Spinoza's Metaphysics: An Essay in InterpretationHarvard University Press, 1969 - 174 pagine “This valuable study presents a provocative and genuinely original interpretation of Spinoza. Writing in a style that is both clear and elegant, E. M. Curley takes a fresh look at the fundamental tenets of Spinoza’s metaphysics and reconstructs them with thoughtful precision. He introduces his work with an analysis of the serious disagreement among Spinoza scholars regarding matters of basic interpretation and shows the weaknesses of two of the most prominent lines of interpretation, those of H. H. Joachim and H. A. Wolfson.He then explains his own novel and quite radical interpretation of Spinoza’s metaphysics. Couching his argument largely in the language of twentieth-century philosophy, he focuses on four doctrines: that every finite thing is a mode of the one substance, that God is the cause of all things, that every truth is a necessary truth, and that a mode of thought and its corresponding mode of expression are the same. In a study that is both an explanation and a defense of Spinozism, Mr. Curley not only clarifies abstruse elements of the Spinozistic system but also offers intriguing interpretations of the contemporary views he employs to explain Spinoza’s intentions.”- Publisher |
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Sommario
The Definitions of Substance and Mode I | 2 |
The Causality of God | 44 |
Necessity | 82 |
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absolute nature absolutely infinite absolutely necessary actual world Adam and Tannery argued argument Aristotle attribute of extension attribute of thought axioms B-world basic nomological facts Bayle C. I. Lewis cause conceived concept of substance constitutes contingent defined definitions of substance deny Descartes distinction entities essence Ethics example existential propositions explain external bodies finite things follow give H. H. Joachim human mind idea of Peter infinite modes insofar intellect interpretation Joachim kind laws of nature Leibniz lexical definition Manasseh ben Israel mode of extension natura naturata necessary propositions necessary truth necessity nomological propositions object ontological argument particular things passage perceive philosophers possible world predicate reason rectangles relatively necessary scholium seems sense Short Treatise singular facts singular propositions species Spinoza says Spinoza's definitions Spinoza's metaphysics stipulative definition substance and mode suggests summum genus suppose tion true propositions truth-functions understand universal whole of Nature Wolfson