INDEX 



43 T 



48 n ; Leibniz and Descartes on 

 secondary qualities, &c., 375> 

 376 n ; criticism of Spinoza's 

 Ethics, 24 n ; Leibniz and 

 Spinoza on empirical knowledge, 

 70 ; relations to Newton, 8, 80 ; 

 correspondence with Clarke, 

 102 n, 104 n ; discussion with 

 Bayle on multiplicity in the 

 Monad, 272 ; Leibniz's account 

 of his relation to Locke, 357 

 sqq. ; criticisms of Locke, 13 ; 

 criticism of the tabula rasa, 

 122 n, 369 ; via media between 

 Descartes and Locke, 123; on 

 the controversy between Locke 

 and Stillingfleet, 398 sqq. ; re- 

 lation to Kant, 168 sqq., 208 

 sqq. ; Kant's discussion of 

 Leibniz's first principles, 208 ; 

 relation to Fichte, 178 sqq. ; to 

 Schopenhauer, 183 ; toHerbart, 

 184; to Hegel, 1 86 ; to Lotze, 

 190 sqq. 



Lemoine on the vinculum sul)- 

 stantiale, 119 n. 



Lessing, 198. 



Leuwenhoek, 256 n, 260 n, 305 n. 



Liberty of indifference does not 

 exist, 141 sqq. 



Life everywhere in nature, 105, 

 109, 112, 256,309,409. 



Limitation, necessity of, 340 n. 



Limitations of created things, 240, 

 250, 416, 419 n. 



Limits, mathematical points are, 

 28, 29. 



Locke, 36 n ; his Essay, 355 sqq. ; 

 Leibniz's relation to and criti- 

 cism of, 13, 123, 357 sqq.; 

 Locke's theory of knowledge, 

 122 ; his view that mind may 

 exist without thought, opposed 

 by Leibniz, 129 ; his account of 

 ' uneasiness,' 140 ; his account 

 of virtue criticised, 149 n ; on 

 the immortality of the soul, 

 383 n ; on the immateriality of 

 the soul, 402 ; holds that matter 

 may think, 392, 395 ; Locke and 

 Descartes, I24n; Locke and 

 Stillingfleet, 387 sqq. 



Logic of Leibniz, 206 sqq. ; 



Leibniz's early interest in logic, 

 2. 



Lotze, H4n ; relation to Leibniz, 

 194 sqq.; criticism of Leib- 

 niz, 195 sqq. ; on innate ideas, 

 126 n; on mechanism, 192; 

 his monadology, 194 ; teleology, 

 193; relation to Herbart, 191 ; 

 on Hegel, 190, 192. 



Loubere, Simon de la, 397. 



Louis XIV, 5. 



Love, disinterested as distinct 

 from selfish, 148, 269, 285 ; 

 Divine, 286, 423. 



Machines of nature are machines 

 throughout, 254, 309 ; have an 

 infinity of organs, 309. 



Mainz, Archbishop of, employs 

 Leibniz, 4. 



Malebranche, 305 n, 312; inter- 

 course with Leibniz, 6 ; sense 

 in which Leibniz agrees with 

 him, 53 n; he might approve 

 the pre-established harmony, 

 44 n. 



Malpighi, 39 n, 256 n, 260 n, 305 n. 



Materia prima, 95 ; and materia 

 secunda, no; possessed by 

 every created Monad, 97. 



Materia secunda, 96, 258 ; an 

 aggregation, 97, 300 ; a mere 

 phenomenon, 97 ; in flux like a 

 river, 97, 114, 258, 262 n ; dis- 

 tinct from substance, 96 n. 



Mathematics in relation to Leib- 

 niz's philosophy, 74; Divine 

 mathematics, 342 ; mathematical 

 points, 311. 



Matter, Leibniz's theory of, 93 

 sqq. ; not mere extension, 28, 

 94 ; a mere aggregate, 300 ; in- 

 finitely divided as well as infin- 

 itely divisible, 39, 237, 255, 335 ; 

 living throughout, 256; cohesion 

 of, 386 ; primary and secondary 

 qualities, loo ; inseparable from 

 mind, in, 128; can matter 

 think ? 390 sqq. ; miraculous 

 exaltation of matter, 401 ; Des- 

 cartes's view of matter, 86. 



Mechanical philosophy, 158. 



Mechanism, Divine and human, 



