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HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT
LEIBNIZ
Political Writings
‘Professor Riley is always a sensible guide to Leibniz,
and... one is left with a good overall picture of Leib-
niz's political thought.”
Philesophical Books xan, 3, October 1972
GH. R. Parkinson
‘An excellent selection of works that deal with everything
from ethical theory to practical politics . . . his trans-
lation of these works is eminently readable. Particularly
excellent in Riley’s introduction to the whole, in which,
in the space of only thirty-nine pages, he provides a
brilliant survey of Leibniz’s moral and political philoso-
phy, and of its connexion with the rest of his thought.
Even for this alone, the book is well worth reading.”
Philosophy «vit, 186, October 1973
Joun HostLer
“Among its merits is an introduction in which Patrick
Riley makes just the right claimson Leibniz’s behalf...
he gives an illuminating account of Leibniz’s hopes for
the reunion of Christendom ... Among the writings
which Professor Riley has selected, the satirical “Mars
Christianissimus” gives the lie to Bertrand Russell's
portrait of Leibniz as a toady to every passing prince. For
itis a ferocious attack on Louis XIV’s treacherous and
bellicose foreign policy, written with a verve that does a
good deal to rectify Leibniz’s Panglossian image.”
The Times Literary Supplement, july 1972CAMBRIDGE TEXTS IN THE
HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT
Serves vdstory
Raymonp Gruss
Reader in Phalosuphy, Unicersuy of Cambridge
QUENTIN SKINNER
Reegeas Professor of Modern History sn the Univesity of Cambridge
Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought is now firmly
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MicuaeL OAKESHOTTContents
Preface to the Second Edition page ix
Abbreviations x
Introduction 1
Part I. On Justice and Natural Law
1 Meditation on the Common Concept of Justice (« 1702-3) 43
2 Opinion on the Principles of Pufendorf (1705) 64
Part IL. On Social Life, Enlightenment and the Rule of Princes
3 On Natural Law 7
4 Notes on Social Life 81
5 Felicity (¢ 1694-89) 82
6 Portrait of the Prince (1679) 85
7 Memoir for Enlightened Persons of Good Intention
(mid-16908) 103
Part Il. On State-Sovereignty and Hobbesian Ideas
8 Caesarinus Fiirstenerius (De Suprematu Principum Germaniae)
(1677) wy
Part [V. On the Defense of Hapsburg Europe against France _
9 Mars Christianissimus (Most Christian War-God) (1683) 121
10 Manifesto for the Defense of the Rights of Charles [II (1703) 146
Part V. On Internationa! Relations and International Law
rt Coder Iuris Gentium (Praefatio) (1693) 165
12 On the Works of the Abbé de St Pierre (1715) 176
Observations on the Abbé’s Project for Perpetual Peace (1715) 178
Letter 1 to Grimarest (1712) 183
Part VI. Political Letters
13. Excerpts from Letters to Landgraf Ernst of Hesse-Rheinfels,
Bossuet and Thomas Burnett 185
Two Letters to Landgraf Ernst of Hesse-Rheinfels (1683-91) 185
Two Letters to Bossuet concerning the Re-unification of
Christendom (1692-9) 188
Three Letters to Thomas Burnert (1699-1712) 19t
14 Judgment of the Works of the Earl of Shaftesbury (1712) 195
vii15
16
WF
Contents
Part VIL Sovereignty and Divinity:
Unpublished Manuscripts, 1695-1714
An Unpublished Manuscript of Leibniz on the Allegiance
Due to Sovereign Powers (1695)
Leibniz’ Unpublished Remarks on Abbé Bucquai: Divinity
and Sovereignty (1711)
An Unpublished Lecture by Leibniz on the Greeks as
Founders of Rational Theology: Its Relation to His
“Universal Jurisprudence’ (1714)
Critical Bibliography
Index
257
225
241
247Preface to the Second Edition
Ina leer to the Jesuit Father des Bosses, Leibniz had occasion to complain that
“two things usually make publishers hesitare - one is their desire to profit; the
other is ignorance. Thus they do not know what they should select. They do not
trust scholars enough, because they believe that scholars have a better under-
standing of what is scholarly than of what will sell” If Leibniz were alive today,
he would be gratified to know that the Cambridge University Press, in consent-
ing to publish an editien of his political writings, showed itself admirably ‘ree of
alll these faults. From the outset the Press trusted my judgment in the sclection
and translation of the picces to appear in this volume, but also saw to it that was
provided with a searching critique of some of the more obscure points in the
‘editor's introduction’, For this trust, for this willingness to revive interesting
and unaccountably neglected political writings of a great contemporary of
Hobbes, Spinoza and Locke, ! am much intheir debt. While it is true that aoone
can pretend that Leibniz’ political writings are equal to those of such contempo-
raries, or even ta his own writings on logic, metaphysics and theology, they are at
least intriguing and worthy of some attention.
Anyone who reads the introduction will notice that it draws on a wide range of
books, letters, manuscripts etc., and that Leibniz’ ‘political system’ has been
assembled out of these materials. J think that there really is a system in these
writings ~ though, since Leibniz never wrote a large-scale, comprehensive
treatise on politics, the syste which I have explained may look rather artificial.
A composite itis, indeed; but not an invention.
In preparing the original edition (1972) of The Political Writings of Leibniz 1
incurred many debts. Dr John Gleason, formerly of the Harvard Classics
Department, supplied me some years ago witha translation of chapters g and 10
of Leibniz’ Cacserinus Fiirstenerius, and I retained most of his workin the present
version, Mr James Zetzel, of the same Department, was kind enough to read
cer the translation from the Latin, and to suggestimportant changes. Professor
Leroy Loemker, then of Emory University, cleared up several difficult points in
a letter from which I profited. The present version of the Meditation of the
Connmon Concept of Justice was strengthened because | was able to read the actual
manuscript, preserved in the Niedersichsische Landesbibliothek in Hanover,
Germany; for the funds which made that trip possible I remain grateful to the
Harvard Government Department, and for generous assistance at the Landes-
ixx Preface to the Second Edition
bibliothek I owe a debt of gratitude (stretching down to the present moment) to
Dr Gerda Utermébilen, Finally { want to re-acknowledge a grant from the
Canaday Humanities Fund at Harvard, which made it possible to put the
finishing touches on the original edition, and the patient assistance and advice of
Mrs Patricia Williams, then of the Cambridge University Press. In 1972, as in
1987, my wife's unfailing help and encouragement (and proof-reading} have
made all of my scholarly efforts possible.
T have taken advantage of the re-issuing of Leibniz by adding three ‘new’
pieces — unpublished manuscripts fram the period 1695 to 1714 — which flesh
out ous view of Leibniz’ political and moral thought. (For permission to publish
these manuscripts I am grateful to the Niedersichsische Landesbibliothek,
Hanover — and more particularly to Drs Gerda Utermohlen and Albert Heine-
kamp.} Practical considerations necessitated placing these ‘new’ items atthe end
ofthe book; and since they are unknown I have writtena substantial introduction
to each, Different as the three new pieces ate, they are linked by Leibniz’
consistent hostility to Hobbes, and by his consistent effort to fase Platonic
rationalism and Christian charity in a ‘universal jurisprudence’ valid for all
‘minds’, (I have also taken advantage of this new edition by enlarging and
revising the ‘critical bibliography’, carrying it down to 1986).
My work on this new edition has been greatly facilitated by happy events here
in England. For the Hilary and Trinity terms of 1987 Ihave been the guest of
Jesus College, Oxford, which generously provided an ideal work atmosphere
‘and learned, congenial colleagues; all of this { owe to Dr John Gray, who kindly
brought me to the College. 1 am grateful o the British Museum for providing
photocopies of tare editions of Leibniz which I needed for this enlarged edition,
and to the Bodleian Library, Oxford, for furnishing every Leibniz text I needed
with cheerful dispatch, lam most particularly grateful to Mrs Gillian Beeston of
the Ashmolean Muscum, Oxford, for her generous assistance in connection
with the translation of the Latin text of Leibniz’ 1714 lecture on the Greeks as
founders of rational theology - the third and last ‘new’ item in this edition, And |
am grateful to Jeremy Mynort of Cambridge University Press for proposing this
new edition, and to the Editors for incorporating my book in their new series.
My last word will be for Michsel Oakeshott, to whom I dedicate this book. Tt
was le who pulled me into the field of political and moral philosophy nearly
thirty years ago, who left an indelible imprint as my tutor at the London School
of Economics, and who represents everything I most admire in English civi-
lization and academic life. [ owe him more than any mere dedication can ever
hope to express.
Jesus College, Oxford
Jane 1987Abbreviations
Acad. Ed, = G. W. Leibniz, Siimtlishe Schnfien und Briefe, edition of the German
(formerly Prussian) Academy of Sciences at Rerlin, Darmstadt and Leipzig,
1923-
Baruzi = Jean Baruzi, Leibmis et !Organisation Réligieuse de la Terre, Felix Alcan,
Paris, 1907.
Duncan = G.M. Duncan (trans.), The Philosophical Works of Leibniz, and ed., New
Haven, 1908.
Dutens = Louis Dutens, God. Guil. Leibnits: ... Opera Omnia, de Tournes,
Geneva, 1768,
F de C = A. Foucher de Careit, Euwres de Leibniz, Didot Freres, Paris, 1859-75.
Ger. = C. I. Gerhardt, Die Philosophischen Schriften von G. WY. Leibmiz, Weidmann,
Berlin, 1875-99.
Ger. Math, = C. L Gerhardt, Die Mathematsiche Schnifien von G. W. Leibniz, Berlin
and Halle, 1849-55.
Klopp = Onno Klopp, Die Werke von Lebnia, Klindworth Verlag, Hanover,
1864-84.
Latta = Robert Latta, The Monadology and Other Philosophical Writings, Oxiord
University Press, 1898.
Loemker = Leroy Loemker, Leibmit: Philosophical Papers and Leticrs, University of
Chicago Press, 1956 (republished at Dordrecht, 19695 cited as Loemker and ed.)
Molla: = G. Mollat, Rechtsphilosophisches aus Leibnizens: Ungedruckien Schrificn,
Verlag Robolsky, Leipzig, 1885.
Moadology (cited by propositions. ¢.g., “prop. 56°).
‘New Essays on Human Understanding (cited by book, chapter and part, €.g.. NE 1 iti
ptr)
Principles of Nature and Grace (cited by propositions, e.g, “prop. 2.
Rommel = C, von Rommel, Leibniz und Landgraf Ernst von Hasen-Rheinfels,
Frankfurt, 1847.
Ruck = E. Ruck, Die Leibmia’sche Staatsidee, Verlag J. C. B. Mohr, Tibingen, 1909.
Russell = Bertrand Russeli, A Critical Exposition of the Philosophy of Leibniz, George
Allen and Unwin, London, 1900.
Texts Inédits = G. Gra (ed.), Tents Inddits, Presses Universitaires de France, 1948.
Theodicy (cited by books and propositions, e.y., ‘Theadicy tt, pt. 337°)Introduction
THE LIFE AND WORK OF LEIBNIZ
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz, the son of a Leipzig University professor,
was born in 1646, two years before the end of the Thirty Years’ War. He
was thoroughly educated — partly through his own efforts - in scholastic
philosophy and in jurisprudence, including the Roman law (which was
later to be important to his theory of justice), Atan early age he attempted
a cottespondence with Hobbes, whom he was already beginning to see as
his principal philosophical antagonist; but Hobbes never replied, in part,
perhaps, because of Leibniz’ left-handed compliments (‘certain men are
wrong in ascribing license and impiety to your hypotheses’). Follow-
ing a brief period of service to the Elector of Mainz, Leibniz resided in
Paris for a few years; here he first observed Louis XIV's expansionist
policies, which he was afterwards to combat as a writer and as a diplo-
matist, In Paris, too, he expanded his interests to tke in logic and
mathematics, and made 4 number of important permanent friendships.
Unable to secure the diplomatic post he wanted, Leibniz finally attached
himself to the house of Brunswick-Liineburg, rulers of the (soon-to-be)
Electorate of Hanover, and became official apologist for and historian of
this principality.
‘At Hanover Leibniz, in addition to his official duties and philosophical
efforts, carried on a wide range of political activities and correspondences.
He entered into an exchange of letters with Bossuct concerning the re-
unification of ‘Christendom’; this became his lifelong passion, 2s it had
been that of his favorite modern political theorist, Grotius. Though a Pro-
testanz, Leibniz became the defender of a reformed and truly universal
Papacy; at the same time he vigorously defended the Conciliar movement
of the fifteenth century, believing that if it had succeeded, the Reforma-
tion would have been unnecessary and the ‘universal’ authorities (Pope
and Holy Roman Emperor) would still be viable. To produce the desired
reconciliation, Leibniz recommended toleration and compromise; and
this, of course, made all parties suspicious of him. Though he was the
last thinker of great stature to defend the Empire as something more than
4 vestigial oddity, he was also a frequent apologist for the rights of
Imperial electors and princes, and tried to strike a balance between the
een cersz Introduction
mayesias of: the Empire and the sovereignty of the princes. Sovereignty, for
him, meant simply internal control and ‘influence’ in European affairs, but
did not exclude ultimate allegiance to universal authority. His efforts to
recast sovereignty led to a broad attack on Hobbes and Pufendorf, and,
ultimately, to a more general critique of legal positivism.
In later years, while keeping up his interest in the reunification of the
Respublica Christiana and in the refutation of Hobbes, Leibniz devoted
considerable time to justifying the Hanoverian succession to the British
throne, arguing that a Stuart restoration would make France the absolute
arbiter of Europe. On behalf of the Empire, he wrote tracts attacking
French seizure of Imperial territories; against Louis XIV’s devastations,
he urged that charity and benevolence were the proper course for a true
prince, and was instrumental in trying to set up academies of arts and
sciences, as well as economic and educational councils, in Germany and —
at the behest of Peter the Great - in Russia
‘At the end of his life, Leibniz gave up a little on his plans for reviving
a Republic of Christendom, but still insisted that his schemes mould be
better than a system of independent states and teligious fragmentation;
the tone of his last political letters is resigned and often ironic. And when
he died in 1716, famous in an astounding variety of subjects, the rational-
ized medieval system which he tried to sustain had largely disappeared.
POLITICAL WRITINGS
It was characteristic of Leibniz to try to reconcile apparently conflicting
ideas, to take from each kind of thought that which was soundest and to
synthesize it with the seemingly incommensurable truths of other
systems; thus he struggled throughout his life to fuse Platonism, Cartes-
ianism, Christian voluntarism, scholasticism, Hobbesian mechanism and
a number of ether doctrines into a plausible whole! whose apex would be
a rational theology {Leibniz used God with a relatively sparing hanc, and
was contemptuous of philosophers who drew him in at the first sign of
intellectual difficulty). Given this desire for reconciliation, for harmony,
for synthesis - which he applied to political philosophy as much as to
any other philosophical question it should come as no surprise that Leib~
niz wanted to establish, or rather discover, a ‘universal jurisprudence’, a
system of lew and justice common to God and man (and generally to any
rational substances); both God and man existed in a ‘society or universal
republic of spirits’ which was the ‘noblest part of the universe’, a moral
realm within (and at the summit of) physical nature, a realm in which
‘universal right is the same for God and for men’?introduction 3
The totality of all spirits must compose the City of God, thet is to say, the most
perfect state that is possible, under the most perfect of Monarchs,
‘This City of God, this truly universal monarchy, is a moral world in the
natural world, and is the most exalted among the works of God.'
For Leibniz, the difference between divine and human justice was one
of degree, not in kind; God's justice was simply infinitely more perfect
than men’s, and ‘to say. .. that God’s justice is different from men’s is
Tike saying that the arithmetic or the geometry of men is false in heaven.
Justice had, moreover, as Leibniz observed in a commentary on Hobbes,
nothing to do with the command or the power of authorities; it ‘does not
depend on the arbitrary laws of superiors, but on the eternal rules of
wisdom and goodness, in men as well as in God?.5 Perhaps the fullest
mature statement of this view is contained in Leibniz’ Opinion om the
Principles of Pufendorf >
In the science of law. . . it is best to derive human justice, as from a spring,
from the divine, in order to make it complete. Surely the idea of the just, no
Jess than that of the true and the good, relates to God... And the rules
which are comman [fo divine and human justice] certainly enter into the science
{of natural law}, and ought to be considered in universal jurisprudence *
[All of this suggests (what Leibniz actually believed), that God is not
just a first cause or an ‘imaginary metaphysical being, imcapable of
thought, will and action’, but that he is ‘a definite substance, a petson,
mind’? In God “there is power, which is the source of all, also knowledge,
whose content is the variety of the ideas, and finally will, which makes
changes or products according to the principle of the best’? Ged, then,
like men, has knowledge, will and power, but Leibniz wanted to be
cerfain that justice is not deduced out of the last two attributes alone;
God will act, perfectly {as men will act, though imperfectly), in a way
such that action is the issue of knowledge and volition combined.
“Wisdom’, he urged in the Meditation on the Common Concept of Justice,
‘ig in the understanding, and goodness in the will. And justice as a result
is in both, Power is another matter, but if it is added it transforms right
into fact’.
It is precisely because Leibniz. usually conceived of moral activity, for
both God and men, in terms of voluntary and rational action, that he
could not reduce justice simply to a Platonic relation, or a fixed barmony;
an action, rationally chosen, had to be involved, And this is why Leibniz
usually defined justice as ‘the charity of the wise’. “The [proper] treatment
of justice and that of charity cannot be separated’, he urged in one of his
earliest writings. ‘Neither Moses, nor Christ, nor the Apostles nor the
ancient Christians regulated justice otherwise than according tocharity. - .4 Introduction
{anc] I, too, after having tried countless definitions of justice, finally felt
myself satisfied only by this one; it alone 1 have found universal and
reciprocal.’* Charity is ‘a universal benevolence, which the wise man
carries into execution in conformity with the measures of reason, to the
end of obtaining the greatest good’? Charity, a ‘habit of loving’ (with love
defined as a ‘feeling of perfection’! in others), necessitated voluntary
action; it was to be regulated by wisdom, which would provide a knowledge
of what men deserved through their ‘perfections’. (In Leibniz’ philosophy,
perfection is both the cause of love and the reason which regulates that
love.)
Leibniz’ view of justice as charity tempered by a knowledge of what is
deserved obviously suggests a more generous and benevolent idea of the
just than that entertained by many philosophers; but since his full view of
charity can be more happily taken up ata later point, it will perhaps be
sufficient to say for the moment that he had at least three excellent reasons
for conceiving justice as he did. First, in 2 ‘universal jurisprudence’ the
same rules must apply to God and man. But the traditional definition of
justice, resting on the idea that something is ‘owed’ or ‘due’, cannot be
applied to God, who can owe no duties.12 God can, however, love, and
wisdom will show how much each rational being deserves to be loved.
Since this idea can apply to men as well as to God, it is a perfect founda-
tion for a universal jurisprudence. Second, if charity is the essence of
justice, then mete power or mere command cannot be. Adopting such a
universal solution is the best antidote to all legal-positivist views of
justice, such as Hobbes’. And finally, charity presupposes not merely a
ins strictum (forbearance from violence against others), and not merely
rendering what is due, but an active benevolence; and Leibniz believed
that if one tried to make the happiness of others his own, not only would
ordinary life be happier, but disasters such as the disintegration of
Christendom after the Reformation could be healed, True charity, he
thought, could overcome doctrinal differences; ‘charity must prevail over
all other considerations in the world’.'?
Despite the attractiveness of this view, Leibniz sometimes did try to
define justice simply in terms of harmony, of proportion, of ratios as
precise as any in mathematics. ‘One of his more extreme statements in
this vein (1696) urged that the
eternal truths are the fixed and immutable point on which everything ums.
Such is the truth of numbers in arithmetic, and of figures in geometry
"That postulated, itis well to consider that order and harmony ave also some
thing mathematical and which consist in certain proportions: and that justice
being nothing else than the exder which is observed with regard to the good andIntroduction 5
evil of intelligent creatures, it follows that God, who i i
‘ ent creatures, , who is the sovereign substance,
immutably maintains justice and the mest perfect order which can, be observed."*
Throughout his life Leibniz was tempted to assert that principles of
justice, as ‘eternal verities’, had the same status as A = 4 or 2+2 = 4,
and for an obvious reason: one of his great hopes was that of reducing all
complex propositions to their simplest form, to primary and irreducible
concepts whose predicates were clearly contained in their subjects, to a
‘universal symbolistic’ in which argument would be replaced by the use
of a universal language. Certainly differences over the character of justice
could be obviated if, as Leibniz hoped, ‘justice follows certain rules of
equality snd of proportion which are no less founded in the immutable
nature of things, and in the ideas of the divine understanding, than the
principles of arithmetic and geometry’.16
‘The reason that Leibniz could not and did not consistently maintain this
idea of justice is that there is no voluntary act in it; a justice of harmony
and proportion alone presupposes an aesthetic passivity which fails to take
Christian voluntarism into account. In most Christian thought, justice is
not simply a relation, but an action; and Leibniz, who grew up reading
the scholastics, was aware of the transformation made in the idea of justice
by philosophers such as St ‘Thomas Aquinas:
Now justice does not aim at directing an act of the cognitive power, for we are
hot said to be just through knowing something aright. . but since we are said
to be just through doing something aright. .justice must needs be in some
[rational] appetitive power.”
That Leibniz (usually) favored this view - originally suggested by
Aristotle’s Ethics'8 and much elaborated by medieval philosophy — is
perfectly clear: in an important early work he insisted that Christian
virtues ‘consist not only in taking and in thinking, but in thinking
practically, that is, in acting’;!9 and in a late letter (1706) he described
justice and injustice in termsof the ‘moral goodness or badness of actions’ 20
Justice, then, cannot be a simple proportion or harmony in Leibniz;
harmony may be the product of justice, but it cannot be the essence of it.
{It must be granted, however, that there is a certain tension in Leibniz’
work which is caused by his working with two kinds of premises -
Christian voluntarism and Platonic rationalism - simultaneously; and
this makes interpretation of his thought exceedingly difficult.)
IC Leibniz. was, as a Christian, unavoidably a voluntarist, that does not
mean that justice for him was founded on will alone; far from it, This, in
fact, is what he accused Hobbes (together with Thrasymachus) of doing;
and he asserted again and again that to say, slat pro yatione voluntas, let6 Introduction
will take the place of reason, is properly the motto of a tyrant.2! If will
were uppermost, there would be as many kinds of justice as there were
arbitrary commands;2? if the justice of God were invented by fiat, there
would be no reason to praise him.
For why praise him for what he has done if he would be equally praiseworthy in
doing exactly the opposite? Where will his justice and his wisdom be found if
nothing is left but a certain despotic power, if will takes the place of reason, and
if, according to the definition of tyrants, that which is pleasing to the most
powerful is by that very fact just?
It is important to recall that, for Leibniz, God operates within limits;
he chooses the best among possibilities, but he does nor create ideas or
essences himself. ‘Wisdom and justice have their eternal theorems’, he
observed, and ‘God does not establish them at all by his will; but he
discovers them in his essence, he follows them.’ In an act of justice
(divine or human), knowledge and volition, though separate faculties,
rust work together, knowledge providing the standard of what ought to
be done, and will providing the purely moral element, choice. “To will is
nothing but the striving which arises from thought, or to strive for some~
thing which our thinking recognizes.’ Reason, or thought, or knowledge
alone, is not enough for a moral action, if it were, intellectual error would
be equal to moral evil.2¢ The will must be conformedto reason, must choose
the best.
Clearly, then, Leibnizian justice requires a voluntary act of charity. But
if God and men are to be just, by the same standard though in differing
degrees, whence evil, particularly moral evil? If God is just, why is the
world full of imperfection and pain and sin (as Leibniz grants)?27 If men
are unjust because they are less perfect than God, how can they be truly
responsible for their actions? In short, can both God and men be just
(or, more generally, good) by the seme standard ~ since the point of 2
universal jurisprudence is its equal applicability to all ‘minds’? That
Leibniz was aware of these difficulties is perfectly evident throughout his
work, but particularly in his most famous book, the Theodicy, whose
subtitle suggests that the author will reconcile three apparently itre-
concilable problerns - the justice of God, the moral freedom of men, and
the origin of evil. Leibniz. was unwilling to define his ideas of right and
justice in nacrow terms; and precisely because his conception of justice is
so universal, so little ‘political’ in any restricted sense, an excursion into
his metaphysics and theology is essential. A narrower treatment, leaving
his pure philosophy to one side, would inevitably ignore what is most
characteristic in his political thought. To he sure, Leibniz some
times appears to define politics in an extremely restricted sense: ‘theIntroduction 7
science of the pleasant is medicine, that of the useful is politics, and that
of che just is ethics.’ But this is not his usual view; and, indeed, it would
be more accurate to say that Leibniz tried to develop a metaphysic of
perfection, of which the pleasant, the useful and the just would simply
be different aspects, Some effort, at least, must be made to show how and
why perfection is the thread which leads from metaphysics and theology
to psychology and ethics - and thus to justice - in Leibniz’ thought.
Divine Justice and Human Responsibility
Leibniz makes human justice turn on divine justice to avoid arbitrariness
and the equation of justice with power; but he must afterwards explain
the justice of God, given a visible world full of evil, not all of it apparently
deserved, but all of it allowed, if not positively willed, by God. Tounder-
stand the place of evil in the universe which Leibniz’ God creates, ¢
general understanding of God’s mode of operation is required. The
eternal verities and all essences (all possible non-seli-contradictory
beings) are in his understanding, not in his will or power. ‘Does the will
‘of God form the ideas which are in his understanding?” No, Leibniz
says; this would involve an infinite regress of causality and would ‘confuse
understanding and will’.2°* Thus ‘the essences of all things are co-eternal
with God’.3° It is essential to God’s moral freedom that he choose the best
from a range of possibles; if this were not the case — if essence were equal
to existence - then the universe would exist by 2 blind necessity (of the
sort that Leibniz feared in Spinoza). ‘If we wished absolutely to destroy
such pure possibles," he observed in a letter to Arnauld, ‘we should
destrov contingency and freedom, for if nothing is possible except what
God has actually created, whatever God has created would be necessary’.
God's power only translates a portion of essence into existence; but the
best is not determined by power. Now, God need not create the universe:
eternal truths do not have a merely temporal reality, and essences can
remain just that. But if God does create 2 universe he is restricted by the
eternal verities and by possibilities: the essence ofa circle is round, and it
cannot have a square existence; that the sum of the angles of a triangle is
equal to 180° is a function of God's understanding, not of his will. Nor
does God create the essences of particular possible substances. ‘God was
= Tn every intelligent being the acts of the will arc of their nature posterior to
the acts of the understanding....the eternal truths are in the divine under-
standing. , it does not follow [however] that there is anything before God,
bat only that the acts of the divine understanding are prior. .to the acts of
the divine will’& Introduction
able to create matter, a man, a circle, or leave them in nothingness, but he
‘was not able to produce them without giving them their essential proper
ties. He had of necessity to make man a rational animal and to give the
round shape toa circle,’ On this point Leibniz parted company with the
Cartesians, who founded even the character of truth itself on the omni-
potent will of God; the Cartesian view which he was combating was well-
stated by his correspondent and antagonist, Bossuet, who urged that if
God chose the best it was ‘not because there is a best in things which
somehow precedes his will and guides it, but rather that everything he wills
becomes the best, because his will is the cause of all the good and all
the best which exists in nature’. Leibniz devoted the opening portion of
his Meditation on the Common Concept of Justice to a refutation of this
view.
It is agreed that whatever God wills is good and just. But there remains the
question wherher ir is good and just because God wills it or whether God wills it
Because it is good and just; in other words, whether justice and goodness are
arbitrary or whether they belong to the necessary and eternal truths about the
nature of things, s do numbers and proportions.»
One must, said Leibniz, hold to the second view, since, if the good were
not the motive of God's will, his decisions would be only ‘a certain
absolute decree, without reason’.:s Leibniz’ position on this question is far
from original; it stretches back at least to Plato's Euthyphro3? and had
been recently re-stated by Grotius.2® But it is essential to a fully ‘natural’
natural law.
God chooses for translation into existence that configuration af essences
which will guarantee the greatest total perfection, pre-adjusting all
substances and all of their possible relations in advance; the most perfect
essences have the greatest ‘claim’ to existence, since ‘all possible things. .
tend toward existence with equal right in proportion to the quantity of
essence or reality, or to the degree of perfection which they involve’ 2°*
* Critics of Leibniz have pointed out that this principle - that the most perfect
cacences have the greatest claim to existence - seems to contradict another
fundamental Leibnizian doctrine, ic. that the universe ig a plenum, a con~
tingum with no “gape or ‘vacuum of forms’, in which ‘one of everything”
exists and is separated from the substances immediately ‘above’ and ‘below’ it
by the smallest possible degree of difference. (This last principle rests on the
so-called ‘identity of indiscernibles’, which holds that no two substances can
be precisely alike, since, if they were, God would have no reason to create ether
in preference to the other, and hence would create neither.) Ifthe most perfect
cerences have the greatest claim to existence, then only those essences feast
jnferior to God should be created; but Leibniz wanted to account for the
‘whole range of existence, from ‘nothing’ to God. Cf. Menadolegy, props. 53
and 54,Introduction 9
There mast be 4 ‘suficient reason’ for God's choice of a particular
se, reason must be the best: why the best, and not
perfection itself, must be settled for, is dictated (apparently) by the fact
that there: can be only one God, and that everything else must be imperfect
compared with him, ‘God could not give the creature all without making
of it a God.’6! God acts by a moral necessity (the best) which restricts him
but leaves him free in the sense that he could (conceivably) have chosen
otherwise (though not as well): this is the famous distinction between
metaphysical necessity, whose opposite is inconceivable, and moral
necessity, whose opposite is conceivable but less good, and which
‘inclines without necessitating’. ‘Metaphysical necessity... admits of no
choice, presenting only one object as possible... [but]. .. moral necessity
|. constrains the wisest to choose the best.’42 What leads to the rejection
of an alternative course of action, Leibniz noted in the Discourse on Meta-
‘piyrics, “is. not its impossibility, but its imperfection’. Within the realm
‘of morality, moral necessity is absolute in the sense that one cannot choose
the lesser good and still be right; only the possibility of failing to choose
the best is necessary for freedom (for God and men alike: God is wholly
free because he always chooses the real best, while men choose the
apparent best). God chooses that universe which is best on the whole;
but since, for Leibniz, the simultaneous co-existence of all possibles is not
itself a possibility, God will produce the best ‘compossible’ (compatible
and possible) universe. It follows that while the whole is as perfect as it
can be, each individual part (including particular men) might be better
in itself, if not considered in its relation to the entire system. The universe,
‘once settled on, has a hypothetical necessity :45 other ones are still con-
ceivable, but in the one actually chosen everything is certain and has @
moral necessity.46
Now, Leibniz mast account for the existence of three kinds of evil -
rmoral (sin), metaphysical (imperfection or limitation), and physical
(pain) —in terms of the divine mode of operation just described, andina
way which will leave both God’s justice and men’s moral responsibility
intact, It is absolutely essential that he be able to distinguish between
moral and metaphysical evil, ifthe idea of moral responsibility is to be
mpaintained; if all evil is merely metaphysical (a consequence of limitation
alone) then sin will be involuntary ~ caused, in fact, and not chosen - and
thereby not a sin. Justice, asa charitable action, would be impossible for
men; ‘Spinozism’ would reign, Generally, Leibniz avoids making God
the creator of evil by giving it the seme ontological status as goodness:
both are essences, parts of the divine understanding - and, as will be
recalled, God does not create his own understanding. ‘Evil springs’,10 Introduction
Leibniz said in the Theodicy, ‘from the forms themselves in their detached
state, that is, from the ideas which God hes not produced by an act of his
will’.* He insisted that God wills the good of each single created substance
by an ‘antecedent’ will, but that the non-compossibility of all substances
led to adjustments in which the overall perfection of the total scheme is
uppermost;* as a result, God wills ‘antecedently the good and conse-
quently the best’.4° Since this means that some evil had to be admitted,
including evil accual men, 2 great strain is put on the doctrine of compos
sibility, a doctrine which (considering its importance) Leibniz never
made very plausible.
It will be recalled that the distinctions between moral and meta-
physical necessity, and between moral and metaphysical evil, are of
capital importance to Leibniz; the first is the guarantor of moral freedom,
the second of moral responsibility. Leibniz was certainly not prepared to
doaway with the latter, particularly since he admitted (rather uncritically)
the idea of eternal damnation, a punishment he wanted to characterize as
just.® But there is a serious question whether he really succeeded in
upholding the distinction between moral and metaphysical evil; in the
Monadology he claims that ‘creatures receive their perfections from the
influence of God but... . their imperfections ate due to their own nature,
which is incapable of being limitless’, and in the Theodicy he insists that
God could not give men ‘al?’ without making them divine.s: If men are
necessarily imperfect (metaphysically evil), in what sense can they be
held responsible for moral actions, including acts of justice? Assigning
evil to the status of an essence not created by God saves ‘him from the
charge of voluntarily manufacturing evil; but it not only virtually destroys
moral responsibility in human beings (who ere only essences translated
into existence, or substances), it also raises the question: why, if an
actual universe could nat be perfect throughout (a multiplication of God),
and if the admission of evil was the conditio sine qua non of the best, did
God create existence?s? Referring to the admission of evil into the
universe, Leibniz actually allowed himself to say that “we can judge by
the event (er a posteriori) that the permission was indispensable. . .sin
made its way into the world; God was therefore unable to prevent it
without detriment to his perfections...In God this conclusion holds
good: he did this, therefore he did it well.
© CE the acid remark of Hegel, History of Philosophy: “Lf I have some goods
brought to me in the market, at some town, and say that they axe certainly not
perfect, but che best that are to be got, this is quite a good reason why Ishould
Content myself with them. But comprehension is a very different thing from
this.’Introduction iu
. Oddly enough, Leibniz makes very little use of the idea that moral evil
is inevitable if free will is an attribute of finite beings - though he does
say that without sin neither grace nor Christ would be possible.$¢ fis more
usual argument is that evil is necessary to the most perfect plan, though
men (because of their limited perspective) can never know why thisisso.‘?
Since God is all good, all perfect, there must be a sufficient reason which
allowed him to admit evil into existence; this is enough. Malebranche, on
the other hand, who, like Leibniz, had also to account for evil, urged in
his Dialogues on Metaphysics that ‘the world as saved by Jesus Christ is of
greater worth than the same universe as at first constructed, otherwise
God would never have allowed his work to become corrupted’.58 This is
an interesting argument, but it is too specifically Christian for Leibniz,
who made a very sparing use of Christ. He might, however, have done
well to take the advice which Theodore offers to Aristes in Malebranche’s
ninth Daalogue >
Man, Aristes, is a sinner, he is not such as God made him. God, then, has
allowed his work to become corrupt. Harmonize this with his wisdom, aad his
power, save yourself from the difficulty without the aid of the man-God, with-
‘cut admitting a mediator, without granting that God has had mainly in view the
incarnation of his son. I defy you to do it even with the principles of the best
philosophy.**
Leibniz’ problem is fairly clear, and it casts Goubt not only on his own
work, buton any ‘universal jurisprudence’ which tries to reconcile univer-
sal justice, evil, and human freedom. He was aware that ‘an inevitable
necessity... would destroy the freedom of the will, so necessary to the
morality of action: for justice and injustice, praise and blame, cannot
attach to [metaphysically] necessary actions’ 6° His idea of moral freedom
ought to have made meritorious actions and good intentions important;
but his account of evil made this virrually impassible. Sometimes be makes
evil (and evil ren) the condition of a compossible whole, in which case
men are part of a metaphysical compromise, but not free.¢1 Sometimes
evil men serve to ‘heighten’ the good of the rest, as dissonance heightens
consonance in music? (‘the glory and the perfection of the blessed may
be incomparably greater than the misery and imperfection of the
damned, and.,.here the excellence of the total good in the smaller
umber may exceed the total evil which is in the greater number’); but
this is only a defense of the justice of predestination in terms ‘of a cosmo-
logical utilitarianism. And sometimes (and most importantly) men are
simply imperfect - their existences, which can be no more perfect than
their essences, insure that their mistakes arc the result of essential
limitations of their possible knowledge of the good, not of evil will. The2 Introduction
whole crucial distinction between metaphysical and moral evilthus appears,
to break down, As a result, Leibniz is forced into a position which is
internally self-contradictory : ‘free will is the proximate cause of the evi! of
punishment; although it is true that the original imperfection of creatures,
which is already presented in the eternal ideas, is the first and most remote
cause’
This statement comes from a late work, the Theodicy; but Leibniz had
struggled with this problem since the beginning of his philosophical
career, as a letter of 1671 makes clear: ‘Pilate is condemned. Why?
Because he lacks faith, Why does he lack it ? Because he lacks the will to
attention, Why this? Because he has not understood the necessity of the
matter... Why has he not understood it? Because the causes of under-
standing were lacking’¢ - that is, his metaphysical imperfection made his
moral perfection impossible.
‘Justice, Responsibility and the Concept of “Substance”
‘A brief examination of Leibniz’ concept of substance may make these
difficulties more clear.* Wher. God translates a portion of essence into
existence, he creates substances (or, as Leibniz called them after ¢. 1697,
monads), which are characterized by ‘perception’ when passive and by
force’ (or activity) when active;é rhe Leibnizian substance is understood
= to use a phrase of Hege?’s - in terms of ‘inner activity and self-movement
of its own active life’? While substances are always conjoined with
bodies in existence, substances themselves are not material; matter can
be divided and sub-divided ad infinitum,ss but to account for perception
(‘intelligence’ in the higher monads) and for action there must be 4 point
of unity, a ‘metaphysical point’ or a ‘formal atom’ (Leibniz of course
rejected material atomism) which constitutes the reality of a being.
Indeed, Leibniz says flatly that ‘being and unity are convertible rerms’.7°
He believed that thought could not be conceived as a modification of
matter,t which was, for him, passive and undifferentiated”! a “complete
corporeal substance’ (any living being having both mind and body) thus
received its completeness from io sources, “that is, from the active
principle and from the passive principle, of which the first is called form,
sovl, entelechy, primitive force [or monad], and of which the second is
# Such an examination, in the present context, is necessarily partial and weighted
in favor of those clements of the doctrine of substance with the highest poten-
tially political content. |
+ This is, of course, only approximately accurate, since it can be claimed that
Leibniz ‘idealized’ even matter itself. But this cannot be taken up here, See
Loemker i, pp. 29, 54 ffIntroduction 13
called Primacy matter, solidity, resistance’.72 (Leibniz never gave a wholly
convincing account of why a material world ~ or a material element in a
possible world - existed at all; sometimes matter, in his system, scems to
be only the condition of the ‘imperfection’ of all substances inferior to
God, since substantial perception mediated through senses is necessarily
‘confused’.*)73 Substances, then, are psychic beings, and the bodies wich
which they are associated are simply phenomena bene fundata;7+ substances,
as simple unities, 2s ‘subjects’ of perception and change, are ‘true things’,
whereas bodies - as Leibniz urged in a letter to de Volder - are ‘beings
‘by aggregation and therefore phenomena, existing, 2s Democritus put it,
by convention and not by nature’.’5 Substances can be differentiated only
intensively, or qualitatively, in terms of degrees of psychic perfection, and
never extensively, or quantitatively, in terms of an “extrinsic denomina-
tion’ such as position in time or space;t ‘it is Living substance. . which is
truly a being, and matter, taken sitmply as mass, is only a phenomenon or a
well-founded appearance’.?6t Substances are indestructible (except by
God), and can be brought into existence only by divine creation, they are
translated into being as parts of a system whose every clement impinges
on every other element; all substances are (so to speak) pre-modified in
relation to each other, and everything that will ever happen to a substance
is included in its original ‘concept’, much as all predicates inhere logically
ina gubject.77 That Pilate would condemn Christ was thusacertainty, and
bad a hypothetical, though not a metaphysical necessity, since its opposite
was still concervable.3 If a man undertakes a journey, thisaction issues out
of his concept and is, hypothetically, necessary #0 dim; if he did not make
the journey, his concept would be altered (though no universal rute of
metaphysical necessity would be overthrown).’ (Sometimes, indeed,
Leibniz defined frecdam as the autonomous temporal unfolding of a sub-
stance out of its concept, uneffected by other substances: and he wavered
# CE, Theodicy iy pt. 2002 “If each substance taken separately were perfect, all
would be alike; which is neither Sting nor possible. If they were Gods, it
would not have been possible to produce them, The best system of things will
therefore not contain Gods; it will always be a system of bodies.’ Cf. also
Ger. Vi, Pe 172.
TT hold space to be something mercly relative, as time is: T hold it to be an
onder of co-existences, as time is an order of successions.’ Letter IJ} to Clarke,
part 4, Ger. vit, p. 363.
+ CE, however, the correspondence with des Bosses, in which Leibniz holds
thet ‘ne doubt there is in any body something more than phenomena. .T
should prefer so say that there are no substances over and above ‘monads, but
only appearances, but that these are not illusory, like a dream, or like 2 sword
pointing at us out of a concave mirror... but that they are erue phenomena’.
Loemker 11, pp. 978 and 100114 Introduction
between this Spinozistic conception of ‘freedom’ and a more traditional
Christian conception based on free will.) In any case, all relations of
substances are determined in advance of temporal existence; substances
do not affect each other in action, but in advance, metaphysically, by
being assigned a place in the pre-established harmony, ‘The intercourse
of substances or monsds, namely, arises not from an influence but from
a consensus originating in their preformation by God.’89 There is, for
Leibniz, a continuum* of substances stretching from the barely organic
to God himself: bare monads have perceptions only*? {as in the plant's
‘perception’ of light in the process of photo-synthesis); animals have
feeling and purely empirical ‘memory’; but spirits (or minds), which are
characterized by self-consciousness, memory or moral personality? (on
which responsibility, guilt and punishment depend), and innate know-
ledge of the (logical end moral) eternal verities, are part of the City of
God. Since all substances are created as parts of a compossible whole,
they all have relations; and since substance is percipient, all substances
express of represent all other substances with varying degrees of clarity
and distinctness; ‘this mutual connection or accommedation of all created
things to each other and of each to all the rest causes each simple substance
to have relations which express all the others and consequently to be a
perpetual living mirror of the universe’.85 Substances are perfect to the
extent that they are causes @ priori of changes in lesser substances, 6 thus
the physical realm exists to serve the moral, and nature leads to grace.1?
That Leibniz thought his concept of substance essential to an under-
standing of justice and morality is quite clear: ‘true ethics is to meta-
physics what practice is to theory, because upon the doctrine of substances
in common depends the knowledge of spirits and particularly of God and
the soul which gives a proper meaning to justice and virtuc’.#® But the
difficulty with the theory of substance - apart fcom the possible meaning
of such terms as ‘expression’ and “representation’®? — is that it seems to
involve, in part at least, a fatalism which is incongruent wich Leibniz’
(Christian) idea of freedom and hence with the possibility of choosing to
act charitably. On the one hand, the doctrine of substance provides for
moral personality (in the higher substances) ; for the possibility of good
and evil actions, for responsibility, guilt, punishment, and reward, for
the autonomy of the mind from causal determination by physical factors;
for a personal immortality in which actions can receive what they are
worth. Generally, it provides for an idea of mind which is something
more than mechanism and for an idea of fife which is something more
than motion. On the other hand, however, substance comes into existence
only as part of a patern which is ‘good’ as a totality: a given substanceIntroduction 5
dees not exist in abitracte, but within the constraints imposed by the
Principles of compossibility and pre-established harmony - both of
which involve a large measure of stasis, if not of fatalism. An evil substance
may be necessitated by the best, and if it ‘gets better’, perhaps through
good actions, the order of the universe would be less fixed than Leibniz
usually assumes (though he sometimes indicates that the whole universe
may be progressing toward ‘new perfections’).2°1f one assumes, as Leibniz
does, that evil is an essence which must be given reality if any world is
created (and any world would be less perfect than God), then it is hard to
see how all substances can attain salvation ar act rightly. Ef this were not a
sufficiently serious problem, Leibniz’ rather frequent definition of freedom
as the unfolding of substance according to internal laws,®! while congruent
with the concepts of compossibility and pre-established harmony, cannot
be reconciled with more traditional views of moral freedom. Amauld
made Leibniz aware of some of these problems in the 1680s, and he
responded, ultimately, with the distinction between moraband metaphysical
necessity, a8 well as with the argument that men’s moral actions are free
because “God has foreseen those actions in his ideas, just as they are,
that is, free’.£ But the doctrine of the metaphysical imperfection of all
men overthrew the force of these distinctions, since volition is ultimately
dependent on possible knowledge ;* and to make matters more difficult,
Leibniz admitted (2 subtle form of) predestination into his system, insist-
ing that grace and salvation were not deserved of accorded to merir.93 If
charity, however, is to be the foundation of an ethical-political system,
‘one must grant an importance to “good acts’ which Leibniz was Icath to
allow (though he was also unwilling to deny their importance: ‘prayers,
good intentions, good actions, all are useful and sometimes even neces
sary, but none of it is sufficient’). Good acts - such as acts of justice ~
would necessarily involve alterations in the relationst of rational sub-
stances, alterations presupposing a degree of moral spontaneity which
++ We will only what appears to the intellect, The source ofall errors is precisely
the same in its own way as the reason for errors which is observed ia arith-
metical calculation. .to willis to be brought ro act through a reason perceived
by the intellect” (Thoughts on the Principles of Descartes, Loember tt, PP.
637-9). This creates terrible problems for Leibniz, who often held that good-
pees eiust be in the will, considered as a faculry which chooses among ‘objects
of knowledge’. The problem is even clearer in the Manvssa to the Codex duis
Centum, in-which he says that ‘even in our evil purposes we are moved by a
certain perceived appearance of good or perfection’. Here the erucial distine-
tion between error and evil breaks down altogether
+ Cf NE 31, xxx, pt. 4: "Relations have a reality dependent on the mind, like
truths; but not the mind of men, since there is a supreme intelligence which
determines them for all time.’16 Introduction
important elements of the doctrine of substance seem to disaliow. Indivi-
dual men would have to be individually good; it would not be enough
that the universe, as a totality, was good. As Leibniz’ system stands, only
those beneficiaries of compossibility who find themselves nearest divinity
can enjoy the possibility of acting even relatively well. Ultimately, the
effort to salvage God’s justice by making evil an essence which might be
translated into particular substances, including human beings, seriously
weakened the possibility of men’s responsibility and justice.* Thus, even
while attempting to overthrow ‘Spinozism’ in the Theadizy, Leibniz’ own
logic forced him to grant that:
often creatures lack the means of giving themselves the will they ought to have,
often they even lack the will to use thase means which indirectly give a good will
"This fault must be admitted, ...but...it is not necessary. .. for all rational
creatures to have so great a perfection, and such as would bring them so close to
the Divinity.**
What would have been more in accord with charity as the chief moral~
political virtue than Leibniz’ conflation of Platonism, Thomism and
Calvinism, is pure Pelagianism ; and this he sometimes approaches - quite
inconsistently ~in the New Essays (‘for true goodness less knowledge
suffices with more good will”).96 Hut this is not his ordinary view. The
central question in Leibniz is: why did God create a necessarily imperfect
universe? Sometimes he suggested that God created out of goodness?? —
an odd suggestion, unless plenitude and variety are better than the non-
‘existence of evit; but more usually he treated existence as a manifestation
of God’s glory. Substances exist to ‘mirror’ hisperfections, to be witness
to them.? Evidently neither of these explanations rests on ‘charity’ tradi-
tionally understood. At most, Leibniz is able to show that the universe as
a whole is best, once a decision to create some universe has been made.
‘Only the evil themselves have suffered any loss through sin’, he urged in
the True Theologica Mystica, but ‘the whole creation of God has not lost
bat gained through it." That this doctrine is destructive of individuals,
Leibniz was aware without being able to do anything about it; in the
Radical Origination of Things (1697) he said that just as care is taken in the
# The most recent defense of Leibniz’ consistency on ethical questions, Nicholas
Rescher's The Philosophy of Leibniz, holds that the distinction between moral
and metaphysical necessity does in fact hold up under analysis, and that the
Srgument zbout evil as imperfection (1s cortrasted with evil as cheize) is
tinobjectionable. But Reacher does not take up an objection which Leibniz
himeclf vas willing to enterin (without, however, answering jt), viz. that
God could have refrained from creating any world. Here Russell seems to be
more nearly right, though his imputation of unworthy motives to Leibniz 3s,
as Rescher says, ‘unjustifable and unjust’ (p. 147)-Introduction y
best-ordered commonwealth tht individuals shall fre as well as possible
so the universe would not be perfect enough unless as much care is
shown for individuals as is consistent with the universal harmony’ .10! [tis
the last phrase which is crucial, and which shows why the effort to define
charity in terms of both perfection and choice becomes so problematical
in a necessarily imperfect world.
Perfection
Leibniz himself observed that the relation of divine justice to the moral
freedom of rational substances was a ‘labyrinth’ in which one could get
lost ;102 and in fact he was much happier when dealing not with freedom
and responsibility, but with perfection; it is perlection which helds the
Leibnizian system together, as freedom fails to do. The ‘apex of meta~
physics and that of ethics are united in one’ by the perfection of God.105
Essences have a cisim to existence in proportion to their perfections
(‘there is a struggle between all the possibles, all of them laying ¢laim to
existence, and, . those which, being united, produce most reality, most
perfection. . .carry theday,’}.1%* But Leibniz did not define only his theo-
logy and his metaphysics in terms of perfection; he tried to define his
ethics and psychology in the same way - of rather, he sometimes defined
them in terms of perfection, sometimes in terms of will and choice, Thus
love, which becomes charity when it is habitual, is a feeling of the perfec-
tion which 1s in others; when this charity is regulated by wisdom, which
tells us how perfect men are, and thereby what they deserve, the product
is justice..0s} Leibnis? psychology is founded on perfection as well,
* sfust as possibitity isthe principle of essence, so perfection or degree of essence
& the principle of existence’, Radical Origination of Things, Locmker 1, p- 793-
$ There is, obviously, a problem here: if charity is a fering of perfection which
hecomes justice when regulated by a knsmiedge of perfection, then justice is
simply perfection regulated by perfection. [.citniz, avoids this difficulty
{usvally) by defining charity in a broad way, as tolerance, 2s sympathy, as
generosity. But the philosophical grounds for this brosdening are not well
established.
Tn the New Essayt 1, si, pt. 4, Leibnie complicates matters by urging that
men are guided morally not only by rational perceptions of pleasure but by
‘instinct’ as well: ‘we are prompted to acts of humanity. by instinct because it
pleases us, and by reason because it is just’. Hut justice too is a pleusure -
though a ‘higher’ one than instinct, asa result this distinction is confusing. In
pt g, he explains that ‘God has given to man instincts which prompt at
once and without reasoning to some portion of what reason ordzins’. The
Gifficulty in interpreting these passages lies in the fact that while Leibniz
usually treats pleasure as a contiauum, in the Neo Essays he draws 4 strong
distinction between reason and ‘le naturel”. But the New Essays are not always
representative of the whole range of his thought.18 Introduction
pleasure is a fecling of perfection, pain a feeling of imperfection, ard ‘the
impulse to action arises from a striving toward perfection, the sense of
which is pleasure, and there is no action or willon any other basis'10 There
is a strong connection between Leibniz’ ethics and psychology; since
perfection gives pleasure, the love of other men, when regulated by what
their perfections deserve, makes justice a pleasure. Because ‘to love or to
cherish is to be delighted by the happiness of the beloved and his perfec-
tions’,t9® everyone will love other intelligent beings to the extent that they
make perfection and charity their object..09*
Leibniz’ most effective brief effort to link up his metaphysics, psycho-
logy and ethics through the idea of perfection is contained in his notes on
Fulicity (¢. 1694-8), in which he says that:
1. Virtue is the habit of acting according to wisdom. It is necessary that
practice accompany knowledge.
‘2. Wisdom is the science of felicity, [and] is what must be studied above all
other things.
3. Felicity is a lasting state of pleasure. Thus it is good to abandon or
moderate pleasures which can be injurious, by causing misfortunes or by block-
ing [the attainment of] better and more lasting pleasures.
4. Pleasure is a knowledge or feeling of perfection, not only in ourselves, but
also in others, for in tis way some further perfection is aroused in us.
'5. To love is to find pleasure in the perfection of another
6. Justice is charity or a habit of loving conformed to wisdom. Thus when
cone is inclined to justice, one tries to procure good for everybody, so far as one
can, reasonably, but in proportion to the needs and merits of cach: and even
‘fone is obliged sometimes to punish evil persons, itis for the general good.1"°
In a letter to Hansch (1707), Leibniz related this highly rationalistic
psychology and ethies to his theology: ‘since the divine happiness is the
confluence of all perfections, and pleasure is the feeling of perfection, it
fellows that the true happiness of a created mind is in its sense of the
divine happiness?.t1 This does not mean, however, that Leibniz fell back
on a world-soul, or a ‘single universal spirit’ (which he disliked in
Spinoza);1!2 rational substances are autonomous for Leibniz, and their
leve of others (and of God) must be an extension of their own (higher)
« CE, De Trbus Juris Naturae et Gentium Gradibus, Mollat, p. 13. Falling back,
however, on perfection did nut really solve Leibniz’ problem of recenciling
God's justice, human freedom, and the existence of evil; in the Radical
Onginaivon he said that ‘the law of justice... dictates that each one shall take
part in the perfection of the universe. . according to the measure of his own
Mertue and the degree to which his will is moved toward the common good’.
Here again a certain moral freedom is suggested which the ideas of compossi-
bility and pre-established harmony seem not to allow,fntroduction 19
pleasure.* An expansion of self, not a negation of self, is required. ‘To
love’, Leibniz said in a letter to Bossuct, ‘is nothing else than finding onc’s
pleasure (I say pleasure, and not utility or interest) in che well-being,
perfection, happiness of another; and thus, while love can be dis-
interested, it can nonetheless never be detached from our own interest, of
which pleasure is an essential part.113 Despite this brush with hedonism,
Leibniz insisted in countless letters and memoranda that ‘to contribute
to the public good, and to the glory of God, is the same thing’ ;'14 that
‘the touchstone of the love of God is that which St John has given us: and
when E sce that a man has a true ardor for the general good, he is not far
from the love of God’.115 Men must scale the cassinuum of pleasures, near
the top, just beneath the love of God, they will find love of nexghbor, on
which justice curns. Leibniz’ most eloquent summary of this view, a letter
concerning True Piety (1710), urged thet:
one cannot love God, who is invisible, if one does not love his neighbor, who is
visible, Those who. . reduce justice to [mere] rigor, and who fail altogether to
understand that one cannot be just without being benevolent... ; ina word, not
only those who look for cheir profit, pleasure and glory in the misery of others,
bur also those who are not at all anxious to procure the common good and to lift
ut of misery those who ave in their caze, and generilly thase who show them-
selves £0 be without enlightenment and without charity, boast in vain of a piety
wihich they do not kitow at all, whatever appesrance they create."*
Practical Justice
Charity exactly proportioned to merit would produce the most perfect
human justice; but Leibniz was aware that this was too much to be hoped
for in practical life. He therefore attempted to fuse his definition of
justice as the charity of the wise with the three great principles of the
Roman law: neminem laedere, suum cusgue tribuere, honeste vivere. Leibniz
converted the highest degree of Roman law, ‘live honestly’, into ‘live
piously’, or charitably, while the ius serictum (whose mexint was netsinem
aedere, injure no one), and which requiced mere forbearance from viol-
ence, became for bim simply the lowest form of justice, something
essential but not adequate. The middle degree of justice, suum cuigue
* One must, in Leibniz’ view, ‘seck luminous and rational pleasures’, which are to
be found in ‘the knowledge and in the production of order and harmony’; one
must, that is, shun the ‘confused pleasures of the senses’ (ME m1, xxi, pts: 35°
T, 4% §3) Leibniz admired the work of Lorenzo Valla, the Renaissance
xhelar who, in De Veluptate, produced a synthesis of pleasure and Christian
virtues which in some measure prefigured Leibniz’ work. Cf. particularly
Exnst Cassirer, The Individual and she Cosmos in Renaissance Philosophy, PP
39 ff, and Gaston Grua, La Justice ‘Humaine selon Leibniz, pp. 4320 Introduction
tribuere, rendering to cach his due, made up for Leibniz the bulk of
politica justice.27 In the Codex Lures Gentium Diplomaticus (1693), Leibniz
enlarged on these distinctions. The precept of the fur strictum is that no
one is to be injured, “lest if it be within the state, the person should have
grounds for an action at law, or if it be without the state, he should have
the right to make war’; this lowest degree of justice he also called ‘com-
mutative’ (altering the sense which Aristotle gave to the term). The middle
degree of justice, rendering to each his due, Leibniz sometimes called
charity in a ‘narrow’ sense, sometimes equity, sometimes ‘distributive?
justice.'!* There are two important differences between the ius strictumand
‘equity: first, that the sus siricivm, which is mercly preservative, treats
everyone equally, whereas equity, or ‘distributive’ justice, looks to merit
and thus treats different men differently; and second, that the ius sirictum
simply ‘avoids misery’ and ‘hes its source in the need of keeping peace’,
while equity ‘tends to happiness, but of such a kind as falls to our mortal
lov’.119 The highest degree of justice, erue charity (or piety), plays only an
oblique and regulative role in politics, but is the guarantor of the goodness
of men’s actions ina wider sense: some men, without fear of divine justice,
would not act as they should.'2
Leibniz treated private property in relation to the three degrees of
justice, though not with perfect consistency, He believed that no private
property at all was best, but that such austerity was unattainable. Society,
he urged, is held together by three things — friendship, political justice,
and valor. ‘If the first, which makes all goods common, could be observed,
the second would be useless, and if men were not so far removed from
justice, valor would not be needed to defend states."12! But‘human nature’,
he insisted, would not allow that society be founded on friendship alone,
thus both private property and political coercion became necessary. In a
perfect state, Leibniz said, ‘all goods should be public property’)? and
should be publicly distributed to private persons; unfortunately, neither
2 sufficiently enlightened public, willing to live a ‘convent-like’ existence,
nor sufficiently just and public-spirited administrators, could be found,
‘As a result, men must be left to provide property for themselves (though
public benevolence demands chat no one actually suffer from want).
Once this decision has beer. made, in Leibniz’ view, private property must
be considered to be protected by strict right: thus in respect to property
men are to be treated equally, not in the sense that they all receive the
same thing, but in the sense that they have an equal rightto keep what they
have (or can get). Redistribution of property on the basis of alleged merits
and virtues is too difficult and too dangerous;1?" such a redistribution
would cause an injury to private persons. ‘The principle suum cuigue tri-Introduction a1
suere, therefore, is to apply only to goods which the state has at its dis-
posal for distribution (or to goods which private men wish to distribute
out of benevolence).12¢ The potential radicalism of Leibniz’ theory of
justice is thus socially defused ; levelling is forbidden, and only a gencral
expansion of the state's generosity is recommended.*
| One of the most important things about Leibniz’ theory of practical
justice, when joined with the gradations of the Roman law, is that he
allowed no sharp breaks between duty and benevolence: in Leibniz there
is none of Kant’s differentiation between ‘perfect’ and ‘imperfect’ duties to
others.225 Justice for Leibniz. is a continuum, as everything in his philosophy
tends to be; there is an unbroken continuity, with no ‘gaps’, between the
Jowest substance and God, between life and death, between rest and
motion, just as there is a continuum between abstaining from injury and
doing good. In the Meditation on the Common Coucept of Justice, be argues
persuasively thar if one grants that injury ought not to be done, it is hard
to deny that good should be done; ‘whether one does evil or refuses to do
good is a matter of degece’.126 To this argument he added a psychological
one - that if one wants to knaw what is just, he should put himself in the
place of one who might have reason to complain of injustice. Here
Leibniz came to roughly the sme practical conclusion as Kant: if men
did not make exceptions of themselves, they would ail agree to the same
roles, And this is why he urged that ‘the place of others’ was the soundest
viewpoint from which to make moral and political judgments; ‘every-
thing which we would find unjust if we were in the place of others, must
seem to usto be suspect of injustice. . . the sense of the principle is: do not
do or do not refuse lightly that which you would not like to be done to
you or which another would not refuse to you’!
Leibniz’ theory of justice, then, is a complex amalgam of Christian
charity, a metaphysic of Platonic perfectionism, Roman law, and trans-
ogrified Aristotelian terminology; its relarion to his pure philosophy is,
* CE Extensive Remarks on Jurisprudence (1676), Acad. Ed. 1, 1, p. 572: ‘Itis
sulBcient that the commonwealth take care that no one becomes miserable;
that men of merit can find some way to be useful; this is what is essential; for
the rest, it is not very important which [citizens] possess certain things;
provided that ants of violence and manifest frauds be punished and stopped
+ Even on this point, however, Leibniz’ Platonism and his Caristian doctrines
came into conflict ‘there is so much dissimilitude and inequality berween
caer that we would nat reasonably demand of o:hets that which they demand
Teasonably of us’ (Letter to Bierling, Dotens v, pp. 388-9). The fandamentay
Ggalitarianiom of Christian moral doctrine was something that Leibniz found
ery difficult to reconcile with ‘natural’ justice resting on fixed and permanent
relations.a Introduction
to say the least, problematical, but taken in itself it has integrity and
force. Bertrand Russell, therefore, was not altogether justified in calling
Leibniz’ social thought a ‘mass of inconsistencies’ ;!8 there is one central
problem, to wit whether, given the ideas of substance, compossibility etc.,
one could act any better than he does, or whether one’s necessarily limited
knowledge will bring about imperfect charity involuntarily, In essence,
the question is Spinoza's — whether it is possible to distinguish between
error and evil. And on this point Leibniz was never perfectly consistent,
though he tried to maintain the distinction.
Particular States and the Character of Pohticel Rute
Leibniz’ doctrine of justice as charity regulated by wisdom was rather
consistently kept in view as he worked out his theory of the state: a just
political order requires both benevolence and intelligence, but not the
participation of all the members of society, cither in forming or in
sustaining the polity — Seast of all by a natural right. The state, in his view,
isan “unlimited unequal society’ - that is, it is concerned with ‘the whole
life and the common good’, and not simply with ‘certain purposes, for
example, trade and commerce, navigation, warfare, and travel’ ;22°* and it
js founded on relations of inequality between those whe rule and those
who are ruled. Like Plato, Leibniz. believed that it would be unjust if the
hest and the wisest men did not rule; here he fell back on justice as a rela
tion, as 2 proportion, and took the Platonic view that social justice should
be the most accurate possible transcript of ‘name’. In a letter to the
Scottish nobleman Thomas Burnett (1699 or 1700), he sketched this
position, while criticizing (with infinite circumspection) the Hobbesian/
Lockean theory of equal natural rights.
J have still not had the icisure to read the entire book entitled Two Treatises af
Government, against the principles of Mr Filmer. I did notice, however, a great
justice and solidity in the reasoning. ‘There are, nevertheless. some passages,
perhaps, which demand a more ample discussion, as among others what is said
of the State of Nature, and of the equality of rights of men. This equality would
de certain, if all men had the seme {natural} advantages, but this not being so at
all, it seems that Aristotle is more correct here than Mr Hobbes. If several men
found themselves in a single ship on the open sea, it would not be in the least
conformable either to reason or nature, that those who understand nothing of
* One is reminded of a famous passage in Burke’s Reflections on the Revolution
tz France: ‘the state ought not to be considered 2s nothing better than a
partnership agreement in a trade of pepper and coffe, calico, or tobacco, or
Some other such low concern... .it is a partnership, . .in every virrue and in all
perfection’ (vi1, 2 (a) }.Introduction 23
suing chim to be pilots; such that, following natural reason, government
Since cqual natural rights to political participation are, for Leibniz,
illusory, he made very little use — at least in his mature works — of social
contract theory, which presupposes a right in all contractors to found
legitimate states, The legitimacy ofthe Leibnisian state has nothing to do
with its otigins. A contract, therefore, is not important; but justice,
welfare, benevolence, and the promotion of the common geod are.
Probably Leibniz denigrated the contract precisely because Hobbes had
made so much of it: ina very early work, the Nova Methodus, he appeared
as a rather conventional contractarian;!1 but since the ‘state of nature’
which preceded the Hobbesian contract posited a moral vacuum in which
there was no justice without positive law~a doctrine which Leibniz
detested - he may have felt that contract theory was dangerous. (It also,
in his view, introduced too great a measure of artifice into social relations;
Hobbes, Leibniz suggested in the New Essays, was not aware that ‘the
best men, free of all malice, would unite the better to obtain their
[common] end, as birds flock together to travel in company’.1) ‘This
aversion, however, did not prevent him from making a rather acute
remark about Hobbes in his late (1712) Remarks on Shafiestury’s Charace
teristics: ‘Our illustrious author [Shaftesbury] refutes with reason those
who believe that there is no obligation at all ia the state of nature, and
outside of government; for, obligations by pacts having to form the right
of government itself, according to the author of these principles, it is
manifest that the obligation is anterior to the government which it must
form,’133
Leibniz’ rejection of equal natural rights and (ultimately) of contract
theory did not mean, however, that he dismissed the possibility of an
important ‘popular’ element in the state. This he made clear in his most
important purely political letter (to Burnett, 1701), which is also valuable
for its revelation of Leibniz’ devotion to a Montesquieuean moderation
and reasonabitity in politics.
‘The end of political science with regard to the doctsine of forms of common:
\wealths [réoubliguei, rast be to make the empire of reason flourish. The end of
monarchy is to make 1 hero of eminent wisdom and virtue reign. The end of
amiatperaey is to give the government to the most wise and the most expert "The
‘end of democracy, or polity, is to make the people themselves agree 10 what is
good far them. And if one could have all {three] at once: 2 great hero, very w Se
‘tizens, that would constitute a mixture of the
to the empire of reason.
only in kings, but also24 Introduction
in asgemblies... Thus one must think in this world of laws which can serve to
restrain not only kings, but also the deputies of the people, and judges.
__Arbiteary power, then, was wholly rejected by Leibniz; liberty was as
important to him as equality was unnatural. But this love of liberty never
led him to republicanism.* ‘When one loves true liberty,” he observed in
the same letter to Burnett, ‘one is not a republican on that account, since
‘one can find a more certain reasonabie liberty when the king and the
assemblies are linked by good laws, than when arbitrary power is in the
king or in the multitade.’5 [f one had to choose, however, between absolu-
tism and popular ‘license’, Leibniz clearly preferted the former; ‘it is
certain...that the absolute power of kings is more tolerable than the
license of individuals, and [that] nothing is more certain to bring about
tyranny than anarchy’.36
Leibniz, however, did not like to concentrate on power as the main
attribute of rulers, [nan important early work, the Grundriss eines Bedench-
ns vom Aufrichtung einer Societat in Deutschland (c. 1671), he drew his
customary sharp distinction between reason and power, and observed that
a harmony of mind and power is nat only the foundation of beauty and of
justice, but of true statesmanship: “if power is greater than reason, he who
possesses it is either a lamb who cannot use it at all, or a wolf and a tyrant
who cannot use it well.'187 On the other hand, the man in whom reason 18
greater than the power to use itis ‘overpowered’. Accordingly, Leibniz
urged, ‘those to whom God has given reason without power... have the
tight to be counselors’, white those who have power alone ‘must listen
patiently, and not throw good counsels to the winds’.!3® What is ideal,
however, isa union of power and reason within a single person: “Those to
whom God has given at once reason and power in a high degree, are
heroes created by God to be the promoters of his will, as principal instru-
ments,’ Of the three ways of honoring Gad ~ through good words, good
thoughts, and good actions - the last is best, and is accomplished (if ever)
by moralists and statesmen; as ‘governors of the public welfare’ they
‘girive not onty to discover the brilliance of the beauty of God in nature’,
but «ry to imitate it. ‘To praises, to thoughts, to words and to ideas, they
add good works. They do not merely contemplate what he has done well,
* Nonetheless, Leibniz was aware of republicanism’s attractions, and of the fear
it produced in monarchs: ‘all republics are odious in the eyes of kings...
republics usually cause their neighbors to wish for comparable liberty; they
telerate all kinds of religions; the common good is the first object in their
tatechisins; they scarcely know corruption; they are the true seed-beds of men
of genius’, Securitas Publica Tnterua ct Externa (1670-1), pt. 11, No. $3i F de
C6, pp. 225-6,Introduction. 25
but offer and sacrifice themselves as instruments, the better to contribute
to the general good and to that of men in particular.’12>
Power was essential, Leibniz granted, to the translation of right into
‘fact’, but it was the right to which he devoted his attention; power was
neutral and undifferentiated, and helped evil men to carry out evil designs
as readily as it helped good men to be benevolent.i40 And nothing in
Leibniz is more important than benevolence. It is essential that the wise
and virtuous who (ought to} rule devote alt their efforts to the public
welfare, not merely to prevent misery, but to promote actual improvement
in both the material living conditions and the knowledge and virtue of the
citizens. ‘The end of politics, after virtue,’ Leibniz wrote, ‘is the main-
tenance of abundance, so that men will be in a better position to work in
common concert for those solid [objects of] knowledge which cause the
sovereign Author to be admired and loved.’!41 If Leibniz’ insistence on
liberty links him to the great English liberals of his century, his emphasis
on charity and welfare separates him from them ; he did not stress, as they
did, rights, representation, or a Benthamite ‘dislocability’ of rulers, but he
was much more interested in welfare and in the general improvement of
men than any liberal.* This much is apparent ina strong passage from his
(otherwise somewhat sanguine) Memoir for Enlightened Persons of Good
Intention:
“The greatest and most efficacious means. .. of augmenting the general welfare of
men, while enlightening them, while turning them toward the good and while
freeing them from annoying inconveniences [poverty, unemployment, maleduca~
tion] in so far as this is feasible, would be to persuade great princes and [their]
principal ministers to make extraordinary efforts to procure such great goods
eed to allow our times to enjoy advantages which, without this [extraordinary
eort] would be reserved for a distant posterity."
Leibniz assures the princes who are to make these efforts that they will
be working not simply for ‘immortal glory” and for ‘their own perfection
and satisfaction’, but also in their own interest: not only will they have
subjects who are ‘more virtuous and better-suited to serve them well’,
but ~ and here Leibniz gives more than a hint of his opinion of the general
run of German aristocrats ~ ‘persons of leisure and means, instead of
amusing themselves with trifles, with criminal of ruinous pleasures,
and with intrigues’, will find their satisfaction in becoming virtuous.14>
* Leibniz’ combination of benevolent authoritarianism with welfare anticipates
a good deal of later German practice; some of Bismarck’'s domestic policies
meght not have been uncongenial to him. Janet, in his Histoire de la Sience
Potitgue (vol. 2, p.248), says that ‘state socialism would not have frightened
Leibniz. very much’.26 Introduction
While English liberalism concentrated mostly on the state as a judicial
authority defending natural rights (and particularly property rights},
Leibniz concerned himself with social well-being; in dozens of projects
which he urged on numerous princes, he advocated the setting up of
economic councils which would oversee not only manufacturing and
agriculcure, but also public health and education (‘optima respublica intel-
igi non potest sine optima educatione’),!44 and insisted again and again
that ‘it is much better to prevent poverty and misery, which is the
mother of crimes, than to relieve it after it is born’.!3 His strenuous efforts
to found academies of arts and sciences in a number of major capitals were
successful only in Berlin; but his endeavors to interest Peter the Great of
Russia, the Elector of Saxony, and the Holy Roman Emperor in such
academies show how truly he was interested in making charity an impor-
tant pub virtue. Leibniz felt that many rulers made the mistake of think-
ing that they could be glorious through their ‘destructions and desola~
tions’,t46 and that it was his function to demonstrate the superiority of
constructive to destructive actions, As he noted in one of his useful
poems:
Duel sriomphe qu'on puisse obtentr par la guerre,
Obliger est bien plus gue conquerir ta terre
Sovereignty
Leibniz’ emphasis on charity, welfare, and reasonability led, not surpris~
ingly, to an extreme downgrading of the concept of sovereignty, which
played so important part in much other seventcenth-century theory. He
did believe, with Hobbes, that the state is simply an aggregation, like a
herd or an army, and that its unity is found in the unity of its rulership;
the doctrine of substance, of course, requires that only individuals be real,
and thus on this point Leibniz’ metaphysics and politics coincide exactly.
A state, like a marble pavement made up of smaller stones, is only a
mom per accidens; itis nota true unity, ‘any more than would be the water
ofa pond with all the fish it holds, even though all the water and the fish
were frozen together’,!4* But Leibniz broke with the Hobbesian view of
law as command: for him it is the content of law— its promotion of the
common good and an objective justice ~ which matters. His treatment of
sovereignty was, of course, affected by his being: the official apologist for a
German electorate; indeed the immediate purpose of his writing his main
* Thus Gierke’s objection, in Natural Law and the Theory of Society, p. 137, that
Leibniz attained to a conception of the state as a ‘mere’ persona ficta (rather
than as a corporate ‘personality’), is misdirected: Leibnia’ metaphysics could
ot allow him to consider the statc a ‘real personality’.Introduction 2
work on sovereignty (the so-called Caesarinus Fiirsteneris, 1677) was to
show that minor German princes were as ‘sovereign’ as the kings of
France and Spain. But he did not have to do violence ta his own views of
Saw and of rule to demonstrate this. Throughout his life Leibniz ciung to
the belief that the medieval majestas of the Empire - pethaps understood
only as a court of last resort for all of the Republic of Christendom - was
better than the modern states-system; and, this being so, he was quite
willing to pull down what Bodin and Hobbes had built up. ‘Sovereign’,
said Leibniz in the Lutrésiens de Philarcte et d'Evgine (a French summary,
in dialogue form, of the Caesarinus Fiirstenersus), ‘is he who is master of a
territory’ and who is ‘powerful enough to make himself considerable in
Europe in time of peace and in time of war, by treaties, arms and all:-
ances’.\50 He removed the character of absolute supremacy from the
concept of sovereignty, making it only a comparative rather than a super-
lative standard; and, taking the fantastic morcellization and diversity of
German political forms into account, urged that it did not matter
whether the sovereign ‘holds his lands as a fief, nor whether he recognizes
the majesty of a chief, provided that he be master at home and cannot be
disturbed except by arms’.i21 Leibniz adhered 1 this merely descriptive
and non-legal conception of sovereignty long after his hopes of a revived
Imperial majestas, together with his hopes of a reunified Respublica
Christiana, began to wane.
If Leibniz had immediate practical reasons for wanting to undermine
the idea of sovereignty, he had more purely philosophical ones as well;
and not surprisingly, he began with av attack on Hobbes. “If we listen to
Hobbes,’ he said in the Cacsarinus Pirstenerius, ‘there will be nothing in
our land (the Empire] but out and out anarchy’, far ‘no people in civilized
Europe 1s ruled by the laws that he has proposed.'152 Leibniz went on to
discuss, with some accuracy, Hobbes" idea of the war of every man against
every man, caused by man’s natural right to all things; his conception of
the transferal of these rights (save self-defense) to the state, such that (in
Leibniz’ words) ‘each man is understood to will whatever the government
or person who ropresents him wills’. And he faithfully described Hobbes’
insistence that government be unitary and centralized, because {again in
Leibniz’ words) ‘it is fruitless to divide the rights of supreme power among
several persons or corporations [collegia), since a division of power could
cause disagreements and the state might be dissolved.1#9
Leibniz, having described Hobbes’ ideas, flatly denied their accuracy.
“Hobbes? fallacy”, he said, ‘lies in this, thar he thinks that things which can
entail inconvenience should not be borne at all,’ This insistence, according
to Leibniz, is ‘foreign to the nature of human affairs’. He admitted that28 Introduction
‘when the supreme power is divided, many dissensions can arise; even
vars, if everyone holds stubbornly to his own opinion’. But experience, he
ssid, shows that ‘men usually hold to some middle road, so as not to
commit everything to hazatd through their obstinacy’.I3¢ He found
examplesof this moderation in Poland and in the United Provinces: ‘Among
the Poles, one territorial representative can dissolve the assembly by his
obstinacy; in Holland, when something of great importance is being
considered, such as peace, war or treaties, the disagreement of one town
upsets everything.’ Still, said Leibniz, because of the ‘prudence and
moderation of those who preside over the whole’,154 most matters rurn
out well enough.
Leibniz then turned to an attack on Pufendorf, whom he considered an
inferior German version of Hobbes, and who had called the Empire a
‘political monster’ in his De Statu dmperit Germanici. ‘If this is true’,
Leibniz retorted, ‘I would venture to say that the same monsters are
being maintained by the Dutch and the Poles and the English, even by
the Spanish and French.’ How unreal absolute suvereignty is will be clear
to those ‘who know what the noble orders of the kingdom of France...
once said in public assembly concerning the fundamental laws of the
kingdom and the limits of royal power’. The components of the French
state were not managed by ‘mandates given fromthe plenitude of power (as
they sayy, but by ‘demands, negotiations, and discussions'.156 ‘Hobbesian
empires’, he concluded, ‘exist neither among civilized people nor among
barbarians, and F consider them neither possible nor desirable - unless
those who must have supreme power are gifted with angelic virtues.’
Hobbes’ ‘demonstrations’ thus ‘have a place only in that state whose
king is God, whom alone one can trust in all things?.)57
Taking this view of sovereignty, Leibniz could not but reject the
Hobbesian doctrine of law as command (hedged round by formal requirer
mentssuchas promulgation and ‘authentic interpretation’) ;158 Leibniz was
a natural-law theorist (though he preferred the term ‘universal juris-
prudence’ to natural law) who held thar ‘the fault of those, who have
made justice depend on power, 's partly a consequence of their confound
ing right[ droit] and jaw [fa oi], Right cannot be unjust, but law can be.’s#*
While this radical distinction between positive law and natural law
sometimes leads, in other theorists, tu ideas of a right of revolution when.
the actions of rulers are ‘against nature’, Leibniz usually treated this
subject simply as a question of prudence. ‘I am of the sentiment of
* Cf NE 1v, vii, pt. 19: ‘There are fundamental maxims constituting the law
itself, which, when they are aught by pure reason, and do not arise from
the arbitrary power of the state, constitute natural faw.”Introduction 29
Grotius, he wrote in 1695, ‘and ] believe that as a rule one must obey, the
evil of revolt ordinarily being incomparably greater than that which
causes it. ] allow, however, that the prince can go to such an excess, and
put the safety of the commonwealth in such danger, that the obligation
to suffer ceases."' And, indeed, if a ruler cannot provide security - here he
agreed with Hobbes ~‘it is permitted to subjects to swear an oath of
fidelity to the enemy of their master who has conquered them, theit
master not being able ra de anything more to insure their safcty’.161 For all
his differences with Hobbes, Leibniz never denied that providing security
wwas the first obligation of the state. ‘My definition of the state, or of that
which the Latins call respublica’, said Leibniz in 1705, ‘is: that it is a large
society whose end is the common security.’ Ic is to be hoped, he went on,
‘that one can obtain for men something more than security, namely
happiness, and one must apply himself to this end; but security at least is
essential, and without it all well-being ccases.’#? The difference between
Hobbes and Leibniz is that Leibniz concentrated on ‘something more than.
security’, namely institutionalized chatity, while Hobbes, who believed
that all ends other than existence were relative, contented himself with
setting up a ‘context’.
Before passing on to Leibniz’ theory of international relations, it should
be noted that, while a great many seventeenth-century theorists devoted
their efforts to the (theoretical) destruction of all of the medieval colfegia
existing below the level of the state, a well as the ‘universal’ authorities
existing above the level of the state, Leibniz ~ particularly in his earlier
works — tried to preserve something of the hierarchy of social forms
handed down from the late Middle Ages. ‘Thus for him the state was the
“fifth degree’ of natural society: above it, as the highest natural degree, was
the Church of God, comprehending both the Church per s¢ and the Em-
perot (as head and defender of the Respublica Christiana); below it were
four lesser degrees, of ascending (political) importance - husbands and
wives, parents and children, masters and servants, and, finally, whole
“households’.16>
Ieverything ia the world were arranged in the most perfect way, then, frst of
all, parents, children, ‘and relatives would be the best of fricnds, and whole
families would have chosen an art of living... .would abide in it and continue to
perfect themselves in their art and direct their chitdren to the same end. ‘They
eeyuld marry people of the same calling in order to be united through education
Fem their parents. These clans would make up guilds or estates out of which
cities would arise; these would enter into provinces, snd all countries,
finally, would stand under the Church of Godt"
* CE, Gierke, The Development of Political Theory. pp. 259 f.30 Introduction
‘This hierarchy, reminiscent parily of Aristotle and partly of Althusius,
locked che state inte a system in which it had not the (for Leibniz per-
nicious) freedom which the Hobbesian state enjoyed. ‘Natura)’ voluntary
societies below the state level were to be negotiated with, made partners
to consensual arrangements; while the universal authorities — albeit in a
much restricted and rationalized form — were to preserve Furope against
the immoderate appetites of any part of it.
The Republic of Christendom and international Relations
Leibniz wanted the idea of justice as charity regulated by wisdom to have
not only a philosophical plausibility, and not only an effect on the internal
politics of particular states, but also an impact on the international
system: if charity could replace doctrinal disputation, then the greatest
misfortune of Western civilization, the ‘schism’ between Catholics and
Protestants, might be overcome. Leibniz devoted a great deal of his life to
efforts aimed at healing this split, first in laboring on a vast (uncompleted)
work called the Casholic Demonstrations, 6 which was intended to supply
a Christian doctrine of sufficient imprecision to be agreeable to everyone,
and later in a drawn-out correspondence with Bossuet (who apparently
had greater hopes of converting Leibniz!s¢ than of compromising with
‘heretics’,) Leibniz ransacked the history of pre-Reformation deviation-
ism, hoping to show that if the Catholic Church re-admitted Protestants
without an excessively fine-grained examination of doctrinal differences,
it would be doing no more than it had when it agreed 10 disagree on some
points with the Calixtins of Bohemia, and with the Greeks at the Council
of Florence (1438).'” He urged also that many of the didlerences between
Catholicism and Protestantism were no wider than some of the differ-
ences within the Church itself.14* Generally, Leibniz appealed to Bossuet
to bring Christendom together on a slightly vague basis involving no
apologies and no recantations; specific doctrinal disputes could be settled
afterwards by genuine ecumenical councils (modelled on that of Constance,
1414-18, Leibniz’ favorite). ‘Would it not be better’, he wrote in 1692,
for Rome and for the general good, to regain so many nations, though
one would have to remain in a state of disagreement on some points for
sometime, . . 2°18 But Leibniz and Bossuet could not agree on the status of
the Council of Trent, the counter-Reformation council which was offen-
sive to Protestants. He tried for some time to prove calmly that the
Council had never been fully recognized in France; but Bossuet's con-
tinuing insistence that the questioning of one council would lead to theIntroduction 3L
questioning of alll finally provoked Leibniz into an uncharacteristic out~
ast:
‘To say that you cannot consent to a new examination [of the Council of Trent],
is only to renew the old equivocations: a new examination is necessary at least
for the benefit of those who have a right to doubt a pretended infallible decision;
and your party is deceiving itself in trying to derive any advantage from this
[Council], as ifit were permitted that a band of minor [talian bishops, courtesans
and hangers-on from Rome (who were believed to be littte-educated and little
mindful of true Christianity) fabricate in a corner of the Alps, in a manner
highly disapproved by the most serious men of their times, decisions which are
to obligate the whole Church.2”*
Bossuet, for his part, called Leibniz ‘opinionated’ and even a ‘heretic’;
and when the Hanoverian succession to the British throne was assured,
Leibniz was no longer encouraged to seek reconciliation, in view of
British hostility to Catholicism. But his own views never changed. His
labors in this field have sometimes been dismissed as merely pobtically
inspired; but such a view cannot explain why~to take an example -
Leibniz strove so hard, in his correspondence with the Jesuit des Bosses, to
reconcile his own theory of substance with che Catholic doctrine of tran-
substantiation.!71 Whatever his motives, he believed that fanaticism and
bioodshed could be ended throughout Europe if charity replaced theo~
logical hair-splitting.
‘The essence of Catholicism is not external communion with Rome. . the true
and essential communion, which makes us part of the body of Jesus Christ, is
charity. All those who maintain the schism by their fault, by creating obstacles to
seconciliation, contrary to charity, are truly schismatics: instead of which those
who are ready to do everything that can be done te re-establish external com-
munion are Catholics in effect."
Leibniz’ retiance on the Reipublica Christiana as chief defender of
European concord was at its height during the 1670s, and appears most
strongly in the Cacterinus Firstenerius. In this most medieval of his works,
he spoke of the Pope and the Holy Roman Emperor as the ‘two heads’ of
Christendom, then went on to describe the kinds of supra-national
authority which he chought these two heads ought to have, He believed:
the Emperor is the defender or rather the chief, of if one prefers, the secular
arm of the Universal Church; that all Christendom forms a species of republic,
in which the Emperor has some authority, from which comes the name, Holy
Empire, which should somehow extend as far as the Catholic Church; that the
Emperor is. ..the born leader of Christians against the infidels; that it is mainly
for him to destroy schisms, to bring about the meeting of [ecumenical] councils,
to maintain good order .. .s0 that the Church and the Republic of Christendom
euffer no damage.”32 Introduction
At the same time, Leibniz recalied the great temporal authority which
the Popes had had in the Middle Ages, urging that a good Pope had the
night {by common consent, if not from God) to ‘curb the tyranny and the
ambition of the great, who cause so many souls to perish’.17¢ And he
suggested thar an ecumenical council might be converted into a perpetual
‘general Senate of Christendom’, which would replace the insecurity and
bad faith of treaties, mediations and guarantees with ‘the interposition of
the public authority, emanating from the heads of Christendom, the
Pope and the Emperor’ .175 ‘
By the r6gos Leibniz, older and less infatuated with medieval institu-
tions, was placing more stress on international positive lew~on the
treaties and guarantees which he had earlier denigrated. In the Codex
Juris Centium (1693), a collection of documents supporting the Empire's
international position against French claims, he did not fail to mention
the Emperor, the Pope, natural law, and Christian tradition, but mostly
he insisted on the points to which France had actually agreed. In the
Codex there was also a new emphasis on the gap between political actuality
and ideality: a new ‘realism’ which even. led Leibniz to allow that there
was something in Hobbes’ view that international relations were only a
perpetual war, This interpretation, he said, was ‘not so absurd as one
might think, if the author claims to show, not that each nation has a right
to destroy the others, but that prudence obliges every nation to be perpet-
ually on guard against the others’.'% It could be said of many princes,
Leibniz went on, that ‘in their palaces they play cards, and in the state
with creaties.177 The evil designs of scheming ministers, papered over with
‘specious pretexts’ sometimes brought about campaigns founded on
hated and vengeance alone; sometimes a prince’s ‘bad night’ led to the
death of thousands; often a woman ‘pushed’ a ruler into ill-considered
actions. ‘History would lose some of its beauty’, Leibnizconcluded, ‘fone
always knew the true causes of events, and if it were known that the
most frivolous motives... .have often caused the greatest heroes to act.’178
|All of these considerations led him to play down the (still important but)
diffuse and slackening restrictive power of Christendom, and to hope that
historical evidence of positive agreements might be of greater utility in
restraining international violence.
“This does not mean that he changed his mind; he only changed the
emphasis. In a very late (1715) commentary on the ADE de St Pierre’s
Project for Perpetual Peace, Leibniz, while praising the Abbé's good inten-
tions, urged that the medieval system, in a purified form, would be better
than St Pierre’s federal scheme. That system, which had been ‘like 2
droit des gens among Latin Christians for several centuries’, could haveIntroduction 33
persisted on an even stronger footing, Leibniz maintained, had conciliar-
ism ever been fully established; but the late medieval Popes, inferior to
cartier ones, were afraid of councils and undermined the movement.
‘This, he said, marked ‘the beginning of their decline’, and a succession of
bad Popes destroyed papal authority. ‘However,’ he added, ‘I believe that
if there had been Popes with a great reputation for wisdom and virtue,
who had wanted to follow the measures taken at Constance, they would
have remedied the abuses, prevented the rupture, and sustained or even
advanced Christian society.”!7*
Ina letter of the same year, on the same subject, Leibniz’ tone was
both elegiac and ironic:
T have seen something of the project of M. de St Pierre, for maintaining 2
perpetua! peace in Europe. I am reminded of a device in cemetery, with the
words: Pax perpetua; for the dead do not fight any longer: but the living are of
another humor and the most powerfu! do not respect tribunals at all. 1t would
be necessary that these gentlemen contribute a caution bourgeoise, or deposit in
the bank of the tribunal, a king of France, for example, a hundred million éus,
and a king of Britain in proportion, so that the sentences of the tribunal could
be executed on their money, in case they proved refractory.
Leibniz suggested, in half-seriousness, that a better alternative would
beto ‘allow ecclesiastics to resume their old authority’, so that interdictions
and excommunications would ‘make kings and kingdoms tremble’.*
‘Here’, he concluded, ‘is a project which will succeed as easily as that of
M. PAbbé de St Pierre: but since it is permitted to write romances, why
should wecondemn the fiction which would recall the age of gold to us Pst
‘At the end, Leibniz knew that some of his ideals had become impossible -
without, however, being able to give them up. Hobbes, he observed in the
New Essays, was atraid of spirits which he knew did not exist.t!2
International Relations : the Problem of French Imperialism
‘The main practical problem of international relations which Leibniz had
to face throughout his life was that of French expansionism. Leibniz,
whose Life (31646-1716) coincided almost exactly with Louis XIV’s
* Despite the lightness of his tone in this letter, the question whether « purified
Church should intervene in political affairs was one which Leibniz always
took quite seriously. A letter of 1706 makes his uncertainty on this point clear:
“According to the law of riture, ecclesiastics in the state cannot be more than
counselors, following the example of doctors whose jurisdiction is purely
Voluntary, s0 to speak, But the divine law has given something more to the
Church, and sometimes human laws give it event more ~ which T do not dis-
approve absolutely’ (Ger. 11, pp. 310-11).