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  1. 27 de nov. de 1997 · This penetrating book is the first to offer a comprehensive overview and commentary on the Leibniz-Clarke correspondence. Building his narrative around general subjects covered in the exchange--God, the soul, space and time, miracles and nature, matter and force--Ezio Vailati devotes special attention to a question crucial for Leibniz and Clarke alike.

  2. The correspondence between Leibniz and Newton’s apologist, Samuel Clarke, 1 can be, and often has been, viewed as the culmination of the priority dispute that arose between Leibniz and Newton over the discovery of the calculus. Newton’s discovery of his method of fluxions in 1665/6 had preceded by some ten years Leibniz’s discovery of his ...

  3. Leibniz and Clarke: Correspondence. 2000 - 112 pp. Ebook edition available for $12.50, see purchasing links below. For this new edition, Roger Ariew has adapted Samuel Clarke’s edition of 1717, modernizing it to reflect contemporary English usage. Ariew’s introduction places the correspondence in historical context and discusses the vibrant ...

  4. 27 de nov. de 1997 · Oxford University Press, Nov 27, 1997 - Philosophy - 268 pages. The correspondence between Leibniz and Samuel Clarke was the most influential philosophical exchange of the eighteenth century, and indeed one of the most significant such exchanges in the history of philosophy. Carried out in 1715 and 1716, the debate focused on the clash between ...

  5. Leibniz-Clarke papers G. W. Leibniz and Samuel Clarke Clarke 1: 26.xi.1715) Leibniz’s first paper (November 1715) Natural religion seems to be greatly on the decline ·in Eng-land·, where many people hold that human souls are made of matter, and others contend that God himself is a corporeal being, ·i.e. a body·.

  6. 1 de mar. de 1977 · n 1715 Leibniz wrote to his friend the Princess of Wales to warn her of the dangers Newton's philosophy posed for natural religion. Seizing this chance of initiating an exchange between the two greatest minds in Europe, the princess showed his letter to the eminent Newtonian scientist and natural theologian, Samuel Clarke.

    • Robert Gavin Alexander
  7. The Leibniz-Clarke Correspondence as a Case Study for the Historiography of Physics. Matt Waldschlagel. Physics, History. 2020. This paper examines an important episode in the history of early modern physics – the Leibniz-Clarke correspondence of 1715-16, an exchange that occurred at the intersection of physics, metaphysics….