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    Therefore, the complete concept of each substance must be... — Carmelics
    Home/Modality & Possibility
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    Supports→Each substance must reflect, or as a mental entity, represent the entire universe.

    Therefore, the complete concept of each substance must be a complete concept of the universe itself.

    Modality & Possibility
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    Modality & Possibility

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    Philosophy of Language3 linkedTruth & Knowledge1 linked

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    Each substance must reflect, or as a mental entity, represent the entire univers...Everything true of a substance is so because the predicate of a true proposition...The complete concept of a subject reflects the properties or traces in the subst...There are true propositions linking every substance in the world to every other ...
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    Therefore, each substance must bear within itself as properties traces of every ...

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    Therefore, each substance must bear within itself as properties traces...84%Leibniz holds that a complete concept of a substance may contain an in...84%The essence of substance lies in having a complete concept from which ...82%If every fact about Caesar and every other fact about the universe is ...81%

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    Yet Leibniz often seems to avert such a conclusion by appeal to his idea of “pre-established harmony”, and this is possible because he himself interprets this idea in two different ways. Early in his career, in such texts as “Primary Truths” (1680–84) and the “Discourse on Metaphysics” (1686) (both texts unpublished in Leibniz’s lifetime and not known to his immediate successors such as Wolff and Baumgarten), Leibniz introduces the doctrine of pre-established harmony on truth-theoretical grounds

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