Leibniz’s Body Realism: Two Interpretations

The Leibniz Review 16:1-42 (2006)
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Abstract

In this paper we argue for the robustness of Leibniz's commitment to the reality (but not substantiality) of body. We claim that a number of his most important metaphysical doctrines — among them, psychophysical parallelism, the harmony between efficient and final causes, the connection of all things, and the argument for the plurality of substances stemming from his solution to the continuum problem— make no sense if he is interpreted as giving an eliminative reduction of bodies to perceptions.

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2009-01-28

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Richard T. W. Arthur
McMaster University

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