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61. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 26
Robert Merrihew Adams Negotium Irenicum: L’union des Églises protestantes selon G. W. Leibniz et D. E. Jablonski; Leibniz: Protestant Theologian
62. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 27
Massimo Mugnai The Logic of Leibniz’s Generales inquisitiones de analysi notionum et veritatum
63. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 27
Edward Slowik Vis Vim Vi: Declinations of Force in Leibniz’s Dynamics
64. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 27
Zachary Micah Gartenberg Spinoza and Dutch Cartesianism: Philosophy and Theology
65. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 27
Ohad Nachtomy The Leibniz–Stahl Controversy
66. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 27
Donald Rutherford Leibniz on Causation and Agency
67. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 28
Samuel Levey Monads, Composition, and Force: Ariadnean Threads through Leibniz’s Labyrinth
68. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 28
Russell Wahl Russell: The Journal of Bertrand Russell Studies (37, 1: 2017): Special Issue on Russell and Leibniz
69. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 28
Christopher Johns The New Method of Learning and Teaching Jurisprudence, According to the Principles of the Didactic Art Premised in the General Part and in the Light of Experience
70. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 28
Nabeel Hamid Kant on Reality, Cause, and Force: From the Early Modern Tradition to the Critical Philosophy
71. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Matteo Favaretti Camposampiero Organisme et corps organique de Leibniz à Kant, by F. Duchesneau
72. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Christopher P. Noble Living Mirrors: Infinity, Unity, and Life in Leibniz's Philosophy, by O. Nachtomy
73. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Dwight K. Lewis Jr. Another Mind-Body Problem: A History of Racial Non-Being, by J. Harfouch
74. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Kristen Irwin Leibniz on the Problem of Evil, by P. Rateau
75. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Chloe Armstrong The Oxford Handbook of Leibniz, ed. M. R. Antognazza
76. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 29
Antonio Lamarra, Catherine Fullarton, Ursula Goldenbaum (English translation of) “Contexte génétique et première réception de la Monadologie. Leibniz, Wolff et la Doctrine de L’harmonie préétablie,”
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The many equivocations that, in several respects, characterised the reception of Leibniz's Principes de la Nature et de la Grâce and Monadologie, up until the last century, find their origins in the genetic circumstances of their manuscripts, which gave rise to misinformation published in an anonymous review that appeared in the Leipzig Acta eruditorum in 1721. Archival research demonstrates that the author of this review, as well as of the Latin review of the Monadologie, which appeared, the same year, in the Supplementa of the Acta eruditorum, was Christian Wolff, who possessed a copy of the Leibnizian manuscrip since at least 1717. This translation figured as a precise cultural strategy that aimed to defuse any idealist interpretation of Leibniz’s monadology. An essential part of this strategy consists in reading the theory of pre-established harmony as a doctrine founded on a strictly dualistic substance metaphysics.
77. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 3
Richard Arthur De Summa Rerum: Metaphysical Papers, 1675-6
78. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 3
J. A. Cover Leibniz’s Metaphysics: A Historical and Comparative Study
79. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 3
Michael Latzer G.W. Leibniz, De l’Horizon de la Doctrine Humaine (1693); La Restitution Universelle (1715)
80. The Leibniz Review: Volume > 3
Murray Miles Leibniz et la méthode de la science