Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
Monadology, pre-established harmony, origin of the substance concept.
More on LeibnizSixteen thinkers provide the intellectual backbone of the Quantum Monads project. Their ideas – from the monadology (Leibniz) and transcendental critique (Kant) to complementarity (Bohr), non-locality (Bell), and autopoietic systems (Luhmann) – converge here into one coherent field.
In the architecture of the theory, these forerunners feed into XQM (roof/substance), VQM (relation/coupling), IEQ (measurement/simulation), and XDM (ethics/governance).
Monadology, pre-established harmony, origin of the substance concept.
More on Leibniz
Transcendental critique and the epistemic boundaries of knowledge.
More on Kant
Intentionality as a bridge between mind, perception and relation.
More on Brentano
Limit situations, axial age, and communication as existential dimension.
More on Jaspers
Communicative action and the normative interlinking of social systems.
More on Habermas
Autopoiesis and systems theory – structural basis of VQM.
More on Luhmann
AGIL schema and functional differentiation – precursors to systems theory.
More on Parsons
Cultures as living organisms – analogies to quantum fields.
More on Spengler
Complementarity as structural principle of entangled perspectives.
More on Bohr
Inequalities, non-locality, and realism in a quantum context.
More on Bell
Implicate order and holistic field interpretation.
More on Bohm
Entanglement and unity of consciousness.
More on Schrödinger
Relativity of space-time and the search for determinism.
More on Einstein
Uncertainty relation as an epistemic boundary of measurement.
More on Heisenberg
Incompleteness as formal horizon – link to XDM.
More on Gödel
Mathematical foundations of quantum mechanics and the measurement problem.
More on von NeumannNote: All portraits are AI interpretations in the style of Edward Hopper. For academic work, please refer to the source pages and primary literature linked above.