The Philosophy Book

(nextflipdebug2) #1

136 GOTTFRIED LEIBNIZ


Each singular substance
expresses the whole
universe in its own way.
Gottfried Wilhelm
Leibniz

faculties, human beings must
also rely on experience as a
means of acquiring knowledge.


A universe in our minds
To see how Leibniz arrives at this
conclusion, we need to understand
a little of his metaphysics—his
view of how the universe is
constructed. He holds that every
part of the world, every individual
thing, has a distinct concept or
“notion” associated with it, and that
every such notion contains within
it everything that is true about
itself, including its relations to other
things. Because everything in the
universe is connected, he argues,
it follows that every notion is
connected to every other notion,
and so it is possible—at least
in principle—to follow these
connections and to discover truths
about the entire universe through


rational reflection alone. Such
reflection leads to Leibniz’s “truths
of reasoning.” However, the human
mind can grasp only a small number
of such truths (such as those of
mathematics), and so it has to
rely on experience, which yields
“truths of fact.”
So how is it possible to progress
from knowing that it is snowing,
for example, to knowing what will
happen tomorrow somewhere on the
other side of the world? For Leibniz,
the answer lies in the fact that the
universe is composed of individual,
simple substances called “monads.”
Each monad is isolated from other
monads, and each contains a
complete representation of the
whole universe in its past,
present, and future states. This
representation is synchronized
between all the monads, so that
each one has the same content.

According to Leibniz, this is how
God created things—in a state of
“pre-established harmony.”
Leibniz claims that every
human mind is a monad, and so
contains a complete representation
of the universe. It is therefore
possible in principle for us to learn
everything that there is to know
about our world and beyond simply
by exploring our own minds.
Simply by analyzing my notion of
the star Betelgeuse, for example, I
will eventually be able to determine
the temperature on the surface
of the actual star Betelgeuse.
However, in practice, the analysis
that is required for me reach this
information is impossibly
complex—Leibniz calls it “infinite”
—and because I cannot complete
it, the only way that I can discover
the temperature of Betelgeuse is by
measuring it empirically using
astronomical equipment.
Is the temperature of the surface
of Betelgeuse a truth of reasoning
or a truth of fact? It may be true
that I had to resort to empirical

A map of the internet shows the
innumerable connections between
internet users. Leibniz’s theory of
monads suggests that all our minds
are similarly connected.
Free download pdf