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Individuation and Identity in Early Modern Philosophy
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01 July 1994

Philosophy in the sixteenth through eighteenth centuries has traditionally been characterized as being primarily concerned with epistemological issues. This book is not intended to overturn this characterization but rather to balance it through an examination of equally important metaphysical, or ontological, positions held, explicitly or implicitly, by philosophers in this period.
Major philosophers whose views are discussed in this book include Descartes, Malebranche, Spinoza, Locke, Berkeley, Hume, Leibniz, Wolff, and Kant. In addition, the contributors of minor Cartesians, especially Regis and Desgabets, are analyzed in a separate chapter. Although the views of early modern philosophers on individuation and identity have been discussed before, these discussions have usually been treated as asides in a larger context. This book is the first to concentrate on the problems of individuation and identity in early modern philosophy and to trace their philosophical development through the period in a coherent way.
Kenneth F. Barber is Associate Professor, State University of New York at Buffalo.
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Kenneth Barber
The Problem of Individuation among the Cartesians
Thomas M. Lennon
Descartes and the Individuation of Physical Objects
Emily Grosholz
Malebranche and the Individuation of Perceptual Objects
Daisie Radner
Spinoza's Theory of Metaphysical Individuation
Don Garrett
Locke on Identity: The Scheme of Simple and Compounded Things
Martha Brandt Bolton
Berkeley, Individuation, and Physical Objects
Daniel Flage
Substance and Self in Locke and Hume
Fred Wilson
Leibniz's Principle of Individuation in His Disputatio metaphysica de principio individui of 1663
Laurence B. McCullough
Christian Wolff on Individuation
Jorge J. E. Gracia
Substance and Phenomenal Substance: Kant's Individuation of Things in Themselves and Appearances
Michael Radner
Notes on Contributors
Index of Proper Names