Gottfried leibniz biography for kids


Gottfried Leibniz facts for kids

Quick facts for kids

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz

Born1 July

Leipzig, Electorate of Saxony

Died14 November () (aged 70)

Hanover, Electorate of Hanover

Era17th-century philosophy
RegionWestern Philosophy
Doctoral advisorErhard Weigel
Doctoral studentsJacob Bernoulli
Christian von Wolff

Main interests

Metaphysics, Mathematics, Theodicy

Notable ideas

Infinitesimal calculus, Monadology, Theodicy, Optimism
Leibniz formula for pi
Leibniz harmonic triangle
Leibniz formula for determinants
Leibniz integral rule
Principle of sufficient reason
Diagrammatic reasoning
Notation for differentiation
Proof of Fermat's little theorem
Kinetic energy
Entscheidungsproblem

Influences

Holy Scripture, Plato, Aristotle, Augustine of Hippo, Scholasticism, Ramon Llull, Thomas Aquinas, Francisco Suárez, Descartes, Jakob Thomasius, Spinoza

Signature

Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz (also Leibnitz or von Leibniz) 1 July 1 (21 June OS) – 14 November ) was a Germanintellectual who wrote mostly in French and Latin. He played an important role in both philosophy and mathematics. He invented calculus independently of Newton, and his notation for derivatives is the one in general use since then. He also invented the binary system, foundation of modern computers.

He was taught law and philosophy. He served as secretary to two major German noble houses: one became the British royal family while he served it. Leibniz played a major role in the European politics and diplomacy of his day.

In philosophy, he is most remembered for optimism. He thought our universe is the best possible one God could have made. He was one of the great 17th century rationalists. René Descartes and Baruch Spinoza are the other two. His philosophy also both looks back to the Scholastic tradition and anticipates modern logic and analysis.

Leibniz also made contributions to physics and technology, and anticipated ideas which surfaced much later in biology, medicine, geology, probability theory, psychology, and information science. He wrote on politics, law, ethics, theology, history, and philology. Sometimes, he even wrote in verse. His contributions are scattered in journals and in tens of thousands of letters and unpublished manuscripts. There is no complete edition of Leibniz's writings, and a complete account of his accomplishments is not yet possible. Leibniz is sometimes known as the last "universal genius". Leibniz is perhaps most famous for his involvement in development of calculus independent of Isaac Newton and creation of Leibniz Notation which is the standard form of calculus today.

Related pages

Images for kids

  • A page from Leibniz's manuscript of the Monadology

  • A diagram of I Ching hexagrams sent to Leibniz from Joachim Bouvet. The Arabic numerals were added by Leibniz.

  • Leibnizstrasse street sign Berlin

  • Commercium philosophicum et mathematicum (), a collection of letters between Leibnitz and Johann Bernoulli

See also

In Spanish: Gottfried Leibniz para niños