Description
Book SynopsisDoing without Free Will: Spinoza and Contemporary Moral Problems introduces Spinoza into the contemporary discussion on free will and on moral problems surrounding this discussion. Traditional Western moral philosophy, for the most part, has been built on the assumption of free will as a special human capacity to freely choose actions without being determined in that choice. This idea draws increasing critique, fueled recently especially by the ever new findings of neuroscience. But how can we develop a moral philosophy without free will? Spinoza faced a similar challenge when writing his Ethics during the rise of modern science and its deterministic model of nature and, for this reason, has much to offer the current discussion. Not only does he provide a foundation for understanding moral responsibility without free will, he also provides an explanation and solution to the classical problem of akrasia precisely because he argues the will is not free. He worked out an entirely new syst
Trade ReviewI applaud the goal of bringing Spinoza’s views into contemporary debates.... [E]arly modern scholars will find here some fine research by up and coming scholars. * Journal of the History of Philosophy *
Ursula Goldenbaum and Christopher Kluz's Doing without Free Will: Spinoza and Contemporary Moral Problems is the book that we have all been waiting for! Finally Spinoza's unique contribution of a conception of the goal of human life as freedom without free will has been reclaimed as the tertium quid and inserted into the stalemated contemporary philosophical debate between the two dominant strains of latterday Kantians and Humeans. Kudos to Goldenbaum and Kluz for spearheading this important project and for bringing together major contributors to reprise Spinoza's understanding of moral agency in the terms of the contemporary Anglo-American philosophical conversation. This is a great book and a needed contribution to both Spinoza studies and to the ongoing philosophical free will/determinism debate. -- Heidi Ravven, Hamilton College
Table of ContentsIntroduction: Doing without Free Will: Spinoza and Contemporary Moral Problems, Ursula Goldenbaum and Christopher Kluz Chapter 1. Moral Responsibility Without Free Will: Spinoza’s Social Approach, Christopher Kluz Chapter 2. Recovering Spinoza’s Theory of Akrasia, Julia Haas Chapter 3. Spinoza’s Evolutionary Foundation of Moral Values and their Objectivity: Neither Relativism nor Absolutism, Ursula Goldenbaum Chapter 4. Rehumanizing Spinoza’s Free Man, Matthew Homan Chapter 5. Freedom from Resentment: Spinoza’s Way with the Reactive Attitudes, J. Thomas Cook