“Nihil est sine ratione.[There is nothing without a reason.]”
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz“Nihil est sine ratione.[There is nothing without a reason.]”
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz“If you could blow the brain up to the size of a mill and walk about inside, you would not find consciousness.”
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz“[On Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz]The answer is unknowable, but it may not be unreasonable to see him, at least in theological terms, as essentially a deist. He is a determinist: there are no miracles (the events so called being merely instances of infrequently occurring natural laws); Christ has no real role in the system; we live forever, and hence we carry on after our deaths, but then everything — every individual substance — carries on forever.”
Peter Loptson“And just as the same town, when looked at from different sides, appears quite different and is, as it were, multiplied in perspective, so also it happens that because of the infinite number of simple substances, it is as if there were as many different universes, which are however but different perspective representations of a single universe form the different point of view of each monad.”
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Monadology“For all bodies are in perpetual flux like rivers, and parts are passing in and out of them continually.”
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Monadology“Nothing is necessitated whose opposite is possible.”
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, Discourse on Metaphysics and Other Essays“…if geometry were as much opposed to our passions and present interests as is ethics, we should contest it and violate I but little less, notwithstanding all the demonstrations of Euclid and Archimedes…”
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, New Essays on Human Understanding“The mind is not only capable of knowing [innate ideas], but further of finding them in itself; and if it had only the simple capacity to receive knowledge…it would not be the source of necessary truths…”
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, New Essays on Human Understanding“The mind leans on [innate] principles every moment, but it does not come so easily to distinguish them and to represent them distinctly and separately, because that demands great attention to its acts, and the majority of people, little accustomed to think, has little of it.”
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, New Essays on Human Understanding“For the [innate] general principles enter into our thoughts, of which they form the soul and the connection. They are as necessary thereto as the muscles and sinews are for walking, although we do not at all think of them.”
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, New Essays on Human Understanding