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Yale University Press

series: The Yale Leibniz Series
Series

The Yale Leibniz Series

Book Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed 2016
The first unabridged English translation of the correspondence between Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz and Georg Ernst Stahl detailing their opposing philosophies

The correspondence between the eighteenth-century mathematician and philosopher G. W. Leibniz and G. E. Stahl, a chemist and physician at the court of King Friedrich Wilhelm I of Prussia, known as the Leibniz-Stahl Controversy, is one of the most important intellectual contributions on theoretical issues concerning pre-biological thinking. Editors François Duchesneau and Justin E. H. Smith offer readers the first fully annotated English translation of this fascinating exchange of philosophical views on divine action, the order of nature, causality and teleology, and the soul-body relationship.

Book Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed 2011

In this book G. W. Leibniz presents not only his reflections on predestination and election but also a more detailed account of the problem of evil than is found in any of his other works apart from the Theodicy. Surprisingly, his Dissertation on Predestination and Grace has never before been published in any form. Michael J. Murray's project of translating, editing, and providing commentary for the volume will therefore attract great interest among scholars and students of Leibniz's philosophy and theology. Leibniz addresses such topics as free will, moral responsibility, divine causation, justice, punishment, divine foreknowledge, and human freedom, revealing crucial aspects of the genesis of his mature metaphysics and the theological motivations behind it.

Book Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed 2008
This volume is a critical edition of the ten-year correspondence (1706-1716) between Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, one of Europe’s most influential early modern thinkers, and Bartholomew Des Bosses, a Jesuit theologian who was keen to bring together Leibniz’s philosophy and the Aristotelian philosophy and religious doctrines accepted by his order. The letters offer crucial insights into Leibniz’s final metaphysics and into the intellectual life of the eighteenth century.
Brandon C. Look and Donald Rutherford present seventy-one of Leibniz’s and Des Bosses’s letters in the original Latin and in careful English translation. Few of the letters have been translated into English before. The editors also provide extensive annotations, deletions, and marginalia from Leibniz’s various drafts, and a substantial introduction setting the context for the correspondence and analyzing the main philosophical issues.
Book Requires Authentication Unlicensed Licensed 1992
This book is the first volume in a new series that presents original texts by G. W. Leibniz accompanied by authoritative English translations on the facing pages. The volumes, which will be translated, annotated, and introduced by well-known Leibniz scholars, are a valuable resource for those interested in the works of this eminent seventeenth-century philosopher.
De Summa Rerum is a selection of twenty-five papers written by G. W. Leibniz early in his career between December 1675 and December 1676. Unlike many of his other works, which were written for other people, Leibniz wrote these essays to clarify in his own mind the thoughts on such major philosophical issues as the philosophy of physics, and the nature of God and of the human mind. In these papers, Leibniz propounds many of the philosophical doctrines for which he is best known. This volume makes these important works available in English, many of them for the first time.
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