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Anne Conway

Rationalist
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Largely self-taught and often bedridden by relentless headaches, Anne Conway thought her way to a bold monism in a single posthumously published book. There are not two substances, mind and matter, she argued, but one living substance shading by degrees from densest body to purest spirit, every creature capable of rising toward the good. She rejected the cold mechanism of Descartes and Hobbes for a universe alive throughout. Leibniz read her work and adopted her term, the monad, carrying her vision of living, perceiving units into the center of modern philosophy.

1631 CE·London

Born in London

Born in London and largely self-taught, she pursued philosophy through a long correspondence and chronic illness.

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