1. Section 7. We are further told that the monads
lack windows.
L
thinks that there is only one thing other than a substance, and this is an
accident. Accidents are modifications of substances: they are ways that
that substance is. If I am a substance, then my blueeyedness
is an accident, as is my being a philosopher and so on. Considered in
this way, an accident is tightly bound to its substance. One cannot take
my blueeyedness and give it to someone else.
Even if my eyes were stolen and implanted somewhere else, then it would be that
person who is blue-eyed, not I, and so it would become his blueeyedness, not mine. It wouldn’t be my blueeyedness--the accident--that would be doing the
traveling, but the eyes--the part. Thus, Leibniz says picturesquely, an
accident of mine cannot somehow leave me and go into you in such a way that by
means of this accident something happens in you. So, I can only cause
effects in myself and you can only cause effects in yourself.
• Presumably the person who
claims we just directly act on someone else will think this to be
question-begging. Perhaps the argument is to be understood along the
lines of the intuitions grounding a contact physics, supplemented with the idea
that there can’t really be contact between monads. First of all, the
monads don’t have parts, and so they can’t touch. Could we maybe
have two monads at the same place at the same time? But I think L doesn’t
want to say that monads are literally spatial beings. Or maybe we should
think of the mutual independence of the monads.
• There is an exception here:
God. If one exception, why not more? But God’s causality is
different. It’s not that God affects monads once they’re
created. Rather, he just creates them at the start to act like He wants
them to.
2. We get some arguments for the immateriality
of the soul. The first argument invokes the image of a mill.
Suppose that we could think without souls. Well, we’d be thinking
machines. Imagine blowing us up so that our parts would be as big as the
parts of a mill. Where would perception be?
- A
more powerful argument is the mechanism argument: “If in that which is
organic there is nothing but mechanism, that is, bare matter, having
differences of place, magnitude and figure, nothing can be deduced and
explained from it, except mechanism, that is except such differences as I
have just mentioned.” (p. 86)
- Can’t
get something for nothing. From a proposition of the form “There is
a machine in which x pushes against y, y pushes
against z, x has such-and-such shape…” one cannot derive a
proposition of the form “The machine is conscious.”
- Is
this a good argument? Couldn’t someone say: “But can’t you say
likewise that from the fact that molecules are doing such-and-such you
can’t derive the fact that the material is hot?”
- But there is a disanalogy there. Consciousness
seems to be a radically different kind of property from mechanical
properties, while heat does not. Consciousness is, after all, a
property that can only be perceived by the one who has it, unlike
mechanical properties which can be perceived by all human beings.
If it is such a radically different kind of property then it is
plausible that it is not derivable from the properties of matter in the
way that heat is derivable.
3. What makes something one thing is the
interrelation of monads, and their hierarchical relation to the central monad.
- The
interrelation consists in nothing other than mutual representation.
- One
can scientifically study the body while ignoring the soul and vice
versa.
4. The Pre-Established Harmony ensures that
all the perceptions of the different monads are coordinated. The
perceptions present phenomena or appearances to the monads.
The interrelation of these phenomena will be interrelated in such a way as to
satisfy the criteria set forth in “On the method of distinguishing…”, an early
essay of L’s. These criteria are vividness, complexity and internal
coherence.
- Vividness.
- Complexity: Reality is inexhaustible for
Leibniz. Indeed, one might say that this is one of the major
differences between reality and irreality.
Consider Winston Churchill. There is an infinitude of facts about
Churchill. How many hairs did he have at a given time and
date? What was his weight to the microgram? What did he have
for breakfast on September 17, 1932? Exactly how many molecules of
water did he consume on January 15, 1911? What did he dream the
night before? There are well-defined answers to all of these
questions, though some of the answers are no longer available to us.
On the other hand, consider Sherlock Holmes. How many hairs did he
have on a given date? What was his weight to the microgram?
What did he have for breakfast on some date that Arthur Conan Doyle did
not see fit to describe? We not only do not have answers to these
questions, but there are no answers to them. It’s not merely
due to the limitations in our knowledge that there are no answers.
The reality of Churchill is inexhaustible. But basically there is
nothing more to Sherlock Holmes than what is found in the writings of
Arthur Conan Doyle. Reality thus exhibits a depth of complexity that
fiction lacks.
- Admittedly,
this depth of complexity we may not always perceive. However, with
the little perceptions of Leibniz, we do perceive
them. It is Leibniz’s contention that we have perceptions of all of
reality, though in confused form. Compare the fact that this piece
of chalk is gravitationally affected by everything in the universe.
Maybe if we figured out exactly the various physical forces affecting the
piece of chalk, we could know a lot about the universe.
- Internal
coherence: Basically,
this means that reality is amenable to scientific investigation.
Behind various complex phenomena there are relatively simple laws of
nature. Planets, moons, galaxies—they all move in their different
ways, but they do so under the influence of a simple force of
gravitation. (Relativity theory complicates only to simplify: It
treats gravity and electromagnetism in a unified way.) According to
L., the most evident way that this criterion is to be applied is in
prediction. If we can predict future states from past
ones—presumably by using simple laws of nature—then this gives one very
good reason to think we are talking of reality. Note that the
coherence criterion will include the concurrence of other people.
- These
are epistemic criteria as given in the essay, and as L. notes they do not prove
that something is real, but they do make it very likely. If all of
the conditions are met, then very likely the phenomenon in question
reflects reality.
- However,
at the end of the essay, L. considers the possibility that God has put us
in a life-long dream where we perceive things according to these
conditions—think of the Matrix. He doesn’t say—as Kant
would—that under that supposition these phenomena are in fact real: that a
dream having vividness, complexity and coherence would be
real. But he does say that God wouldn’t count as a deceiver if God
put us in such a dream—for we can only conclude that it is probable that what we se is there,
and we cannot go from probability to certainty (if I buy a lottery ticket
and win, I was not deceived when
I earlier thought I would lose)—and in saying this he makes one less sure
whether in fact we are in such a dream or not. (Descartes’ argument
for the reality of our perceptions was based on the idea that God wouldn’t
deceive us.) He also says that in a dream the phenomena proceed from
an inner source—from ourselves—but that the same is true in reality.
Indeed, in L.’s system it is so in reality: the pre-established harmony is
such that we produce phenomena on appropriate occasions.
- So
what more do we have in reality than in the dream? Well, first of
all, there is correlation between the phenomena that all the monads
have. When I see a horse and you are looking in the same direction,
you too see a horse. Moreover, our perceptions are coordinated in
such a way that there is a precise relation between the angle at which the
horse you see appears and the angle at which the horse I see appears.
This is also coordinated with the unconscious perceptions that the
monads in the horse’s hoof and in the Andromeda Galaxy have. In a
vivid and coherent dream there is no coordination between my phenomena and
yours—if there is, we think a miracle or a great coincidence has occurred—although
obviously when I dream I think there is such a coordination.
- Is
this all there is to it? Are we all simply dreaming
well-coordinated dreams? Is this all reality is? Sort of.
There is a little more here. The phenomena I have do represent
how things are outside me. For instance, when I see you with eyes
turned towards a horse, I do in fact learn real things about you from
what I see. I learn, for instance that you are having a conscious
perception of a horse (assuming I know you’re not blind or
distracted). I also know something about the monads making up the
horse: they are having perceptions—perhaps unconscious—of you. So
in fact the phenomena do give me a true knowledge of external
reality. The phenomena do present other monads to me, albeit in an
indistinct way.
- Bodies
are purely phenomenal: all there really are are the monads and their internal states.
However, we have phenomena of bodies. I perceive your body,
and your body is unified in my perception. It is also unified in
your perception, and in various ways in the perceptions of the monads
making it up. So, what we have are not mere phenomena
but what we can call well-grounded phenomena.
5. A different story is given in the letter
to Des Bosses. Leibniz’s ecumenical scheme was that Catholics and
Protestants would see that they could both accept Leibniz’s system, and hence
would see that their disagreements aren’t so great.
- Transubstantiation:
Bread and wine change into the body of Jesus at Mass. Leibniz did
not believe in transubstantiation, but he wants to show how he could
accommodate it in his system if he had to.
- He
gives more than one account. The first is the troublesome one.
He says that in addition to the interrelations of monads there is a substantial
bond or chain. This is what makes an aggregate be a
genuine unified substance. Here, L abandons the idea that the
central monad is what unifies an organism, and supposes there is a substantial
bond that does this. This lets one say that the body is a genuine
unity, over and beyond just a bunch of interrelated monads, but at the
cost of introducing a new item into his system.
- Once
one has the item, the transubstantiation is accounted for as
follows. The bread, if it has a substantial bond of its own, loses
its substantial bond, though its monads remain. The monads then
become united to the substantial bond that constitutes the body of Jesus.
- Theologically
unacceptable to Catholics because it means that the bread and wine become
a part of the body of Christ rather than that the whole body of
Christ becomes present instead of bread and wine.
- Although
L. argues to the contrary, it seems that idea of the monads of bread and
wine remaining is a theologically dubious one that pushes one in the
direction of Luther’s doctrine of consubstantiation rather than
the Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation.
- Possible
that L. is simply being diplomatic. Or he may be thinking:
Philosophy can’t tell us if there is a substantial bond or not. If faith
requires us to accept one, then this is not contrary to reason but merely above
reason—an important distinction for Leibniz. It’s possible he
might need a substantial bond or something like it to explain the
Incarnation.
- Leibniz’s
official philosophical story doesn’t include substantial bonds. In
fact, the official story claims that substances other than monads are
nothing but well-founded phenomena, i.e., appearances. Since
it is a part of the doctrine of the transubstantiation that the
appearances remain the same, it at first seems like he can’t have any
story to tell. If the appearances don’t change and appearances
constitute bodies, then nothing has changed. But actually the imperceptible
appearance has changed. The microscopic constitution has changed to
be that of Jesus’s body and blood, and we perceive
this, but only by means of the little perceptions. The gross
perceptions are not like this.
- This
wouldn’t really satisfy a Catholic theologian because it makes the
presence of Jesus be primarily a matter of appearance.
- Why
doesn’t L. just say that the monads of bread and wine cease to exist and
the monads of Christ’s body and blood come to exist in their place,
existing in two places at once? He doesn’t say this because what
makes them be the monads of Jesus’s body
is that they appear interconnected, and they wouldn’t thus appear
interconnected if they were not seen as such. But he could insist
that what makes them be the monads of Jesus’s
body is not that they appear interconnected to us, but that they do
so to Jesus’s central monad.
6. The identity of indiscernibles says that
we cannot have two different objects that have the same CIC.
- L.
argues for the principle of identity of indiscernibles on the basis of the
Principle of Sufficient Reason. Samuel Clarke was a disciple of
Newton, and Newton believed in an absolute space-time. L. argues
that then there is no reason why the universe isn’t moved over in time or
space. L.’s own view of space-time is that it is relational and
phenomenal: it consists of nothing but the perceived relations between
things. When the universe is “moved over” these relations do not
change and hence in reality there is no change. This is an argument
for the identity of indiscernibles in a special case: Newton believed in
indiscernible places, whereas there aren’t any by this argument.
- What
of other things? Well, suppose A and B are indiscernible.
Then, there can’t be a reason as to why A is playing the role it is
whereas B is playing the role it is.
- This
seems to be actually a shaky argument. After all, if they are
indiscernible, if they have the same CIC, they are playing the very same
role! And so the supposition that they might switch is a
null-hypothesis.
- But
perhaps we can see L. as arguing against a position that holds that two
things that are indiscernible internally could play different
external roles, and could in fact swap their external roles.
Imagine the two iron spheres in an asymmetric universe.
People who don’t believe in indiscernibles tend to think this is a
meaningful assumption, and they tend to think that things would be
different if one swapped the two spheres. But if they would be
different, then PSR would be violated.
- Clarke
says: But maybe the reason for things being as they are—the universe being
created when it is, say—is to be found in God’s free will.
- L.
answers: Yes, but God must have a reason for his choice, and no reason can
be given here.
- This
shows L.’s basic commitment to a controversial notion of free will that
involves always having a reason for choosing as one does. We
will examine this more closely later.
7. The identity of indiscernibles says that
we cannot have two different objects that have the same CIC.
- L.
argues for the principle of identity of indiscernibles on the basis of the
Principle of Sufficient Reason. Samuel Clarke was a disciple of
Newton, and Newton believed in an absolute space-time. L. argues
that then there is no reason why the universe isn’t moved over in time or
space. L.’s own view of space-time is that it is relational and
phenomenal: it consists of nothing but the perceived relations between
things. When the universe is “moved over” these relations do not
change and hence in reality there is no change. This is an argument
for the identity of indiscernibles in a special case: Newton believed in
indiscernible places, whereas there aren’t any by this argument.
- What
of other things? Well, suppose A and B are indiscernible.
Then, there can’t be a reason as to why A is playing the role it is
whereas B is playing the role it is. Letters to Clarke, IV.3, p. 327.
- This
seems to be actually a shaky argument. After all, if they are
indiscernible, if they have the same CIC, they are playing the very same
role! And so the supposition that they might switch is a
null-hypothesis.
- But
perhaps we can see L. as arguing against a position that holds that two
things that are indiscernible internally could play different
external roles, and could in fact swap their external roles.
Imagine the two iron spheres in an asymmetric universe.
People who don’t believe in indiscernibles tend to think this is a
meaningful assumption, and they tend to think that things would be
different if one swapped the two spheres. But if they would be
different, then PSR would be violated.
- Clarke
says: But maybe the reason for things being as they are—the universe being
created when it is, say—is to be found in God’s free will.
- L.
answers: Yes, but God must have a reason for his choice, and no reason can
be given here.
- This
shows L.’s basic commitment to a controversial notion of free will that
involves always having a reason for choosing as one does. We
will examine this more closely later.
- What about Black’s intuitions? The world consisting of only two items
or a symmetric world? Well, Leibniz
says that two indiscernibles are one thing counted twice. Maybe these worlds need to be thought of
as worlds with space looped over.