De Arte Combinatoria

The Dissertatio de arte combinatoria ("Dissertation on the Art of Combinations" or "On the Combinatorial Art") is an early work by
Summary
The main idea behind the text is that of an
- Find all the predicates which are appropriate to a given subject, or
- Find all the subjects which are convenient to a given predicate.
For this, Leibniz was inspired in the
Leibniz discusses in this work some
which he thought was original.
The first examples of use of his ars combinatoria are taken from law, the musical registry of an organ, and the Aristotelian theory of generation of elements from the four primary qualities. But philosophical applications are of greater importance. He cites the idea of Thomas Hobbes that all reasoning is just a computation.
The most careful example is taken from geometry, from where we shall give some definitions. He introduces the Class I concepts, which are primitive.
- Class I
- 1 point, 2 space, 3 included, [...] 9 parts, 10 total, [...] 14 number, 15 various [...]
Class II contains simple combinations.
- Class II.1
- Quantity is 14 των 9
Where των means "of the" (from
- Class III.1
- Interval is 2.3.10
Thus, "Interval" is the space included in total. Of course, concepts deriving from former classes may also be defined.
- Class IV.1
- Line is 1/3 των 2
Where 1/3 means the first concept of class III. Thus, a "line" is the interval of (between) points.
Leibniz compares his system to the
As a preface, the work begins with a
Notes
- ^ G.W. Leibniz, Dissertatio de arte combinatoria, 1666, Sämtliche Schriften und Briefe (Berlin: Akademie Verlag, 1923), A VI 1, p. 163; Philosophische Schriften (edited by Carl Immanuel Gerhardt), Bd. IV, p. 30;
- doctoral thesis in Philosophy at Leipzig University. Leibniz defended his thesis in March 1666 (see Richard T. W. Arthur, Leibniz, John Wiley & Sons, 2014, p. x).
- ^ Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz. Hauptschriften zur Grundlegung der Philosophie. Zur allgemeinen Charakteristik. Philosophische Werke Band 1. p. 32. Translated in German by Artur Buchenau. Published, reviewed and added an introduction and notes by Ernst Cassirer. Hamburg: Felix Meiner, 1966, p. 32.
- ^ G.G.L. Ars Combinatoria, Acta Eruditorum, Feb. 1691, pp. 63–64
- ^ Leibniz complained to various correspondents, e.g., to Morell (1 October 1697) or to Meier (23 January 1699); see Akademie I.14, p. 548 or I.16, p. 540.
References
- E. J. Aiton, Leibniz: A Biography. Hilger, Bristol, 1985. ISBN 0-85274-470-6.
External links
- De Arte Combinatoria, the original Latin-language text
- Partial English translation
- Partial German translation