“…Similarly, Stephen J. Menn and Justin E. H. Smith point out that Amo was working at German universities and within an intellectual context influenced by Leibniz, Hoffmann, Stahl, and Wolff, among others (Menn and Smith 2020, 51–60). Moreover, Amo's metaphysical project in two of his works, Inaugural Dissertation on The Impassivity of the Human Mind (1734) and Philosophical Disputation Containing A Distinct Idea of Those Things That Pertain Either to the Mind or to Our Living and Organic Body (1734), is a sustained engagement with longstanding questions about the nature of minds, bodies, and Cartesian dualism (Amo 2020a, 2020b). Neither Gournay nor Amo were writing in ways unintelligible to us now: though Eileen O'Neill notes that Gournay's skeptical arguments can be somewhat difficult to recognize, she offers several models of how they might be reconstructed and interpreted, and Menn and Smith remind us that while Amo's genre of writing—dissertations, disputations—is foreign to us now, it was common in his context and in our interpretive traditions (O'Neill 2006; Menn and Smith 2020, 60–68).…”