Search for crossword answers and clues
17th-century rationalist
Answer for the clue "17th-century rationalist ", 7 letters:
spinoza
Alternative clues for the word spinoza
- Lens-grinding Dutch philosopher
- Philosopher and lens polisher
- Dutch philosopher, expounder of pantheism
- Dutch philosopher: 1632–77
- Philosopher Baruch concerned with ethics
- Philosopher’s informal apology including staple answer
- 17th-century Dutch philosopher who wrote "Ethics"
- A last note turning up down under, written by a philosopher
Word definitions for spinoza in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Spinoza (1951; second edition 1962; third edition 1987) is a book about Baruch Spinoza by the English philosopher Stuart Hampshire . The work includes a foreword by philosopher A. J. Ayer , while a new introduction was added to the 1987 edition. Spinoza ...
Usage examples of spinoza.
These two "apparent absolutes," as he calls them, are synthesized in the third great movement of Spirit, which is the transcendence of both Nature and Mind and thus their radical synthesis or union "in which these two absolutenesses (absolute objectivity and absolute subjectivity) are again one absoluteness," as he puts it (with Fichte and Spinoza in mind).
And holding up Spinoza as someone who equated Nature and nature, twisting him for such use, is suspicious to say the least.
He noted that Descartes considered the passions to be excitations of the soul caused by the movement of ‘animal spirits', and that Spinoza, in laying down the foundation stones of his quasi-Euclidean system of ethics, accepted it as axiomatic that human freedom was based in the rational power of the intellect, while the opposing power of the emotions must be reckoned a burdensome kind of servitude.
As Karl Jaspers points out, according to Spinoza "it is a mark of the radical difference between God and the world that of God's infinitely many attributes only two are available to us.