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* Internet Search Results *
Leibniz's Philosophy of Mind (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
In a more popular view, Leibniz's place in the history of the philosophy of mind is best secured by his pre-established harmony, that is, roughly, by the thesis that there is no ...
Gottfried Leibniz - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Leibniz's father, Friedrich Leibniz, had been a Professor of Moral Philosophy at the University of Leipzig, so Leibniz inherited his father's personal library.
Leibniz’s Metaphysics [Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
Leibniz: Metaphysics. The German rationalist philosopher, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (1646-1716), is one of the great renaissance men of Western thought.
The Philosophy of Gottfried Wilhelm von Leibniz
An essay from the Radical Academy, presenting Leibnizian thought as a synthesis of the Cartesian and Scholastic systems.
Leibniz
A brief discussion of the life and works of Gottfried Leibniz, with links to electronic texts and additional information.
Leibniz's Ethics (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)
It is often remarked that Leibniz never wrote a systematic ethical treatise. However, in his view theology is a sort of jurisprudence, a type of science of law (NE, p. 526).
Gottfried Leibniz: Discussion Metaphysics / Philosophy of Leibniz ...
Metaphysics and Philosophy of Gottfried Leibniz: Explaining Leibniz's monadology / monad with the Wave Structure of Matter (matter and the universe are one interconnected whole).
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Archives - Free access to documentation ...
Chaitin's message is that the practice of science today reflects a new "digital philosophy" that was articulated by Leibniz more than three centuries ago.
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: System of Leibniz
The philosophy, to which Leibniz thus ascribed irenics as one of its chief aims, is a partial idealism. Its principal tenets are: The doctrine of monads,
Gottfried Leibniz: Biography from Answers.com
Bertrand Russell, A Critical Exposition of the Philosophy of Leibniz (1900; 2d ed. 1951), is a comprehensive interpretation. Still worth consulting is Herbert W. Carr, Leibniz (1929)
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