9. Indeed, each Monad must be different from every other. For in nature there are never two beings which are perfectly alike and in which it is not possible to find
an internal difference, or at least a difference founded upon an intrinsic quality. — Jackson
A monad is a possible world. — Jackson
The SEP begs to differ:
"Since there is a hierarchy among monads within any animal, from the soul of a person down to the infinitely small monad, the relation of domination and subordination among monads is a crucial feature of both Leibniz's idealism and his panorganicism. But the hierarchy of substances is not simply one of containment, in which one monad has an organic body which is the result of other monads, each of which has an organic body, and so on. In the case of animals (brutes and human beings), the hierarchy of monads is also related to the control of the “machine of nature” (as Leibniz had put it in a letter to De Volder considered above). What is it then that explains the relation of dominant and subordinate monads? As Leibniz tells Des Bosses, domination and subordination consists of degrees of perfection." — ZzzoneiroCosm
:cry: :lol:Leibniz described the universe aspossible worlds. A monad is apossible world.— Jackson
(Emphases are mine.)And just as the same town, when looked at from different sides, appears quite different and is, as it were, multiplied in perspective, so also it happens that because of the infinite number of simple substances, it is AS IF there were as many different universes, which are however but different perspective representations of a single universe from the different point of view of each monad. — Monadology
You are the least informed person on this forum. Always. — Jackson
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