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Leibniz - The Monadology - 04
Identifier
020586
Type of Spiritual Experience
Background
A description of the experience
THE MONADOLOGY - by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz - translated by Robert Latta
28. In so far as the concatenation of their perceptions is due to the principle of memory alone, men act like the lower animals, resembling the empirical physicians, whose methods are those of mere practice without theory. Indeed, in three-fourths of our actions we are nothing but empirics. For instance, when we expect that there will be daylight to-morrow, we do so empirically, because it has always so happened until now. It is only the astronomer who thinks it on rational grounds.
29. But it is the knowledge of necessary and eternal truths that distinguishes us from the mere animals and gives us Reason and the sciences, raising us to the knowledge of ourselves and of God. And it is this in us that is called the rational soul or mind [esprit].
30. It is also through the knowledge of necessary truths, and through their abstract expression, that we rise to acts of reflexion, which make us think of what is called I, and observe that this or that is within us: and thus, thinking of ourselves, we think of being, of substance, of the simple and the compound, of the immaterial, and of God Himself, conceiving that what is limited in us is in Him without limits. And these acts of reflexion furnish the chief objects of our reasonings. (Theod. Pref. [E. 469; G. vi. 27].)
The source of the experience
Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm vonConcepts, symbols and science items
Concepts
ConsciousEgo
Memory
Memory - the types of model in memory
Memory - traversing the database of facts
Memory and emotion
Memory and perceptions
Perceptions
Personality
Reason
Reasoning
Reasoning - heuristics and induction
Reasoning and levels of reasoning