434 



INDEX 



348, 424 ; artistic pleasure is 

 intellectual, 422. 



Plenum, conception of theworld as, 

 40, 251, 385,408. See Vacuum. 



Pliny, 306, 307 n. 



Plotinus, 155 n. 



Plutarch, 252 n. 



Pneumatics, 376. 



Points, metaphysical, mathema- 

 tical and physical, 311; mathe- 

 matical points are limits, 28, 29. 



Poiret, 57, 243. 



Pope, 198, 257 n, 349 n. 



Possible, definition of, 63 ; possible 

 and compossible, 64, 340 sqq. 



Possible things. See Essences. 



Praedicatum inest subjecto, 61 n, 



398 n - 



Pre-established harmony, 39 sqq., 

 24 6 263, 374 s qq- 409, 421 ; 

 first mentioned by Leibniz, 326 ; 

 called a hypothesis of agree- 

 ments, 315 ; compared with 

 Scholastic and Occasionalist 

 theories, 42, 44, 333 ; explained 

 by a special instance, 200 ; 

 advantages of, 323 ; a proof of 

 the existence of God, 202, 316, 

 418 ; clocks and choirs illustra- 

 tions of, 45, 47, 331 ; might be 

 approved by Malebranche, 44 n ; 

 Kant's account of, 209 sqq. 



Preformation, 260, 412 sqq. 



Present big with the future and 

 laden with the past, 44 n, 231, 



373, 4 1 ?- 



Preservation is a continual crea- 

 tion, 44 n, 244 n. 



Principles of Nature and of Grace 

 in relation to the Monadology, 

 215, 405 sqq. 



Progression, conservation of the 

 quantity of, 328. 



Propositions, categorical and hypo- 

 thetical, 206 ; import of, 207. 



Pufiendorf, 293 n. 



Pythagoras, 34 n ; Pythagorean 

 views, 155 n. 



Qualities, intrinsic and extrinsic, 

 222 n; occult, 157, 389^ 399, 

 403. See Substance. 



Quantity, intensive and extensive, 



220n; 'negligible,' 79; Leib- 

 niz's sharp distinction between 

 quantity and quality, 221 n; 

 quantitative unity, 78. See Sub- 

 stance. 



Rainbow simile for phenomenon 

 bene fundatum, 100. 



Reason, meaning of, 120 ; reason 

 and imagination, 232, 365 ; 

 reason and fact, propositions of, 

 206 ; ultimate reason of things, 

 66, 238, 337, 339, 415. See Suf- 

 ficient Reason. 



Reasoning, truths of, 57, 235. 



Reflexion, acts of, 56, 234, 412 ; 

 ideas of, 366. 



Re"gis, 305 n. 



Relativity, how Leibniz tries to 

 avoid, 135 sqq. 



Representation the essence of the 

 relation between whole and 

 part, 32. See Perception. 



Resistance a passive force, 95. 



Resuscitation of animals, 224 n, 

 306. 



Rewards and punishments, 269, 

 304, 381, 421. 



Riedel, 0., on Kant, 178 n. 



Right, doctrine of, 282 ; precepts 

 of, 288 ; degrees of natural 

 Right, 287 sqq. ; voluntary 

 Right, 295. 



Rorarius, 227. 



Rosicrucians, Leibniz's connexion 

 with, 4. 



Sarmatian salt-mines, 346. 



Scaliger, Julius Caesar, 361. 



Sceptics, 155. 



Schelling on Leibniz, 1 79 n ; on 

 the relation between Leibniz 

 and Fichte, 182. 



Schiller, 198 n, 268 n. 



Scholasticism, Leibniz finds value 

 in, 156 ; Scholastic potency 

 distinct from force, 91 n, 123 n. 



Schopenhauer in relation to Leib- 

 niz and Fichte, 183. 



Schwann, 198. 



Self -consciousness more than 

 merely self-consistent, 59 ; im- 

 plies consciousness of objects, 



