The Philosophy Book

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135


See also: Nicolaus of Autrecourt 334 ■ René Descartes 116–23 ■ David Hume
14 8 – 5 3 ■ Immanuel Kant 164–71 ■ Alfred North Whitehead 336


Gottfried Leibniz


Gottfried Leibniz was a
German philosopher and
mathematician. He was born
in Leipzig, and after university
he took public service with
the Elector of Mainz for five
years, during which time he
concentrated mainly on
political writings. After a
period spent travelling, he
took up the post of librarian
to the Duke of Brunswick, in
Hanover, and remained there
until his death. It was during
this last period of his life that
he did most of the work on
the development of his unique
philosophical system.
Leibniz is famous in
mathematics for his invention
of the so-called “infinitesimal
calculus” and the argument
that followed this, as both
Leibniz and Newton claimed
the discovery as their own. It
seems clear that they had in
fact reached it independently,
but Leibniz developed a much
more usable notation which
is still used today.

Key works

1673 A Philosopher’s Creed
1685 Discourse on Metaphysics
1695 The New System
1710 Theodicy
1714 Monadology

the empiricists held that knowledge
is derived from experience, while
the rationalists claimed that
knowledge can be gained through
rational reflection alone.
Leibniz was a rationalist, and
his distinction between truths
of reasoning and truths of fact
marks an interesting twist in the
debate between rationalism and
empiricism. His claim, which he
makes in most famous work, the
Monadology, is that in principle
all knowledge can be accessed by
rational reflection. However, due
to shortcomings in our rational ❯❯


RENAISSANCE AND THE AGE OF REASON


We know hardly anything
adequately, few things
a priori, and most things
through experience.
Gottfried Wilhelm
Leibniz

Every thing in the world
has a distinct notion.

This notion contains every
truth about that thing,
including its connections
to other things.

When the analysis is
finite, we can reach
the final truth.

We can analyze these
connections through
rational reflection.

When the analysis is
infinite, we cannot reach the
final truth through reasoning—
only through experience.

These are truths
of reasoning.

These are truths
of fact.
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