 the calculus, writing about other mathematics, logic, physics, and philosophy, and keeping up a vast correspondence. He began working on the 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.
The Elector
Ernst August 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.
In 1711, John Keill, writing in the journal of the Royal Society and with Newton's presumed blessing, accused Leibniz of having plagiarized Newton's calculus. 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 the 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 matters Russian over 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 Georg Ludwig 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.
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 the 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 passing. His grave went unmarked for more than 50 years. Leibniz was eulogized by
Fontenelle, before the Academie des 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.
Leibniz never married. 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 cannot be excused or defended and which put him in a bad light during the calculus controversy. On the other hand, he was charming and well-mannered, with many friends and admirers all over Europe.
Writings and edition
Leibniz mainly wrote in three languages: scholastic Latin (ca. 40%), French (ca. 35%), and German (less than 25%). 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 catalogs 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 1685, remains unpublished, and much of what is published has been so only in recent decades. The amount, variety, and disorder of Leibniz's writings are a predictable result of a situation he described as follows:
The extant parts of the
critical edition of Leibniz's writings (see photograph there) are organized as follows:
- Series 1. Political, Historical, and General Correspondence. 21 vols., 1666–1701.
- Series 2. Philosophical Correspondence. 1 vol., 1663–85.
- Series 3. Mathematical, Scientific, and Technical Correspondence. 6 vols., 1672–96.
- Series 4. Political Writings. 6 vols., 1667–98.
- Series 5. Historical and Linguistic Writings. Inactive.
- Series 6. Philosophical Writings. 7 vols., 1663–90, and Nouveaux essais sur l'entendement humain.
- Series 7. Mathematical Writings. 3 vols., 1672–76.
- Series 8. Scientific, Medical, and Technical Writings. In preparation.
The systematic cataloguing of all of Leibniz's
Nachlass was begun in 1901. Two World wars, the NS dictatorship (with Jewish emigration, including an employee of the project, and other personal consequences), and decades of German division (two states with the cold war's "iron curtain" in between, separating scholars and also scattered portions of his literary estates), greately hampered the ambitious edition project which had and has to deal with seven languages used on ca. 200 000 pages of written and printed paper. 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,
Hannover and
Berlin have jointly published 25 volumes of the critical edition (until 2006) with an average of 870 pages (compared to only 19 volumes since 1923), plus preparing index and concordance works (so, had that speed been possible from the beginning, the project would already be completed).
Posthumous reputation
When Leibniz died, his reputation was in decline. He was remembered for only one book, the
Théodicée, whose supposed central argument
Voltaire lampooned in his
Candide. Voltaire's depiction of Leibniz's ideas was so influential that many believed it to be an accurate description (this misapprehension may still be the case among certain lay people). 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. 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 exponent. His work on law, diplomacy, and history was seen as of ephemeral interest. The vastness and richness of his correspondence went unrecognized.
Much of Europe came to doubt that Leibniz had discovered the calculus independently of Newton, and hence his whole work in mathematics and physics was neglected. Voltaire, an admirer of Newton, also wrote
Candide at least in part to discredit Leibniz's claim to having discovered the calculus and Leibniz's charge that Newton's theory of universal gravitation was incorrect. The rise of relativity and subsequent work in the history of mathematics has put Leibniz's stance in a more favorable light.
Leibniz's long march to his present glory began with the 1765 publication of the
Nouveaux Essais, which
Kant read closely. In 1768, 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 study of Leibniz's metaphysics. Shortly thereafter,
Louis Couturat published an important
study of Leibniz, and edited a volume of Leibniz's heretofore unpublished writings, mainly on logic. While their conclusions, especially Russell's, were subsequently challenged and often dismissed, they made Leibniz somewhat respectable among 20th century analytical and linguistic philosophers. 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
[5] fewer than 30 of the English language entries were published before 1946. American Leibniz studies owe much to Leroy Loemker (1904–85) through his translations and his interpretive essays in .
Nicholas Jolley has surmised that Leibniz's reputation as a philosopher is now perhaps higher than at any time since he was alive because:
- 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.
- The doctrinaire contempt for metaphysics, characteristic of analytic and linguistic philosophy, has faded;
- Analytic and contemporary philosophy continue to invoke his notions of identity, individuation, and possible worlds;
- The 17th and 18th century belief that natural science, especially physics, differs from philosophy mainly in degree and not in kind, is no longer dismissed out of hand. That modern science includes a "scholastic" as well as a "radical empiricist" element is more accepted now than in the early 20th century;
- He is now seen as a major prolongation of the mighty endeavor begun by Plato and Aristotle: the universe and man's place in it are amenable to human reason.
The University of Hannover (German spelling) is named after him.
In 1985, the
German government created the
Leibniz Prize, annual awards of 1.55 million Euros for experimental results, and 770,000 Euros for theoretical ones. It is the world's largest prize for scientific achievement.
Philosopher
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 philosophical treatises, and the one he published in his lifetime, the
Théodicée of 1710, is as much theological as philosophical.
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
Malebranche and
Antoine Arnauld. This led to an extensive and valuable correspondence with Arnauld (, ); 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" (, , ). Over 1695–1705, 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 met
Spinoza in 1676, read some of his unpublished writings, and has since been suspected of appropriating some of Spinoza's ideas. While Leibniz admired Spinoza's powerful intellect, he was also forthrightly dismayed by Spinoza's conclusions, (, , ) especially when these were inconsistent with Christian orthodoxy.
Unlike Descartes and Spinoza, Leibniz had a thorough university education in philosophy. His lifelong
scholastic and
Aristotelian turn of mind betrayed the strong influence of one of his
Leipzig professors,
Jakob Thomasius, who also supervised his BA thesis in philosophy. 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.
The Principles
Leibniz variously invoked one or another of seven fundamental philosophical Principles (Mates 1986: chpts. 7.3, 9):
- Identity / Contradiction. If a proposition is true, then its negation is false and vice versa.
- Identity of indiscernibles. Two things are identical if and only if they share the same properties. Frequently invoked in modern logic and philosophy.
- Sufficient reason. "There must be a sufficient reason [often known only to God] for anything to exist, for any event to occur, for any truth to obtain." (LL 717).
- Pre-established harmony. See Jolley (1995: 129–31), Woolhouse and Francks (1998), and Mercer (2001). "[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.
- Continuity. Natura non saltum facit. A mathematical analog to this principle would go as follows. If a function describes a transformation of something to which continuity applies, then its domain and range are both dense sets.
- Optimism. "God assuredly always chooses the best." (LL 311).
- 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." (From Plenitude.)
The second principle here is often referred to as
Leibniz's Law [1]. The Identity of Indiscernibles has attracted the most controversy and criticism, especially from corpuscular philosophy and quantum mechanics.
Leibniz would on occasion give a speech for a specific principle, but more often took them for granted. For a precis of what Leibniz meant by these and other Principles, see Mercer (2001: 473–84). For a classic discussion of
Sufficient Reason and
Plenitude, see Lovejoy (1957).
The Monads
Leibniz's best known contribution to
metaphysics is his theory of
monads, as exposited in
Monadologie. Monads are to the metaphysical realm what
atoms are to the physical/phenomenal. Monads are the ultimate elements of the
universe. The monads are "substantial forms of being" with the following properties: they are eternal, indecomposable, individual, subject to their own laws, un-interacting, and each reflecting the entire universe in a
pre-established harmony (a historically important example of
panpsychism). Monads are centers of
force; substance is force, while
space,
matter, and
motion are merely phenomenal.
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 preprogrammed set of "instructions" peculiar to itself, so that a monad "knows" what to do at each moment. (These "instructions" may be seen as analogs of the
scientific laws governing
subatomic particles.) 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.
God, too, is a monad, and the
existence of God can be inferred from the harmony prevailing among all other monads; God wills the pre-established harmony.
Monads are purported to having gotten rid of the problematic:
The monadology was thought arbitrary, even eccentric, in Leibniz's day and since.
Theodicy and optimism
The
Théodicée 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 a perfect God. Rutherford (1998) is a detailed scholarly study of Leibniz's theodicy.
The statement that "we live in the best of all possible worlds" drew scorn, most notably from
Voltaire, who lampooned it in his comic novel
Candide by having the character
Dr. Pangloss (a parody of Leibniz) repeat it like a
mantra. Thus the adjective "panglossian", describing one so naive as to believe that the world about us is the best possible one.
The mathematician Paul du Bois-Reymond, in his "Leibnizian Thoughts in Modern
Science," wrote that Leibniz thought of God as a
mathematician.
"As is well known, the theory of the maxima and minima of functions was indebted to him for the greatest progress through the discovery of the method of tangents. Well, he conceives God in the creation of the world like a mathematician who is solving a minimum problem, or rather, in our modern phraseology, a problem in the calculus of variations — the question being to determine among an infinite number of possible worlds, that for which the sum of necessary evil is a minimum."
A cautious defense of Leibnizian
optimism would invoke certain scientific principles that emerged in the two centuries since his death and that are now thoroughly established: the
principle of least action, the
conservation of mass, and the
conservation of energy. However, scientific developments in recent decades enable a more sweeping defense of optimism:
- The 3+1 dimensional structure of spacetime may be ideal. In order to sustain complexity such as life, a universe probably requires three spatial and one temporal dimensions. Most universes deviating from 3+1 either violate some fundamental physical laws, or are impossible. The mathematically richest number of spatial dimensions is also 3.
- The universe, solar system, and Earth are the "best possible" in that they enable intelligent life to exist. Such life has evolved on Earth only because the Earth, solar system, and Milky Way possess a number of unusual characteristics; see Ward & Brownlee (2000), Morris (2003: chpts. 5,6).
- The most sweeping form of optimism derives from the Anthropic Principle (Barrow and Tipler 1986). Physical reality can be seen as grounded in the numerical values of a handful of dimensionless constants, the best known of which are the fine structure constant and the ratio of the rest mass of the proton to the electron. Were the numerical values of these constants to differ by a few percent from their observed values, it is unlikely that the resulting universe would contain complex structures.
Our
physical laws,
universe,
solar system, and
home planet are all "best" in the sense that they enable
complex structures such as
galaxies,
stars, and, ultimately,
intelligent life. On the other hand, it is also reasonable to believe that life might be more intelligent given some other set of circumstances.
Symbolic thought
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 [calculemus], without further ado, to see who is right." (The Art of Discovery 1685, W 51)
Leibniz's
calculus ratiocinator, which resembles
symbolic logic, can be viewed as a way of making such calculations feasible. Leibniz wrote memoranda (many of which are translated in Parkinson 1966) that can now be read as groping attempts to get symbolic logic—and thus his
calculus—off the ground. But Gerhard and Couturat did not publish these writings until modern formal logic had emerged in Frege's
Begriffsschrift and in writings by
Charles Peirce and his students in the 1880s, and hence well after
Boole and
De Morgan began that logic in 1847.
Leibniz thought
symbols were important for human understanding. He attached so much importance to the invention of good notations that he attributed all his discoveries in mathematics to this. His notation for the
infinitesimal calculus is an example of his skill in this regard.
Charles Peirce, a 19th century pioneer of
semiotics, shared Leibniz's passion for symbols and notation, and his belief that these are essential to a well-running logic and mathematics.
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. (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.) 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." (Preface to the General Science, 1677. Revision of Rutherford's translation in Jolley 1995: 234. Also W I.4)
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) discussed in 3.2, 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 the calculus, may never be established. A good introductory discussion of the "characteristic" is Jolley (1995: 226–40). An early, yet still classic, discussion of the "characteristic" and "calculus" is Couturat (1901: chpts. 3,4).
Formal logic
Leibniz is the most important logician between Aristotle and 1847, when
George Boole and
Augustus De Morgan each published books that began modern formal logic. 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.
With regard to (1), the number of simple ideas is much greater than Leibniz thought. As for (2), logic can indeed be grounded in a symmetrical combining operation, but that operation is analogous to either of addition or 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 book
History of Western Philosophy Bertrand Russell went as far as claiming that Leibniz had developed logic in his unpublished writings to a level which was reached only 200 years later.
Mathematician
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 (Struik 1969: 367). In the 18th century, "function" lost these geometrical associations.
Leibniz was the first to see that the coefficients of a system of
linear equations could be arranged into an array, now called a
matrix, which can be manipulated to find the solution of the system, if any. This method was later called
Gaussian elimination. Leibniz's discoveries of
Boolean algebra and of
symbolic logic, also relevant to mathematics, are discussed in the preceding section.
A comprehensive scholarly treatment of Leibniz's mathematical writings has yet to be written, perhaps because Series 7 of the Academy edition is very far from complete.
Calculus
Leibniz is credited, along with
Isaac Newton, with the discovery of
infinitesimal calculus. According to Leibniz's notebooks, a critical breakthrough occurred on
November 11,
1675, when he employed integral calculus for the first time to find the area under the function
y = x. 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. This ingenious and suggestive notation for the calculus is probably his most enduring mathematical legacy. Leibniz did not publish anything about his calculus until 1684. For an English translation of this paper, see Struik (1969: 271–84), who also translates parts of two other key papers by Leibniz on the calculus. The
product rule of
differential calculus is still called "Leibniz's law."
Leibniz's approach to the calculus fell well short of later standards of rigor (the same can be said of Newton's). We now see a Leibniz "proof" as being in truth mostly a
heuristic hodgepodge mainly grounded in geometric intuition. Leibniz also freely invoked mathematical entities he called
infinitesimals, manipulating them in ways suggesting that they had
paradoxical algebraic properties.
George Berkeley, in a tract called
The Analyst and elsewhere, ridiculed this and other aspects of the early calculus, pointing out that natural science grounded in the calculus required just as big of a leap of
faith as
theology grounded in
Christian revelation.
From 1711 until his death, Leibniz's life was envenomed by a long dispute with John Keill, Newton, and others, over whether Leibniz had invented the calculus independently of Newton, or whether he had merely invented another notation for ideas that were fundamentally Newton's. Hall (1980) gives a thorough scholarly discussion of the
calculus priority dispute.
Modern, rigorous calculus emerged in the 19th century, thanks to the efforts of
Augustin Louis Cauchy,
Bernhard Riemann,
Karl Weierstrass, and others, who based their work on the definition of a
limit and on a precise understanding of
real numbers. Their work discredited the use of
infinitesimals to
justify calculus. Yet, infinitesimals 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. The resulting
nonstandard analysis can be seen as a belated vindication of Leibniz's mathematical reasoning.
Topology
Leibniz was the first to use the term
analysis situs (LL §27), 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 (1986: 240), citing a 1954 paper in German by
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."
But Hirano (1997) argues differently, quoting Mandelbrot (1977: 419):
"...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."
Thus the fractal geometry promoted by Mandelbrot drew on Leibniz's notions of self-similarity and the principle of continuity:
natura non facit saltus. 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 to 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.
Scientist and engineer
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. His writings on other scientific and technical subjects are mostly scattered and relatively little known, because the Academy edition has yet to publish any volume in its Series
Scientific, Medical, and Technical Writings .
Physics
Leibniz contributed a fair amount to the statics and dynamics emerging about 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 felt strongly space was absolute. While he may have been Newton's peer as co-discoverer of calculus, he was not in Newton's league as a physicist and may even deserve to be ranked below his mentor
Huygens. An important example of Leibniz's mature physical thinking is his
Specimen Dynamicum of 1695. (AG 117, LL §46, W II.5) On Leibniz and physics, see the chapter by Garber in Jolley (1995) and Wilson (1989).
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.
Leibniz's rule in interacting theories plays a role in
supersymmetry and in the lattices of
quantum mechanics. His
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. Those who advocate
digital philosophy, a recent direction in cosmology, claim Leibniz as a precursor.
The vis viva
Leibniz 's
vis viva (Latin for
living force) is an invariant mathematical characteristic of certain mechanical systems (see AG 155–86, LL §§53–55, W II.6–7a). It can be seen as a special case of the
conservation of energy. 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 in France; hence
academics in those countries tended to neglect Leibniz's idea.
Engineers eventually found "vis viva" useful when making certain
calculations, so that the two approaches eventually were seen as complementary.
Other natural science
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. He worked out a primal organismic theory. On Leibniz and biology, see Loemker (1969a: VIII). 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.
Social science
In
psychology he anticipated the distinction between
conscious and
unconscious states. On Leibniz and psychology, see Loemker (1969a: IX). 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 programme, oriented towards public health and preventive measures. In economic policy, he proposed tax reforms and a national insurance scheme, 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
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 praxis, 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 invented 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. (Aiton 1985: 107–114, 136)
Information technology
Leibniz may have been the first computer scientist and information theorist. Early in life, he discovered the
binary number system (base 2), which was later (and is now) used on most computers, then revisited that system throughout his career. (See Couturat, 1901: 473–78.) He anticipated Lagrangian interpolation and
algorithmic information theory. His
calculus ratiocinator anticipated aspects of the
universal Turing machine. In 1934,
Norbert Wiener claimed to have found in Leibniz's writings a mention of the concept of
feedback, central to Wiener's later
cybernetic theory.
In 1671, Leibniz began to invent a machine that could execute all four arithmetical 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 Leibniz's supervision. It was not an unambiguous success because it did not fully mechanize the operation of carrying. Couturat (1901: 115) reported finding an unpublished note by Leibniz, dated 1674, describing a machine capable of performing some algebraic operations.
Leibniz was groping towards hardware and software concepts worked out much later by
Charles Babbage and
Ada Lovelace, 1830–45. 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.
[2] 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. Davis (2000) discusses Leibniz's prophetic role in the emergence of calculating machines and of formal languages.
Librarian
While serving as librarian of the ducal libraries in
Hanover and
Wolfenbuettel, Leibniz effectively became one of the founders of
library science.
[3] The latter library was enormous for its day, as it contained more than 100,000 volumes, and Leibniz helped design a new building for it, believed to be the first building explicitly designed to be a library. 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.
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
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. On Leibniz’s projects for scientific societies, see Couturat (1901: App. IV).
Lawyer, moralist
No philosopher has ever had as much experience with practical affairs of state as Leibniz, except possibly
Marcus Aurelius. Leibniz's writings on law, ethics, and politics (e.g., AG 19, 94, 111, 193; Riley 1988; LL §§2, 7, 20, 29, 44, 59, 62, 65; W I.1, IV.1–3) were long overlooked by English speaking scholars, but this has changed of late; see (in order of difficulty) Jolley (2005: chpt. 7), Gregory Brown's chapter in Jolley (1995), Hostler (1975), and Riley (1996).
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 democracy, in 18th century America and later elsewhere. The following excerpt from a 1695 letter to Baron J. C. Boineburg'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." (LL: 59, fn 16. Translation revised.)
Leibniz foresaw the
European Union. In 1677, he (LL: 58, fn 9) 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. Europe would adopt a uniform religion. He reiterated these proposals in 1715.
Ecumenism
Leibniz devoted considerable intellectual and diplomatic effort to what would now be called
ecumenical endeavor, seeking to reconcile first the
Roman Catholic and
Lutheran churches, later the Lutheran and
Reformed churches. In this respect, he followed the example of his early patrons, Baron von Boineburg 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 the French bishop
Bossuet, and involved Leibniz in a fair bit of theological controversy. He evidently thought that the thoroughgoing application of reason would suffice to heal the breach caused by the
Reformation.
Philologist
Leibniz was an avid student of languages, eagerly latching on to any information about
vocabulary and
grammar that came his way. He refuted the belief, widely held by Christian scholars in his day, that
Hebrew was the primeval language of the
human race. He also refuted the argument, advanced by Swedish scholars in his day, that some sort of proto-
Swedish was the ancestor of the
Germanic languages. He puzzled over the origins of the
Slavic languages, was aware of the existence of
Sanskrit, and was fascinated by classical Chinese. Scholarly appreciation of Leibniz the
philologist is hampered by the fact that no volume of the planned Academy edition series "Historical and Linguistic Writings" has appeared.
Sinophile
Leibniz was perhaps the first major European intellect to take a close interest in
Chinese civilization, which he knew by corresponding with, and reading other work by, European Christian missionaries posted in China. He concluded 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 with fascination how the
I Ching hexagrams correspond to the
binary numbers from 0 to 111111, and concluded that this mapping was evidence of major Chinese accomplishments in the sort of philosophical mathematics he admired.
On Leibniz, the I Ching, and binary numbers, see Aiton (1985: 245–48). Leibniz's writings on Chinese civilization are collected and translated in Cook and Rosemont (1994), and discussed in Perkins (2004).
As polymath
The following episode from the life of Leibniz illustrates the breadth of his genius, and the difficulties awaiting those who try to come to terms with it. While making his grand tour of European
archives to research the Brunswick family history he never completed, Leibniz stopped in
Vienna, May 1688 – 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.
Leibniz also wrote a short paper, first published by
Louis Couturat in 1903, later translated as LL 267 and WF 30, summarizing his views on
metaphysics. The paper is undated; that he wrote it while in Vienna was determined only in 1999, when the ongoing
critical edition finally published Leibniz's philosophical writings for the period 1677–90. 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 was not devoid of humor and imagination; see W IV.6 and LL § 40. 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.
References
1.
^ IPA pronunciation:
/'laɪpnɪts/.
2.
^ Rex Germanorum Populus Sclavorum, An Inquiry into the Origin and Early History of the Slavs of Sarmatia, Germania & Illyria”, Dr. Ivo Vukcevich, University Center Press, Santa Barbara, California, 2001 pp 329-330
3.
^ Aiton 1985: 312
4.
^ For a recent study of Leibniz's correspondence with Sophia Charlotte, see
MacDonald Ross (1998).
5.
^ Gregory Brown's bibliography
bibliography
Works
Four important collections of English translations are W (Wiener 1951), LL (Loemker 1969), AG (Ariew and Garber 1989), and WF (Woolhouse and Francks, 1998).
The ongoing critical edition of all of Leibniz's writings is
Sämtliche Schriften und Briefe.
Selected works; major ones in bold. The year shown is usually the year in which the work was completed, not of its eventual publication.
- 1666. De Arte Combinatoria (On the Art of Combination). Partially translated in LL §1 and Parkinson (1966).
- 1671. Hypothesis Physica Nova (New Physical Hypothesis). LL §8.I (part)
- 1673 (A Philosopher's Creed, )
- 1684. Nova methodus pro maximis et minimis (New Method for maximums and minimums). Translation in Struik, D. J., 1969. A Source Book in Mathematics, 1200–1800. Harvard Uni. Press: 271–81.
- 1686. Discours de métaphysique. Martin and Brown (1988). Jonathan Bennett's translation. AG 35, LL §35, W III.3, WF 1.
- 1703. Explication de l'Arithmétique Binaire (Explanation of Binary Arithmetic). Gerhardt, Mathematical Writings VII.223. Lloyd Strickland's translation.
- 1710. Théodicée. Farrer, A.M., and Huggard, E.M., trans., 1985 (1952). Theodicy. Open Court. W III.11 (part).
- 1714. Monadologie. Nicholas Rescher, trans., 1991. The Monadology: An Edition for Students. Uni. of Pittsburg Press. Jonathan Bennett's translation. Latta's translation. AG 213, LL §67, W III.13, WF 19. French, latin and spanish edition, with facsimil of Leibniz's manuscript.
- 1765. Nouveaux essais sur l'entendement humain. Completed 1704. Remnant, Peter, and Bennett, Jonathan, trans., 1996. New Essays on Human Understanding. Cambridge Uni. Press. W III.6 (part). Jonathan Bennett's translation.
Collections of shorter works in translation:
- Ariew, R & D Garber (1989), Leibniz: Philosophical Essays, Hackett
- Bennett, Jonathan. Various texts.
- Cook, Daniel, and Rosemont, Henry Jr., 1994. Leibniz: Writings on China. Open Court.
- Dascal, Marcelo, 1987. Leibniz: Language, Signs and Thought. John Benjamins.
- Loemker, Leroy (1969 (1956)), Leibniz: Philosophical Papers and Letters, Reidel
- Martin, R.N.D., and Brown, Stuart, 1988. Discourse on Metaphysics and Related Writings. St. Martin's Press.
- Parkinson, G.H.R., 1966. Leibniz: Logical Papers. Oxford Uni. Press.
- ———, and Morris, Mary, 1973. 'Leibniz: Philosophical Writings. London: J M Dent & Sons.
- Riley, Patrick, 1988 (1972). Leibniz: Political Writings. Cambridge Uni. Press.
- Rutherford, Donald. Various texts.
- Strickland, Lloyd, 2006. Shorter Leibniz Texts. Continuum Books. Online.
- Wiener, Philip (1951), Leibniz: Selections, Scribner Regrettably out of print and lacks index.
- Woolhouse, R.S., and Francks, R., 1998. Leibniz: Philosophical Texts. Oxford Uni. Press.
Donald Rutherford's
online bibliography.
Secondary literature
The only biography in English is Aiton (1985). A lively short account of Leibniz’s life, one also doing fair justice to the breadth of his interests and activities, is Mates (1986: 14–35), who cites the German biographies extensively. Also see
MacDonald Ross (1984: chpt. 1), the chapter by Ariew in Jolley (1995), and Jolley (2005: chpt. 1). For a biographical glossary of Leibniz's intellectual contemporaries, see AG 350.
For a first introduction to Leibniz's philosophy, turn to the Introduction of an anthology of his writings in English translation, e.g., Wiener (1951), Loemker (1969a), Woolhouse and Francks (1998). Then turn to the monographs
MacDonald Ross (1984), and Jolley (2005). For an introduction to Leibniz's metaphysics, see the chapters by Mercer, Rutherford, and Sleigh in Jolley (1995); see Mercer (2001) for an advanced study. For an introduction to those aspects of Leibniz's thought of most value to the philosophy of logic and of language, see Jolley (1995, chpts. 7,8); Mates (1986) is more advanced. MacRae (Jolley 1995: chpt. 6) discusses Leibniz's theory of knowledge. For glossaries of the philosophical terminology recurring in Leibniz's writings and the secondary literature, see Woolhouse and Francks (1998: 285–93) and Jolley (2005: 223–29).
Introductory:
Intermediate:
- Aiton, Eric J., 1985. Leibniz: A Biography. Hilger (UK).
- Brown, Gregory, 2004, "Leibniz's Endgame and the Ladies of the Courts," Journal of the History of Ideas 65: 75–100.
- Hall, A. R., 1980. Philosophers at War: The Quarrel between Newton and Leibniz. Cambridge Univ. Press.
- Hostler, J., 1975. Leibniz's Moral Philosophy. UK: Duckworth.
- Jolley, Nicholas, ed., 1995. The Cambridge Companion to Leibniz. Cambridge Univ. Press.
- LeClerc, Ivor, ed., 1973. The Philosophy of Leibniz and the Modern World. Vanderbilt Univ. Press.
- Loemker, Leroy, 1969a, "Introduction" to his Leibniz: Philosophical Papers and Letters. Reidel: 1–62.
- Arthur O. Lovejoy, 1957 (1936). "Plenitude and Sufficient Reason in Leibniz and Spinoza" in his The Great Chain of Being. Harvard Uni. Press: 144–82. Reprinted in Frankfurt, H. G., ed., 1972. Leibniz: A Collection of Critical Essays. Anchor Books.
- MacDonald Ross, George, 1999, "Leibniz and Sophie-Charlotte" in Herz, S., Vogtherr, C.M., Windt, F., eds., Sophie Charlotte und ihr Schloß. München: Prestel: 95–105. English translation.
- Perkins, Franklin, 2004. Leibniz and China: A Commerce of Light. Cambridge Univ. Press.
- Riley, Patrick, 1996. Leibniz's Universal Jurisprudence: Justice as the Charity of the Wise. Harvard Univ. Press.
- Strickland, Lloyd, 2006. Leibniz Reinterpreted. Continuum: London and New York
Advanced
- Adams, Robert M., 1994. Leibniz: Determinist, Theist, Idealist. Oxford Uni. Press.
- Bueno, Gustavo, 1981. Introducción a la Monadología de Leibniz. Oviedo: Pentalfa.
- Louis Couturat, 1901. La Logique de Leibniz. Paris: Felix Alcan. Donald Rutherford's English translation in progress.
- Ishiguro, Hide, 1990 (1972). Leibniz's Philosophy of Logic and Language. Cambridge Univ. Press.
- Lenzen, Wolfgang, 2004. "Leibniz's Logic," in Gabbay, D., and Woods, J., eds., Handbook of the History of Logic, Vol. 3. North Holland: 1–84.
- Mates, Benson, 1986. The Philosophy of Leibniz: Metaphysics and Language. Oxford Univ. Press.
- Mercer, Christia, 2001. Leibniz's metaphysics: Its Origins and Development. Cambridge Univ. Press.
- Robinet, André, 2000. Architectonique disjonctive, automates systémiques et idéalité transcendantale dans l'oeuvre de G.W. Leibniz: Nombreux textes inédits. Vrin
- Rutherford, Donald, 1998. Leibniz and the Rational Order of Nature. Cambridge Univ. Press.
- Wilson, Catherine, 1989. Leibniz's Metaphysics. Princeton Univ. Press.
- Woolhouse, R. S., ed., 1993. G. W. Leibniz: Critical Assessments, 4 vols. Routledge. A remarkable one-stop collection of many valuable articles.
Online bibliography by Gregory Brown.
Other works cited
- John D. Barrow and Frank J. Tipler, 1986. The Anthropic Cosmological Principle. Oxford Univ. Press.
- Martin Davis, 2000. The Universal Computer: The Road from Leibniz to Turing. W W Norton.
- Du Bois-Reymond, Paul, 18nn, "Leibnizian Thoughts in Modern Science," ???.
- Ivor Grattan-Guinness, 1997. The Norton History of the Mathematical Sciences. W W Norton.
- Hirano, Hideaki, 1997, "Cultural Pluralism And Natural Law." Unpublished.
- Reinhard Finster, Gerd van den Heuvel: Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Mit Selbstzeugnissen und Bilddokumenten. 4. Auflage. Rowohlt, Reinbek bei Hamburg 2000 (Rowohlts Monographien, 50481), ISBN 3-499-50481-2
- Benoît Mandelbrot, 1977. The Fractal Geometry of Nature. Freeman.
- Simon Conway Morris, 2003. Life's Solution: Inevitable Humans in a Lonely Universe. Cambridge Uni. Press.
- Ward, P. D., and Brownlee, D., 2000. Rare Earth: Why Complex Life is Uncommon in the Universe. Springer Verlag.
- Zalta, E. N., 2000, "A (Leibnizian) Theory of Concepts," Philosophiegeschichte und logische Analyse / Logical Analysis and History of Philosophy 3: 137–183.
Quotations
Wiener (1951: 567–70) lists 44 quotable "proverbs" beginning with "Justice is the charity of the wise."
- "In the realm of spirit, seek clarity; in the material world, seek utility." Mates's (1986: 15) translation of Leibniz's motto.
- "God is the final reason of salvation, of grace, of faith and of election in Jesus Christ." (Theodicy: Essays on the Justice of God and the Freedom of Man in the Origin of Evil, Part I, 126)
- "With every lost hour, a part of life perishes." "Deeds make people." Loemker's (1969: 58) translation of other Leibniz mottoes.
- "The monad... is nothing but a simple substance which enters into compounds. Simple means without parts... Monads have no windows through which anything could enter or leave." Monadology (LL §67.1,7)
- "I maintain that men could be incomparably happier than they are, and that they could, in a short time, make great progress in increasing their happiness, if they were willing to set about it as they should. We have in hand excellent means to do in 10 years more than could be done in several centuries without them, if we apply ourselves to making the most of them, and do nothing else except what must be done." (Translated in Riley 1972: 104, and quoted in Mates 1986: 120)
- "There is also a type of a middle-of-the-roader who, feeling embarrassed, tacks back and forth, shifts the target for himself and others, hides behind words and phrases, or turns and twists the question so long that one no longer knows what it amounted to. This is what Leibniz did, who was much more of a mathematician and a learned man than a philosopher." (Schopenhauer, On the Freedom of the Will, Ch. III)
- "It is unworthy of excellent men to lose hours like slaves in the labour of calculation which could safely be relegated to anyone else if machines were used."
- "Truths of reason are necessary and their opposite is impossible: truths of fact are contingent and their opposite possible."
- "It is one of my most important and very best verified maxims that nature makes no leaps. This I have called the law of continuity."
- "Why is there something, rather than nothing?"
- "There are two kinds of truths: truths of reasoning and truths of fact."
- "The soul is the mirror of an indestructible universe."
See also
External links
- Works by Gottfried Leibniz at Project Gutenberg
- Online texts, including New Essays, the correspondence with Clarke, and many others in easier-to-read versions.
- Leibnitiana — Gregory Brown.
- Lloyd Strickland's web page. Scroll down for many Leibniz links.
- Leibniz-translations.com — Original Leibniz translations of many works including many never before translated into English
- Leibnizmenu: useful links
- Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy: "Leibniz" — Douglas Burnham.
- Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Leibniz on:
- Ethics — Andrew Youpa.
- Causation — Marc Bobro.
- Problem of evil — Michael Murray.
- Philosophy of mind — Kulstad and Carlin.
- Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th ed.: "Leibniz."
- Leibniz Prize.
- Table of contents for the Leibniz Review, 1998–.
- European Graduate School — Gottfried Leibniz.
- O'Connor, John J; Edmund F. Robertson "Gottfried Leibniz". MacTutor History of Mathematics archive.
- Books and Writers: Brief Leibniz biography and bibliography.
- Sundry comments, often mentioning Leibniz, prompted by:
- Schirrmacher, Frank, "Wake-Up Call for Europe Tech," Frankfurter Allgemeine, 10.07.00.
- Harry Maugan's blog: Leibniz compared to Voltaire via Candide.
- Monadology: text with concordances and frequency list
| Persondata
|
| NAME | Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm |
| ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Leibnitz, Gottfried Wilhelm; Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm von; von Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm |
| SHORT DESCRIPTION | German philoospher |
| DATE OF BIRTH | July 1 1646(1646--) |
| PLACE OF BIRTH | Leipzig, Germany |
| DATE OF DEATH | November 14 1716 |
| PLACE OF DEATH | Hanover, Germany |
July 1 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining. The end of this day marks the halfway point of a leap year.
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Old Style (or OS) and New Style (or NS) is used in English language historical studies either to indicate that the start of the Julian year has been adjusted to start on 1 January (NS) even though contemporary documents use a different start of year (OS); or to
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LeipzigSt Thomas' Church in the evening.
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November 14 is the 1st day of the year (2nd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. There are 0 days remaining.
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Hannover
HanoverThe New Town Hall in Hanover, built from 1901 to 1913.
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Anthem
"Das Lied der Deutschen" (third stanza)
also called "Einigkeit und Recht und Freiheit"
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mathematician is a person whose primary area of study and research is the field of mathematics.
Problems in mathematics
Some people incorrectly believe that mathematics has been fully understood, but the publication of new discoveries in mathematics continues at an immense
..... Click the link for more information. Natural philosophy or the philosophy of nature, known in Latin as philosophia naturalis, is a term applied to the objective study of nature and the physical universe that was regnant before the development of modern science.
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University of Leipzig (German Universität Leipzig), located in Leipzig in the Free State of Saxony (former Kingdom of Saxony), Germany, is one of the oldest universities in Europe.
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The University of Altdorf was a university in Altdorf bei Nürnberg, a small town outside Nuremberg. It was founded in the late 16th century, received university privileges in 1622 and was closed in 1809 by Maximilian I of Bavaria.
Notable instructors include Daniel Schwenter.
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Erhard Weigel
Erhard Weigel
Born 16 November 1625(1625--)
Weiden in der Oberpfalz
Died 20 March 1699 (aged 75)
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Jacob Bernoulli
Jacob Bernoulli
Born November 27 1654(1654--)
Basel, Switzerland
Died July 16 1705 (aged 52)
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Calculus (Latin, calculus, a small stone used for counting) is a branch of mathematics that includes the study of limits, derivatives, integrals, and infinite series, and constitutes a major part of modern university education.
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Calculus (Latin, calculus, a small stone used for counting) is a branch of mathematics that includes the study of limits, derivatives, integrals, and infinite series, and constitutes a major part of modern university education.
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Monad may refer to:
- Monad, a term used by the ancient philosopher Epicurus to describe the smallest units of matter, much like Democritus's notion of an atom.
- Monad (symbol), a term used by ancient philosophers Pythagoras, Parmenides, Xenophanes, Plato, Aristotle, and
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General approaches
Agnosticism Atheism
Deism Dystheism
Henotheism Ignosticism
Monism Monotheism
Natural theology Nontheism
Pandeism Panentheism
Pantheism Polytheism
Theism Theology
Transtheism
Specific conceptions
..... Click the link for more information. Optimism is an outlook on life such that one maintains a view of the world as a positive place. It is the opposite of pessimism. Optimists generally believe that people and events are inherently good, so that most situations work out in the end for the best.
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PLATO was one of the first generalized Computer assisted instruction systems, originally built by the University of Illinois and later taken over by Control Data Corporation (CDC), who provided the machines it ran on.
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Aristotle (Greek: Ἀριστοτέλης Aristotélēs) (384 BC – 322 BC) was a Greek philosopher, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great.
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Saint Thomas Aquinas, O.P.(also Thomas of Aquin, or Aquino; c. 1225 – 7 March 1274) was an Italian Roman Catholic priest in the Order of Preachers, a philosopher and theologian in the scholastic tradition, known as Doctor Angelicus, Doctor Universalis
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Fr. Francisco Suárez, S.J. (5 January 1548–25 September 1617) was a Spanish philosopher and theologian, generally regarded as having been the greatest scholastic after Thomas Aquinas.
Life and career
Suárez was born in the Spanish city of Granada.
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Baruch de Spinoza (Hebrew: ברוך שפינוזה, Portuguese: Bento de Espinosa
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Ramon Llull (1232[1] – June 29, 1315) (sometimes Raymond Lully, Raymond Lull, in Latin Raimundus or Raymundus Lullus, or in Spanish Raimundo Lulio
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Christian Wolff may refer to:
- Christian Wolff (philosopher) (1679-1754), German philosopher and mathematician
- Christian Wolff (composer) (b.1934), American composer of experimental classical music
- Christian Wolff (actor), German actor
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