A Geometry of Sufficient Reason: Reconceiving Space With Spinoza, Leibniz, Bergson, Whitehead and Deleuze KU Leuven
Space is most commonly understood as a box in which things exist. The box itself is independent from and indifferent to the things that exist in it. Therefore, space itself is empty. However, understood as an empty box, space is homogeneous. In other words, if locations are indifferent to whoever occupies them, they must be without differences. Thus understood, there are no qualitative differences between different parts of space. However, ...