Description

Book Synopsis
In Between Philosophy and Religion Volumes I and II, Brayton Polka examines Spinoza''s three major workson religion, politics, and ethicsin order to show that his thought is at once biblical and modern. Polka argues that Spinoza is biblical only insofar as he is understood to be one of the great philosophers of modernity and that he is modern only when it is understood that he is unique in making the interpretation of the Bible central to philosophy and philosophy central to the interpretation of the Bible. This book and its companion volume are essential reading for any scholar of Spinoza.

Trade Review
Polka offers a striking challenge to received readings of Spinoza by privileging neither reason nor revelation. Combining hermeneutics and ontology in reciprocal presupposition, he offers a highly original challenge to dominant views of faith and reason in modernity. This Hegelian reading of Spinoza demands careful consideration from philosophers of religion and Spinoza scholars alike. This is a genuinely extraordinary book. -- Philip Goodchild, Department of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Nottingham
This is a major study of Spinoza, which masterfully commands the details of the philosopher's most important texts with sensitivity and ease. It is also a major work of philosophy in its own right, a history of modernity and its key ideas from the standpoint of the separation between (and relationship of) philosophy and religion. Polka's lucid, rigorous analyses open Spinoza's dense texts to a wide range of readers, specialists and non-specialists alike, while situating the ideas in a genealogy of modernity which fundamentally recasts standard conceptions of the modern, the biblical, the ancient, the rational, and the religious. The book's claims are tough, strong, shocking, unnerving, and risky in the best possible sense. An immense achievement. -- Nancy K. Levene, Author of Spinoza's Revelation: Religion, Democracy, and Reason

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction: The Challenge of Spinoza to Modernity Chapter 2 The Bible and Hermeneutics Chapter 3 The Ontological Argument and Modernity: The Relationship Between Thought and Existence Chapter 4 Conclusion: Hermeneutics and Ontology Chapter 5 Appendix 1: Critical Commentary on Works Relating to Spinoza, the Bible, and Modernity Chapter 6 Appendix 2: Strauss on the Bible, Philosophy, and Modernity Chapter 7 Bibliography Chapter 8 Index

Between Philosophy and Religion Vol. I

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    A Paperback by Brayton Polka

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      View other formats and editions of Between Philosophy and Religion Vol. I by Brayton Polka

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 8/4/2010 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739116029, 978-0739116029
      ISBN10: 0739116029

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In Between Philosophy and Religion Volumes I and II, Brayton Polka examines Spinoza''s three major workson religion, politics, and ethicsin order to show that his thought is at once biblical and modern. Polka argues that Spinoza is biblical only insofar as he is understood to be one of the great philosophers of modernity and that he is modern only when it is understood that he is unique in making the interpretation of the Bible central to philosophy and philosophy central to the interpretation of the Bible. This book and its companion volume are essential reading for any scholar of Spinoza.

      Trade Review
      Polka offers a striking challenge to received readings of Spinoza by privileging neither reason nor revelation. Combining hermeneutics and ontology in reciprocal presupposition, he offers a highly original challenge to dominant views of faith and reason in modernity. This Hegelian reading of Spinoza demands careful consideration from philosophers of religion and Spinoza scholars alike. This is a genuinely extraordinary book. -- Philip Goodchild, Department of Theology and Religious Studies, University of Nottingham
      This is a major study of Spinoza, which masterfully commands the details of the philosopher's most important texts with sensitivity and ease. It is also a major work of philosophy in its own right, a history of modernity and its key ideas from the standpoint of the separation between (and relationship of) philosophy and religion. Polka's lucid, rigorous analyses open Spinoza's dense texts to a wide range of readers, specialists and non-specialists alike, while situating the ideas in a genealogy of modernity which fundamentally recasts standard conceptions of the modern, the biblical, the ancient, the rational, and the religious. The book's claims are tough, strong, shocking, unnerving, and risky in the best possible sense. An immense achievement. -- Nancy K. Levene, Author of Spinoza's Revelation: Religion, Democracy, and Reason

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 Introduction: The Challenge of Spinoza to Modernity Chapter 2 The Bible and Hermeneutics Chapter 3 The Ontological Argument and Modernity: The Relationship Between Thought and Existence Chapter 4 Conclusion: Hermeneutics and Ontology Chapter 5 Appendix 1: Critical Commentary on Works Relating to Spinoza, the Bible, and Modernity Chapter 6 Appendix 2: Strauss on the Bible, Philosophy, and Modernity Chapter 7 Bibliography Chapter 8 Index

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