Abstract
This scholarly and historically rich study shows the originality of Leibniz's moral and religious thought, and its coherence with his philosophy as a whole. At the basis of Leibniz's thought the author sees a stress on essence and the univocity of being, and a resulting belief that metaphysics studies being and truth as such, prior to distinguishing kinds of being and truth. This belief in truth is seen as the source of Leibniz's belief in a rationality and justice common to God and man--the basic principle of his universal jurisprudence and theodicy. A thread of criticism runs through the book, to the effect that Leibniz's stress on essence and continuity causes him to blur the sharp difference between infinite uncreated Being and finite created beings.--R. H.