Leibniz: Nature and Freedom

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Donald Rutherford, J. A. Cover
Oxford University Press, USA, 17 mar 2005 - 265 páginas
The revival of Leibniz studies in the past twenty-five years has cast important new light on both the context and content of Leibniz's philosophical thought. Where earlier English-language scholarship understood Leibniz's philosophy as issuing from his preoccupations with logic and language, recent work has recommended an account on which theological, ethical, and metaphysical themes figure centrally in Leibniz's thought throughout his career. The significance of these themes to the development of Leibniz's philosophy is the subject of increasing attention by philosophers and historians.This collection of new essays by a distinguished group of scholars offers an up-to-date overview of the current state of Leibniz research. In focusing on nature and freedom, the volume revisits two key topics in Leibniz's thought, on which he engaged both contemporary and historical arguments. Important contributions to Leibniz scholarship in their own right, these articles collectively provide readers a framework in which to better situate Leibniz's distinctive philosophy of nature and the congenial home for a morally significant freedom that he took it to provide.

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Índice

Introduction
3
The Possibility of Monism or Pantheism in the Young Leibniz
20
2 Leibniz and Sleigh on Substantial Unity
44
3 Leibniz on Precise Shapes and the Corporeal World
69
4 Leibniz and Idealism
95
5 Compossibility Expression Accommodation
108
6 Leibniz and Occasionalism
121
7 Leibnizs Two Realms
135
8 Leibniz on Spontaneity
156
9 Moral Necessity
181
10 Spontaneity and Freedom in Leibniz
194
Freedom Indifference and the Nature of the Will
217
Leibniz on the Intellectual Source of Sin
234
Bibliography
255
Index
263
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