Abstract

This essay examines the relationship between monads and space in Kant's early precritical work, with special attention devoted to the question of ubeity, a Scholastic doctrine that Leibniz describes as "ways of being somewhere." By focusing attention on this concept, evidence will be put forward that supports the claim, held by various scholars, that the monad-space relationship in Kant is closer to Leibniz' original conception than the hypotheses typically offered by the later Leibniz-Wolff school. In addition, Kant's monadology, in conjunction with God's role, also helps to shed light on further aspects of his system that are broadly Leibnizian, such as monadic activity and the unity of space.

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