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Spinoza, Baruch

Spinoza, Baruch or Benedict, 1632-77, Dutch philosopher. A member of
the Sephardic Jewish community of Amsterdam, Spinoza received a thorough
education in the tradition of medieval philosophical texts as well as
in the works of Descartes,
Hobbes, and other writers of the
period. After charges of heretical thought and practice led to his excommunication
from the Jewish community in Amsterdam in 1656, he Latinized his name
to Benedict. He was by trade a lens grinder, modestly rejecting offers
of an academic career, but he nevertheless became celebrated in his own
day and was regularly visited by other philosophers. Spinoza's system
is monist, deductive, and rationalistic. Politically he posited the idea
of the social
contract, but unlike Hobbes he visualized a community in which human
beings derive most advantage from the rational renunciation of personal
desire. He rejected the concept of FREE WILL, holding human action to
be motivated by one's conception of self-preservation. A powerful, or
virtuous, person acts out of understanding; thus freedom consists in being
guided by the law of one's own nature, and evil is the result of inadequate
understanding. He saw the supreme ambition of the virtuous person as the
"intellectual love of God." Spinoza shared with Descartes an intensely
mathematical appreciation of the universe: truth, like geometry, follows
from first principles, and is accessible to the logical mind. Unlike Descartes,
however, he regarded mind and body (or ideas and the physical universe)
as merely different aspects of a single substance, which he called alternately
God and Nature, God being Nature in its fullness. This pantheism was considered
blasphemous by the religious and political authorities of his day. Of
his works, only A Treatise on Religious and Political Philosophy (1670)
was published during his lifetime. His Ethics, Political Treatise, and
Hebrew Grammar are included in his posthumous works (1677).
From the Concise Columbia Encyclopedia. Copyright © 1991 by Columbia
University Press.
Works on ILTweb
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