The Actual World
Abstract
This chapter discusses Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz’s theory of the actual world as the best
of all possible worlds. The chapter opens with Leibniz’s response to the two most basic
questions of metaphysics: Why is there something rather than nothing? And, why do
certain things exist while other equally possible things do not? It examines Leibniz’s
critique of Baruch Spinoza’s metaphysics, with particular reference to the argument that God must make a choice among possible worlds because not all possibles are
“compossible.” In addition, it explores Leibniz’s claim that the best of all possible worlds
is the world containing the highest level of perfection or reality, intelligibility, order, and
harmony. The chapter concludes by looking at three theological doctrines underlying
Leibniz’s conception of the best of all possible worlds: divine creation, conservation, and
concurrence.