•  1
    In this paper, the author examines Leibniz inconsistent treatments of the existence predicate in his formulations of the ontological argument and elsewhere. It is shown that, contrary to expectations, Leibniz at times adumbrates insights often attributed to Kant and Frege.
  • Leibniz and the Vinculum Substantiale
    Dissertation, The University of Chicago. 1997.
    One of the most curious features of Leibniz's late metaphysics is no doubt the idea of the vinculum substantiale, or substantial bond, found principally in the correspondence with Des Bosses. Apparently out of the blue, Leibniz posits some kind of thing that will help account for transubstantiation, "realize" phenomena and ground the reality of corporeal or composite substances. This dissertation is the first extended treatment of Leibniz's doctrine of the vinculum substantiale in English. It be…Read more
  • Roger S. Woolhouse: Leibniz's' New System'(1695)
    British Journal for the History of Philosophy 7 (1): 173-175. 1999.
  • Leibniz's Correspondence with Des Bosses
    In Paul Lodge (ed.), Leibniz and His Correspondents, Uk ;cambridge University Press. 2004.
  • Kant: A Biography (review)
    Review of Metaphysics 55 (4): 865-866. 2002.
    Philosophers are often thought to be aloof, unworldly, and perhaps even boring people, who, at least from the time of Aristophanes’ characterization of Socrates, have been frequently represented as having their heads or their whole beings in the clouds. Add to these qualities, the dryness that appears in many of Immanuel Kant’s works and the primness and propriety associated with Prussia, and one gets a picture of Immanuel Kant that is not very appealing and certainly not one that would make one…Read more