Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz bibliography

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was a major contributor to mathematics, physics, philosophy, theology, logic, and early computer science; independent inventor of calculus in mathematics; inventor of energy and the action principle in physics; jurist, genealogist, diplomat, librarian; worked towards reunification of Catholic and Protestant faiths.

This in-progress article will list all his published and unpublished works primarily based on the Leibniz Library in Hannover[1] [2], and its online catalog[3].

Table of works

YearTitle and descriptionWikiSource versionsEnglishGermanFrench
1714MonadologyMonadologyMonadology Latta(tr)--Monadologie
1710Théodicée--------
1704New Essays on Human Understanding Nouveaux Essais sur l’entendement humainexternal[4] [5]-- Nouveaux Essais sur l’entendement humain
1693Protogaea--------
1666De Arte Combinatoria[6]--------
1686Discourse on Metaphysics Discourse on Metaphysicsexternal[7]-- Discourse on Metaphysics
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1677That not all possibles attain existence--external[8]----
1684Nova Methodus pro Maximis et Minimis[9]--external [10]----
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Notes:

1. Dates in the table refer to the estimated date of completion of manuscripts if first publication occurred after Leibniz's death (1716).

2. Title and description link to English Wikipedia article if available.

gollark: Promises are very nice because MONAD.
gollark: Quite a lot of browser APIs are weirdly inconsistent, because they only came up with the whole "asynchronous" thing after a lot had already been done, and then a while after that the idea of promises, but they're still sticking with events a lot for some reason.
gollark: JS is what you get if you put 100 language designers in a room, remove the language designers and add a bunch of monkeys with typewriters and DVORAK keyboards, and then bring the actual language designers back but force them to stick with what the monkeys wrote and only make small changes and tack on extra features after the fact, and also the language designers don't agree with each other most of the time.
gollark: Using TS means many of the errors JS wouldn't really catch except at runtime are much easier to deal with.
gollark: I like JS from an ease of development perspective, if not really a language design one.

See also

Transcribed collections

References

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