Giordano Bruno's insistence on an infinity of worlds was not based on the theories of
Copernicus, or on observation, but on the principle applied to God. His death may then be attributed to his conviction of its truth, as he refused to recant even while facing
capital punishment for his view about this and other matters, which caused him to be convicted of
heresy.
Spinoza, according to Lovejoy, "expressed the principle of plenitude in its most uncompromising form" and "represented it as necessary in the strict logical sense".
Kant believed in the principle but not in the possibility of its empirical verification.
Leibniz believed that the best of all possible worlds would actualize every genuine possibility. ==See also==