Leibniz and the Kabbalah

Bibliographic Information

Leibniz and the Kabbalah

Allison P. Coudert

(Archives internationales d'histoire des idées = International archives of the history of ideas, 142)

Springer-Science+Business Media, c1995

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 203-211) and index

"Originally published by Kluwer Academic Publishers in 1995"--T.p. verso

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The general view of scholars is that the Kabbalah had no meaningful influence on Leibniz's thought. } But on the basis of new evidence I am convinced that the question must be reopened. The Kabbalah did influence Leibniz, and a recognition of this will lead to both a better understanding of the supposed "quirkiness,,2 of Leibniz's philosophy and an appreciation ofthe Kabbalah as an integral but hitherto ignored factor in the emergence of the modem secular and scientifically oriented world. During the past twenty years there has been increasing willingness to recognize the important ways in which mystical and occult thinking contributed to the development of science and the emergence 3 of toleration. However, the Kabbalah, particularly the Lurianic Kabbalah with its monistic vitalism and optimistic philosophy of perfectionism and universal salvation, has not yet been integrated into the new historiography, although it richly deserves to be. On the basis of manuscripts in libraries at Hanover and Wolfenbiittel, it is clear that Leibniz's relationship with Francis Mercury van Helmont (1614- 1698) and Christian Knorr von Rosenroth (1636-1689), the two leading Christian Kabbalists of the period, was much closer than previously imagined and that his direct knowledge of their writings, especially the collection of 4 kabbalistic texts they published in the Kabbala Denudata, was far more detailed than most scholars have realized. During 1688 Leibniz spent more than a month at Sulzbach with von Rosenroth.

Table of Contents

A preliminary note on the Kabbalah. Leibniz and van Helmont: a Chronological table. Introduction. 1. A Brief Historiography of Leibniz Studies. 2. Van Helmont, Leibniz, and the Kabbalah. 3. Leibniz and van Helmont: Their Friendship and Collaboration. 4. The Kabbalah and Monads. 5. The Kabbalah and Freedom and Determinism. 6. The Kabbalah and Leibniz's Theodicy. 7. Causation, Language, and the Kabbalah. Conclusion. Endnotes. Bibliography. Index.

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