Leibniz\u2019s general concern in contrasting the conventionalist drift of Locke\u2019s Essay could hide to the reader a common background of assumptions and problems, that, roughly speaking, is determined by the crisis of the ancient image of reality as a hierarchical order of essences. Leibniz and Locke also share the assumption, derived from the nominalistic tradition, that only individuals do exist. I shall try to show briefly this tendency in Leibniz\u2019s own accounts of species and classifications before his confrontation with Locke. When faced with Locke\u2019s attitude in the Essay, however, he will be more eager to contrast an excessive weakening of the ontological import of our partition of the world. To show this, I shall first...
Leibniz discusses the relationship between matter and mentality in two places in the New Essays. The...
The goal of this paper is to critically examine the objections of John Locke’s contemporaries agains...
The paper argues against the claim held, e.g., by Leibniz, that Locke employs a double standard for ...
One fundamental difference between the epistemic views of Locke and Leibniz as represented in Leibni...
This paper examines one of the central complaints regarding Locke’s Essay, namely, its supposed inco...
One of Locke's primary goals for the Essay Concerning Human Understanding is to provide a theory of ...
John Yolton has argued that Locke held a direct realist position according to which sensory ideas ar...
This dissertation examines Locke\u27s and Leibniz\u27 explanation of the origin and nature of the wo...
The purpose of this dissertation is to examine the relationship between Locke\u27s anti-essentialism...
Knowledge, for Locke, consists in perceiving agreement between ideas, i.e., roughly either (a) the p...
In his critique of the Lockean concept of perception as presented in Nouveaux essais, Leibniz reproa...
Locke\u27s, Berkeley\u27s and Peirce\u27s conceptions of reality are analyzed, using Peirce\u27s dis...
This thesis is a study of Leibniz's ideas on the structure of ontological entities, and implicitly o...
version. Abstract: According to Locke, what are ideas? I argue that Locke does not give an account o...
Leibniz discusses the relationship between matter and mentality in two places in the New Essays. The...
Leibniz discusses the relationship between matter and mentality in two places in the New Essays. The...
The goal of this paper is to critically examine the objections of John Locke’s contemporaries agains...
The paper argues against the claim held, e.g., by Leibniz, that Locke employs a double standard for ...
One fundamental difference between the epistemic views of Locke and Leibniz as represented in Leibni...
This paper examines one of the central complaints regarding Locke’s Essay, namely, its supposed inco...
One of Locke's primary goals for the Essay Concerning Human Understanding is to provide a theory of ...
John Yolton has argued that Locke held a direct realist position according to which sensory ideas ar...
This dissertation examines Locke\u27s and Leibniz\u27 explanation of the origin and nature of the wo...
The purpose of this dissertation is to examine the relationship between Locke\u27s anti-essentialism...
Knowledge, for Locke, consists in perceiving agreement between ideas, i.e., roughly either (a) the p...
In his critique of the Lockean concept of perception as presented in Nouveaux essais, Leibniz reproa...
Locke\u27s, Berkeley\u27s and Peirce\u27s conceptions of reality are analyzed, using Peirce\u27s dis...
This thesis is a study of Leibniz's ideas on the structure of ontological entities, and implicitly o...
version. Abstract: According to Locke, what are ideas? I argue that Locke does not give an account o...
Leibniz discusses the relationship between matter and mentality in two places in the New Essays. The...
Leibniz discusses the relationship between matter and mentality in two places in the New Essays. The...
The goal of this paper is to critically examine the objections of John Locke’s contemporaries agains...
The paper argues against the claim held, e.g., by Leibniz, that Locke employs a double standard for ...