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Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza | A Wisdom Archive on Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza |  | Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza A selection of articles related to Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza |  |
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Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Spinozism, Liberalism, Contributions to liberal theory, Voorburg
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza | |
 |  |  | Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - PhilosophyKnown as both the "greatest Jew" and the "greatest Atheist", Spinoza contended that God and Nature were two names for the same reality, namely the single substance (meaning "to stand beneath" rather than "matter") that underlies the universe and of which all lesser "entities" are actually modes or modifications. The argument for this single substance runs something as follows:
1. Substance exists and cannot be dependent on anything else for its existence.
2. No two substances can share an attribute.
Proof: If t ...
See also:Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza Read more here: » Baruch Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy |
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 |  |  | Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - OverviewKnown as both the "greatest Jew" and the "greatest Atheist", Spinoza contended that God and Nature were two names for the same reality, namely the single substance (meaning "to stand beneath" rather than "matter") that underlies the universe and of which all lesser "entities" are actually modes or modifications. The argument for this single substance runs something as follows:
1. Substance exists and cannot be dependent on anything else for its existence.
2. No two substances can share an attribute.
Proof: If t ...
See also:Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Overview, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Relativism, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza Read more here: » Baruch Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Overview |
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 |  |  | Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - RelativismEncapsulated at the start in his Treatise on the Improvement of the Understanding (Tractatus de intellectus emendatione) is the core of Spinoza's ethical philosophy, what he held to be the true and final good. Spinoza held a relativist's position, that nothing is good or bad, except to the extent that they are subjectively perceived to be by the individual. For instance, one person may find roasted peanuts tasty and so for her roasted peanuts are good. But another person may be allergic to nuts and so for him peanuts are bad. S ...
See also:Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Overview, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Relativism, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza Read more here: » Baruch Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Relativism |
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Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza.
Short Treatise on God, Man and His Well-Being.
1662. On the Improvement of the Understanding. Project Gutenberg
1663. Principles of Cartesian Philosophy.
1670. Tractatus Theologico-Politicus (A Theologico-Political Treatise)
Project Gutenberg: Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
1677. Ethica Ordine Geometrico Demonstrata (The Ethics) Project Gutenberg. Another translation, by Jonathan Bennet ...
See also:Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Overview, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Relativism, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza Read more here: » Baruch Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography |
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 |  |  | Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevanceAlbert Einstein said that Spinoza was the philosopher who had most influenced his worldview (Weltanschauung). Spinoza equated God (infinite substance) with Nature, and Einstein, too, believed in an impersonal deity. His desire to understand Nature through physics can be seen as contemplation of God. Arne Næss, the father of the deep ecology movement, acknowledged drawing much inspiration from the works of Spinoza.
In the late twentieth century, there was a great increase in philosophical interest in Spinoza in Europe, often from a le ...
See also:Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Overview, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Relativism, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza Read more here: » Baruch Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance |
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 |  |  | Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - LifeBorn to a great family of Sephardic Jews, among the Portuguese Jews of Amsterdam, he gained fame for his positions of pantheism and neutral monism, as well as the fact that his Ethics was written in the form of postulates and definitions, as though it were a geometry treatise. In the summer of 1656, he was excommunicated because of apostasy from the Jewish community for his claims that God is the mechanism of nature and the universe, having no personality, and that the Bible is a metaphorical and allegorical work used to teach the nat ...
See also:Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Overview, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy - Relativism, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza Read more here: » Baruch Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Life |
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 |  |  | Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - LifeBorn to a great family of Sephardic Jews, among the Portuguese Jews of Amsterdam, he gained fame for his positions of pantheism and neutral monism, as well as the fact that his Ethics was written in the form of postulates and definitions, as though it were a geometry treatise. In the summer of 1656, he was excommunicated because of apostasy from the Jewish community for his claims that God is the mechanism of nature and the universe, having no personality, and that the Bible is a metaphorical and allegorical work used to teach the nat ...
See also:Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza Read more here: » Baruch Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Life |
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 |  |  | Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevanceAlbert Einstein said that Spinoza was the philosopher who had most influenced his worldview (Weltanschauung). Spinoza equated God (infinite substance) with Nature, and Einstein, too, believed in an impersonal deity. His desire to understand Nature through physics can be seen as contemplation of God. Arne Næss, the father of the deep ecology movement, acknowledged drawing much inspiration from the works of Spinoza.
In the late twentieth century, there was a great increase in philosophical interest in Spinoza in Europe, particularly fr ...
See also:Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza Read more here: » Baruch Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance |
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 |  |  | Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - QuotesMind and body are one and the same individual which is conceived now under the attribute of thought, and now under the attribute of extension.
-Ethics II prop. 7
I have laboured carefully, not to mock, lament, or execrate human actions, but to understand them.
-Spinoza's A Political Treatise; ISBN: 0486202496; p. 288.
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See also:Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza Read more here: » Baruch Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Quotes |
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 |  |  | Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography
Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza.
Short Treatise on God, Man and His Well-Being.
1662. On the Improvement of the Understanding. Project Gutenberg
1663. Principles of Cartesian Philosophy.
1670. Tractatus Theologico-Politicus (A Theologico-Political Treatise)
Project Gutenberg: Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Part 4
1677. Ethica Ordine Geometrico Demonstrata (The Ethics) Project Gutenberg. Another translation, by Jonathan Bennet ...
See also:Baruch Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - Life, Baruch Spinoza - Philosophy, Baruch Spinoza - Modern relevance, Baruch Spinoza - Major Works, Baruch Spinoza - Quotes, Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography, Baruch Spinoza - By Spinoza, Baruch Spinoza - About Spinoza Read more here: » Baruch Spinoza: Encyclopedia II - Baruch Spinoza - Bibliography |
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More material related to Baruch Spinoza can be found here:
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