Description

Book Synopsis
While Spinoza is often interpreted as an early secular or liberal thinker, this book argues that such interpretations neglect the senses of order and authority that are at the heart of Spinoza's idea of God. For Spinoza, God is an organized and directed totality of all that exists. God is entirely immanent to this totality, to such an extent that all things are fundamentally of God. Appreciating the full extent to which God permeates and orders every aspect of reality, allows the full sense of Spinoza's theories of tolerance and the social contract to come into view. Rather than assuming that human beings involved in political relationships are independent, autonomous individuals, for Spinoza they are parts of a larger whole subject to distinct natural laws. Spinoza maintains that such laws manifest themselves equally and identically in the seemingly distinct realms of religion and politics. In this respect, Spinoza's theories of religion and biblical interpretation are not properly se

Table of Contents
Contents: «The Face of the Whole Universe»: Spinoza’s Idea of God – «A Kingdom Within a Kingdom»: Spinoza on the
Individual and the Idea of the Will – «Nothing More Useful than Man…»: Spinoza on Politics – «The Supreme Reward of the Divine Law»: Law and Religion in Spinoza.

Spinozas Philosophy of Divine Order

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    A Hardback by Ben Stahlberg

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      Publisher: Peter Lang Publishing Inc
      Publication Date: 1/30/2015 12:09:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781433130441, 978-1433130441
      ISBN10: 1433130440

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      While Spinoza is often interpreted as an early secular or liberal thinker, this book argues that such interpretations neglect the senses of order and authority that are at the heart of Spinoza's idea of God. For Spinoza, God is an organized and directed totality of all that exists. God is entirely immanent to this totality, to such an extent that all things are fundamentally of God. Appreciating the full extent to which God permeates and orders every aspect of reality, allows the full sense of Spinoza's theories of tolerance and the social contract to come into view. Rather than assuming that human beings involved in political relationships are independent, autonomous individuals, for Spinoza they are parts of a larger whole subject to distinct natural laws. Spinoza maintains that such laws manifest themselves equally and identically in the seemingly distinct realms of religion and politics. In this respect, Spinoza's theories of religion and biblical interpretation are not properly se

      Table of Contents
      Contents: «The Face of the Whole Universe»: Spinoza’s Idea of God – «A Kingdom Within a Kingdom»: Spinoza on the
      Individual and the Idea of the Will – «Nothing More Useful than Man…»: Spinoza on Politics – «The Supreme Reward of the Divine Law»: Law and Religion in Spinoza.

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