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361. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Christopher P. Noble Living Mirrors: Infinity, Unity, and Life in Leibniz's Philosophy, by O. Nachtomy
362. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Dwight K. Lewis Jr. Another Mind-Body Problem: A History of Racial Non-Being, by J. Harfouch
363. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Kristen Irwin Leibniz on the Problem of Evil, by P. Rateau
364. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Chloe Armstrong The Oxford Handbook of Leibniz, ed. M. R. Antognazza
365. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Antonio Lamarra, Catherine Fullarton, Ursula Goldenbaum (English translation of) “Contexte génétique et première réception de la Monadologie. Leibniz, Wolff et la Doctrine de L’harmonie préétablie,”
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The many equivocations that, in several respects, characterised the reception of Leibniz's Principes de la Nature et de la Grâce and Monadologie, up until the last century, find their origins in the genetic circumstances of their manuscripts, which gave rise to misinformation published in an anonymous review that appeared in the Leipzig Acta eruditorum in 1721. Archival research demonstrates that the author of this review, as well as of the Latin review of the Monadologie, which appeared, the same year, in the Supplementa of the Acta eruditorum, was Christian Wolff, who possessed a copy of the Leibnizian manuscrip since at least 1717. This translation figured as a precise cultural strategy that aimed to defuse any idealist interpretation of Leibniz’s monadology. An essential part of this strategy consists in reading the theory of pre-established harmony as a doctrine founded on a strictly dualistic substance metaphysics.
366. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Justin E. H. Smith In Memoriam Heinrich Schepers (1925-2020)
367. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
News, Recent Works, Acknowledgments, Abbreviations
368. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Daniel Garber Robert C. Sleigh, Jr. and Leibniz
369. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Maria Rosa Antognazza The Hypercategorematic Infinite
370. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Kyle Sereda Leibniz’s Relational Conception of Number
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In this paper, I address a topic that has been mostly neglected in Leibniz scholarship: Leibniz’s conception of number. I argue that Leibniz thinks of numbers as a certain kind of relation, and that as such, numbers have a privileged place in his metaphysical system as entities that express a certain kind of possibility. Establishing the relational view requires reconciling two seemingly inconsistent definitions of number in Leibniz’s corpus; establishing where numbers fit in Leibniz’s ontology requires confronting a challenge from the well-known nominalist reading of Leibniz most forcefully articulated in Mates (1986). While my main focus is limited to the positive integers, I also argue that Leibniz intends to subsume them under a more general conception of number.
371. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Mark Kulstad Les Lumières de Leibniz: Controverses avec Huet, Bayle, Regis et More
372. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Paul Lodge True and False Mysticism in Leibniz
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The question of Leibniz’s relationship to mysticism has been a topic of some debate since the early part of the 20th Century. An initial wave of scholarship led by Jean Baruzi pre­sented Leibniz as a mystic. However, later in the 20th Century the mood turned against this view and the negative appraisal holds sway today. In this paper I do two things: First I provide a detailed account of the ways in which Leibniz is critical of mysticism; second, I argue that there is, nonetheless, an important sense in which Leibniz should be regarded as an advocate of mysticism. However, the approach that I take does not focus on an effort to overturn the kinds of considerations that led people to reject the views of Baruzi. Instead, I try to reframe the discussion and explore more complex and interesting relationships that exist between mysticism and Leibniz’s philosophical theology than have been articulated previously. Here I draw on some recent discussions of mysticism in the philosophical literature to illuminate Leibniz’s own distinction between “false mysticism” and “true mystical theology” and his assessment of the views of a number of other people who might plausibly be identified as mystics.
373. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Christina Schneider In Memoriam Hans Burkhardt (1936-2015)
374. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Mogens Lærke La vie selon la raison. Physiologie et métaphysique chez Spinoza et Leibniz
375. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Mogens Lærke Leibniz on the Principle of Equipollence and Spinoza’s Causal Axiom
376. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Stephen Steward Leibniz’s Principle of Identity of Indiscernibles
377. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
News from the Leibniz-Gesellschaft
378. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Recent Works
379. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 25
Acknowledgments, Subscription Information, Abbreviations
380. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 23
Stephen Puryear The Leibniz-De Volder Correspondence, with Selections from the Correspondence Between Leibniz and Johann Bernoulli, ed. P. Lodge