Leibniz's doctrine of confused cognition, which Baumgarten inherits, holds that confused representations are still representations of objective features, not mere self-referential states.
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A type of thinking or knowing that isn't crystal clear or fully detailed—like having a fuzzy, incomplete picture of something rather than seeing all the details sharply.
objective features(The debate is whether confused thoughts still accurately represent these real features)
Real characteristics or properties of things that exist independently—not just in someone's imagination or feelings about them.
self-referential states(Leibniz argues that even confused thoughts refer to real things, not just your own mental states)
Mental experiences that only point back to themselves or your own mind, rather than connecting to anything outside your mind.