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Leibnizs Monads and DNA

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Monad' means both unit' and unity': as units: the ultimate ... (self-)consciousness ( apperception') perception. volition ( appetition') What are monads? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Leibnizs Monads and DNA


1
Leibnizs Monads and DNA
  • George MacDonald Ross
  • University of Leeds

2
Who was Leibniz?
  • First major German philosopher
  • 1646-1716 (contemporary of John Locke)
  • Main influences
  • Thomas Hobbes
  • Descartes Spinoza
  • Other influences
  • Ancient and scholastic philosophy
  • Well connected with lesser contemporaries

3
What are monads? - 1
  • Monad means both unit and unity
  • as units the ultimate constituents of reality
  • as unities simple, indivisible, organic wholes.
  • The model for monads is the human soul
  • The human soul is characterised by
  • reason
  • (self-)consciousness (apperception)
  • perception
  • volition (appetition)

4
What are monads? - 2
  • Other monads are not humans
  • They lack reason and consciousness
  • But they do have
  • unconscious perceptions (petites perceptions)
  • unconscious appetition, or striving towards a
    better state
  • Leibniz sometimes calls them spiritual atoms

5
Why monads?
  • The theory seems crazy. So why monads?
  • New solution to the problem of what the universe
    consists in
  • Two issues
  • is there one kind of substance, or two (mind and
    matter)?
  • is the material world a compound of atoms, or a
    plenum divisible into infinitely many parts?

6
One kind of substance or two?
  • For Descartes, there are both mind and matter.
    But
  • how can they interact?
  • how can they be united to form an individual
    person?
  • For Hobbes, there was only matter. But
  • how can he explain consciousness?
  • For Spinoza, the only substance was God. But
  • heresy!!!

7
Leibnizs solution
  • Only spiritual substances exist, and matter
    belongs only to our perceptual world
    (phenomenalism)
  • No problem of interaction between different kinds
    of substance
  • Consciousness is not a product of matter, but a
    gift of God to human monads
  • Individual substances are kept distinct from God

8
Are there atoms?
  • Atomists (Democritus, Gassendi) held that the
    material world consists of material atoms moving
    in empty space. But
  • why cant atoms be subdivided?
  • how can one atom transfer a force to another?
  • how can empty space exist, if it has no substance
    or properties?

9
Is there a plenum?
  • Most believed in a plenum (Hobbes, Descartes,
    Spinoza)
  • It seemed obvious because
  • the concept of empty space is incoherent
  • light and gravitation pass through an apparent
    vacuum
  • But
  • if things are just part of matter as a whole,
    they are not genuine substances
  • there is no way of distinguishing things

10
Leibnizs solution
  • There is indeed a plenum
  • But it is composed of infinitely small parts,
    which can always be further subdivided
  • These parts are the bodies of living organisms,
    and every organism is a colony of smaller
    organisms
  • Bodies are only phenomenal, and the ultimate
    realities are the souls which constitute the
    unity of each organism.

11
How do monads relate to their organic bodies?
  • Each monad is the principle of unity of an
    organic body
  • The monad of a larger body dominates those of
    the smaller bodies of which it is composed
  • The parts of the same organism belong together
    because their characteristics are uniquely
    related to their monad

12
How does this relate to DNA?
  • The parts of a body are not held together
    spatially, because space is unreal
  • They are held together by characteristics which
    relate them to just one monad, and no other
  • Even if they become detached, the characteristics
    remain
  • As with DNA, it is in principle possible to
    discover which organism they belonged to.

13
Conclusion
  • Leibniz did not discover DNA
  • The discovery of DNA surprised modern scientists,
    because they could not conceive that the tiniest
    parts of an individual organism could be unique
    to it
  • Leibniz would not have been surprised, since the
    idea was central to his philosophy
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