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related 1.00 — strongly supporting 1 fact

The concept of the mind is directly addressed in the context of the combination problem, as Leibniz's panpsychist view argues that minds are indivisible units rather than products of combination, as described in [1].

Facts (1)

Sources
Panpsychism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2015 Edition) plato.stanford.edu William Seager, Sean Allen-Hermanson · Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
perspectiveGottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's form of panpsychism avoids the combination problem because he posited that minds are not formed from combinations of parts, but are instead complete in themselves and causally isolated from all other minds.