Sublime
An inspiration engine for ideas
Baruch Spinoza was a 17th-century Dutch philosopher, and his ideas were quite radical and continue to spark debate even today. Baruch (later Benedictus) Spinoza was born in Amsterdam in 1632 to a Portuguese Jewish family.
Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677)
John Berger • Bento's Sketchbook
SPINOZA (1634-77) is the noblest and most lovable of the great philosophers. Intellectually, some others have surpassed him, but ethically he is supreme.
Bertrand Russell • History of Western Philosophy
Spinoza’s claim that all things are in God, a doctrine now known as panentheism, undercut this anthropomorphic theology and challenged the crudely moralistic view of the human good that was based upon it.
Benedictus de Spinoza, Clare Carlisle, • Spinoza's Ethics
passionnés. Spinoza a l’ambition de démontrer, de manière quasi objective, l’intelligence et l’harmonie profondes qui unissent tout le réel. Partant de Dieu, défini comme la substance unique de ce qui est, il entend montrer que tout a une cause – de l’ordre cosmique au désordre de nos passions – et que tout s’explique par les lois universelles de l
... See moreFrédéric Lenoir • Le miracle Spinoza : Une philosophie pour éclairer notre vie (Documents) (French Edition)
Feuerbach developed Spinoza’s panentheist insistence that everything is in God—including, of course, human beings—into the quite contrary doctrine that the human being is God.
Benedictus de Spinoza, Clare Carlisle, • Spinoza's Ethics
Spinoza ne croit pas en l’existence du Dieu créateur, personnel et providentiel, tel que le décrit la Bible. Les juifs, les chrétiens et les musulmans, pour qui Dieu ne peut répondre qu’à cette définition, le considèrent donc souvent comme athée. Pourtant, Spinoza propose une nouvelle définition de Dieu, qu’il considère comme la plus achevée, car l
... See moreFrédéric Lenoir • Le miracle Spinoza : Une philosophie pour éclairer notre vie (Documents) (French Edition)
Benedict (or Bento) de Spinoza
John Berger • Bento's Sketchbook
Spinoza. He alone saw that the human mind could never be reconciled with the human body unless intelligence was recognized as an attribute of nature in its entirety.