Divine Perception and the Unity of the World: Towards a Non-Reductionist Account of Leibniz’s Conception of the World as an Aggregate

Subscibe in publisher´s online store Share via email
Divine Perception and the Unity of the World: Towards a Non-Reductionist Account of Leibniz’s Conception of the World as an Aggregate
Robert, Gastón

From the journal StL Studia Leibnitiana, Volume 52, June 2020, issue 1-2

Published by Franz Steiner Verlag

essay, 17699 Words
Original language: English
StL 2020, pp 156-183
https://doi.org/10.25162/sl-2020-0005

Abstract

This article elaborates a new framework for understanding Leibniz’s conception of the unity and reality of the world as an aggregate. It defends the view that Leibniz conceives of the world as a particular type of aggregate, the main characteristic of which is that its members are bound together by the perceptual activity of the infinite mind of God. It is argued that, so conceived, the world can in a sense have a unity and reality that, while aggregative and relational, do not reduce to the perceptual states of the constituent-substances it comprises. At the same time, it is further argued that this does not involve renouncing Leibniz’s world-apart conception of substance, or his reductionism about relations and relational accidents.

Author information

Gastón Robert