Discours de métaphysique

by 戈特弗里德·莱布尼茨

Blurb

The Discourse on Metaphysics is a short treatise by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in which he develops a philosophy concerning physical substance, motion and resistance of bodies, and God's role within the universe. It is one of the few texts presenting in a consistent form the earlier philosophy of Leibniz.
The Discourse is closely connected to the epistolary discussion which he carried with Antoine Arnauld. However Leibniz refrained from sending the full text and it remained unpublished until the mid 19th century. Arnauld received only an abridged version in 37 points which resumed whole paragraphs and steered their discussion.
The metaphysical considerations proceed from God to the substantial world and back to the spiritual realm. The starting point for the work is the conception of God as an absolutely perfect being, that God is good but goodness exists independently of God, and that God has created the world in an ordered and perfect fashion.
At the time of its writing Discourse made the controversial claim That the opinions of... scholastic philosophers are not to be wholly despised.

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