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Leibniz: A Contribution to the Archaeology of Power


ISBN13: 9781474418065
Published: March 2021
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Country of Publication: Scotland
Format: Hardback
Price: £95.00



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Connelly demonstrates how Leibniz's rearticulation of power and its associated concepts is motivated at least in part by the struggles that marked the terrain in which his ideas were rooted - the struggle between Reformed and Scholastic theology, between natural law and natural right, and between mechanistic natural philosophy and human freedom. He locates Leibniz within power's wider evolution, and shows how the universal jurisprudence which Leibniz developed between the 1660s and 1690s can be considered as a transformative encounter between power, activity and modality.

Drawing on thinkers as diverse as Aristotle, Aquinas, Duns Scotus, Grotius, Husserl and Deleuze, Connelly traces Leibniz's conceptualisation of power through its applications in his legal texts, revealing that Leibniz in fact reconceptualises power under a new name: the state space. The move amounts to an internalisation of power as a moral world within each individual, submitting each practical agent to a universal set of obligations and prohibitions defined by that world. What though is at stake in bringing the objective world within each individual and submitting it to a public legal order? And what is the significance of this surgical intervention for any archaeology of power?

Subjects:
Jurisprudence
Contents:
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. From Trinity to Mind: The Intensional Basis of the Law
2. Potency and Supposita
3. Will: The Scholastic heritage
4. Will, power, and pretensionality
5. Ars combinatoria as Urdoxa
6. A New Method of Teaching Law
7. Power and obligation in the 1660s
8. Power and obligation in the Elementa Iuris Naturalis: the state space
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index