A monad gains the ability to apperceive by reflectively representing its 
own perceptions, which it can only do if it has access to a wide variety of 
distinct and detailed perceptions of a part of the universe, from its 
point-of-view. Therefore, the point of view of this monad must include 
organized perceptions of other monads, in such a relation that the 
apperceiving monad can integrate these perceptions. Note that none of this 
implies a set of causal relations amongst these monads, although a 
situation like this is certainly correlative with the body and sense 
apparatus of an animal. In Leibniz's model, the physical system is the 
correlate of this set of perceptual relations as seen from the perspective 
of another subject.


*Toward an Elegant Panpsychism: Leibniz's "Monadology" and the Combination 
Problem*
Patrick Mellor 
https://www.academia.edu/31759466/Toward_an_Elegant_Panpsychism_Leibnizs_Monadology_and_the_Combination_Problem

@philipthrift

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