A companion to Spinoza / (Record no. 86173)

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082 00 - DEWEY DECIMAL CLASSIFICATION NUMBER
Classification number 199/.492
Edition number 23
245 02 - TITLE STATEMENT
Title A companion to Spinoza /
Statement of responsibility, etc edited by Yitzhak Melamed.
263 ## - PROJECTED PUBLICATION DATE
Projected publication date 2102
264 #1 - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc Hoboken, NJ :
Name of publisher, distributor, etc Wiley-Blackwell,
Date of publication, distribution, etc 2021.
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Extent 1 online resource
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490 0# - SERIES STATEMENT
Series statement Blackwell companions to philosophy ;
Volume number/sequential designation 75
504 ## - BIBLIOGRAPHY, ETC. NOTE
Bibliography, etc Includes bibliographical references and index.
505 ## - CONTENTS
Formatted contents note Cover<br/>Title Page<br/>Copyright Page<br/>Contents<br/>Notes on Contributors<br/>List of Abbreviations<br/>Introduction<br/>Part I Life and Background<br/>Chapter 1 Spinoza's Life<br/>1. Family<br/>2. The Amsterdam Years (1632-ca. 1660)<br/>3. Spinoza in Rijnsburg (ca. 1660/61-April 1663)<br/>4. Spinoza in Voorburg (April 1663-Winter 1669/70)<br/>5. Spinoza in The Hague (1669/70-1677)<br/>6. Final Years (1675-1677)<br/>References<br/>Further Reading<br/>Chapter 2 Spinoza's Philology<br/>1. Introduction<br/>2. Historical Background<br/>3. Spinoza's Works<br/>4. The Development of Spinoza Philology in Outline<br/>References<br/>Chapter 3 Avicenna and Spinoza on Essence and Existence<br/>1. From Avicenna to Spinoza<br/>2. Essence: The 'Definition'<br/>3. Essence and Existence: The Distinction<br/>4. God's Essence is Existence<br/>5. Essentially Different?<br/>6. Conclusion<br/>References1<br/>Chapter 4 Spinoza and Maimonides on True Religion<br/>1. Definition of Religion<br/>2. The Natural Divine Law and the Summum Bonum<br/>3. Two Maimonidean Examples of Divine Commandments<br/>4. King Solomon on Wisdom or Scientia<br/>5. Why Does a Book on Ethics Begin with Deus?<br/>6. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Chapter 5 Spinoza and Scholastic Philosophy<br/>1. The CM as an Intervention in Scholastic Debates<br/>2. The Inseparability of God's Will and God's Intellect<br/>Acknowledgments<br/>References<br/>Chapter 6 Spinoza and Descartes<br/>1. Rewriting Descartes: The Principles of Philosophy<br/>2. Going beyond Descartes: Method and Metaphysics<br/>3. Transforming Descartes: The Subject of Ethics<br/>4. In the Wake of Descartes: The libertas philosophandi<br/>Notes<br/>References<br/>Further Readings<br/>Chapter 7 Spinoza's Dutch Philosophical Background<br/>1. Leiden Scholasticism<br/>2. Dutch Cartesianism<br/>References<br/>Further Reading<br/>Chapter 8 Spinoza and Hobbes<br/>1. Desire and Causation. 2. Emotions and Human Nature<br/>3. Value and the State<br/>4. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Part II Metaphysics and Natural Philosophy<br/>Chapter 9 Spinoza's Monistic Metaphysics of Substance and Mode<br/>1. The Meaning of the Two Theses<br/>2. Arguments for the Two Theses<br/>3. Spinoza's Uses of the Two Theses<br/>4. Contemporary Applications of the Two Theses<br/>References<br/>Chapter 10 Spinoza and Eternity<br/>Acknowledgment<br/>Chapter 11 Spinoza on Causa Sui<br/>1. Causa sui in Descartes<br/>2. Spinoza's Causa (efficiens) sui<br/>3. Defending Causa (efficiens) sui<br/>4. Conclusion<br/>Acknowledgments<br/>References<br/>Chapter 12 Spinoza's Physical Picture<br/>References<br/>Chapter 13 Spinoza's Mereology<br/>1. Modal Parts and Substantial Indivisibility<br/>2. Spatial Quantity and Divisibility<br/>3. Mereology in the Oldenburg Letter<br/>References<br/>Chapter 14 Spinoza's Metaphysics of Time<br/>1. Eternity<br/>2. Duration<br/>3. Time<br/>4. Eternity and geometrical construction<br/>5. The Mind-Eternity Paradox<br/>6. Three Perspectives<br/>7. The Time-Eternity Barrier<br/>8. Nested Perspectives<br/>Acknowledgments<br/>References<br/>Chapter 15 Spinoza's Infinities<br/>1. Introduction<br/>2. Infinity as Perfection<br/>3. Infinity as Negative Quality<br/>4. Infinity as Positive Quality<br/>5. Infinity as Universal Quantification<br/>6. Summary and Open Questions<br/>Acknowledgments<br/>References<br/>Further Reading<br/>Chapter 16 Spinoza on Diachronic Identity<br/>1. The Leibnizian Challenge<br/>2. Material Things and Their Identity<br/>3. Mental Things and Their Identity<br/>4. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Chapter 17 Spinoza on Relations<br/>1. Introduction<br/>2. Relations as Beings of Reason<br/>3. Relations vs. Universals<br/>4. Concluding Remarks<br/>Acknowledgments<br/>References<br/>Chapter 18 Spinoza on Numerical Identity and Time<br/>1. Introduction<br/>2. A Puzzle. 3. Identity and Discernibility<br/>4. Indiscernibility of Identicals<br/>5. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Chapter 19 Spinoza on Universals<br/>1. Spinoza's Realism<br/>2. Spinoza's Nominalism<br/>3. Good and Bad Universals<br/>Acknowledgment<br/>References<br/>Chapter 20 Spinoza's Ontology of Power<br/>1. E1p9: "The More Reality or Being Each Thing Has, The More Attributes Belong to It"<br/>2. E1p10: "Every Attribute of a Substance Must be Conceived Through Itself"<br/>3. E1p11s: Existence as the Power to Cause, or Produce Effects<br/>4. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Chapter 21 Spinoza's Modal Theory<br/>1. God-substance<br/>2. Intelligible Necessity<br/>3. Textual Evidence for a Non-necessitarianist Reading<br/>4. Necessity of Reflective Acts<br/>References<br/>Further Reading<br/>Chapter 22 Spinoza on Determination<br/>1. Introduction<br/>3. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Chapter 23 Spinoza's Physics<br/>1. Introduction<br/>2. Extended Substance<br/>3. Causation and Attribute-Neutrality<br/>4. The Power of God and the Power of Bodies<br/>5. Quantum In Se Est<br/>6. Essences<br/>7. Universality<br/>8. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Part III Epistemology, Philosophy of Mind, and Psychology<br/>Chapter 24 Spinoza on Human and Divine Knowledge<br/>1. Introduction: The Status of Human Knowledge<br/>2. Epistemic Subjectivity and the Human Standpoint<br/>3. Human Cognition at Work<br/>4. God's Intellect<br/>References<br/>Chapter 25 Reflective Knowledge<br/>1. Introduction<br/>2. What Is an Idea of an Idea?<br/>3. Knowing that One Knows<br/>4. Knowing That One Knows<br/>5. Reasoning to Metaphysical Foundations<br/>6. Intuiting Metaphysical Foundations<br/>Acknowledgments<br/>References<br/>Chapter 26 Spinoza Against the Skeptics<br/>1. The Kinds of Skeptics Envisaged by Spinoza<br/>2. The Common Core of Spinoza's Responses to the Skeptics<br/>3. Spinoza's Epistemic Confidence. 4. Conclusion: The Anti-/Skeptical Character of Spinoza's Philosophy<br/>Acknowledgments<br/>References<br/>Further Reading<br/>Chapter 27 Spinoza on Ideas of Affections<br/>Introduction<br/>1. Sensation in TIE, KV, and CM<br/>2. Ideas of Affections: Sensation or Imagination?<br/>3. Conclusion<br/>Acknowledgment<br/>References<br/>Chapter 28 The Mind-Body Union<br/>1. The Nature of Mind and Body Union<br/>2. The Equality between Body and Mind<br/>References<br/>Chapter 29 Spinoza's Non-Theory of Non-Consciousness<br/>1. "Conscious" and "Consciousness" in the Ethics<br/>2. Consciousness Examined: Theories of Consciousness in Spinoza<br/>3. Returning to The Texts<br/>4. Concluding Remarks<br/>References<br/>Chapter 30 Spinoza on the Passions and the Self<br/>1. Deconstructing the Self<br/>2. The Affective Field<br/>3. Beyond Self and Other<br/>References<br/>Chapter 31 The Serpent and the Dove: Spinoza's Two Paths to Enlightenment<br/>1. Beginning the Path<br/>2. Follow the Yellow Brick Road<br/>3. The Serpent<br/>4. The Dove<br/>References<br/>Part IV Ethics, Politics, and Religion<br/>Chapter 32 Spinoza's Moral Philosophy<br/>1. Good and Bad<br/>2. Motivation<br/>3. Virtue<br/>4. Happiness<br/>5. Doing Unto Others<br/>References<br/>Chapter 33 Spinoza on the Constitution of Animal Species<br/>1. The Limits of Individual Natures<br/>2. A First Argument: Commonality and Agreement<br/>3. A Second Argument: The Right of Nature<br/>4. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Chapter 34 Essence, Virtue and the State<br/>1. Essence and Knowledge<br/>2. Freedom and Unity<br/>3. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Chapter 35 Law and Dissolution of Law in Spinoza<br/>References<br/>Chapter 36 Spinoza's Notion of Freedom<br/>1. Imagination as a Power<br/>2. Imagination, Emulation, and the Free Man<br/>References<br/>Chapter 37 Spinoza's "Republican Idea of Freedom"<br/>1. Introduction. 2. Spinoza's Republican Critique of Hobbesian Sovereignty<br/>3. Criticisms of the Republican Idea of Freedom<br/>4. Spinoza's Response to His Critics<br/>5. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Chapter 38 Spinoza and Economics<br/>1. Introduction<br/>2. Spinoza and the Political Problem of Luxury<br/>3. Spinoza's Mechanism Design<br/>4. Conclusion<br/>Acknowledgments<br/>References<br/>Chapter 39 Spinoza and Feminism<br/>1. Spinoza's Anti-Individualism<br/>2. The Conatus Doctrine<br/>3. Anti-dualism<br/>4. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Chapter 40 Spinoza and International Law<br/>1. Introduction<br/>2. Lauterpacht's Arguments Against Spinoza's Political Theory as a Robust Basis of International Law<br/>3. Spinoza's Statements on International Relations in Light of the Ethical Project<br/>4. Concluding Remarks: Towards a Spinozistic Foundation of International Law<br/>References<br/>Chapter 41 The Intellectual Love of God<br/>References<br/>Chapter 42 Spinoza and Scripture<br/>1. The Paradox of a Work Saturated with Scriptural References<br/>2. Why Interpret the Bible?<br/>3. The Method and Its Results<br/>4. Evaluation<br/>Bibliography<br/>Part V Aesthetics and Language<br/>Chapter 43 Spinoza's Aesthetics<br/>1. Introduction<br/>2. Anti-Realist Interpretations<br/>3. Realist Interpretations<br/>4. Conclusion<br/>References<br/>Chapter 44 Following Traces in the Sand: Spinoza on Semiotics<br/>1. Ontological Premises<br/>2. The Semiosis of Imagination<br/>3. Facies Totius Universi<br/>References<br/>Chapter 45 Spinoza and the Grammar of the Hebrew Language<br/>1. Sources<br/>2. Structure and Contents of the Work<br/>3. Philosophical Import of the CGH<br/>References<br/>Part VI Spinoza's Reception<br/>Chapter 46 Leibniz and Spinoza on Plenitude and Necessity<br/>1. Introduction<br/>2. From Spinoza's Attributes to Leibnizian Possible Worlds
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Summary, etc "Collects 48 original essays which offer a panoramic view of Baruch Spinoza's contributions to European intellectual history as a celebrated metaphysician, epistemologist, political philosopher, and seminal figure of the Enlightenment. Discusses the impact of his thought and writing on a range of fields including metaphysics, epistemology, political theory, religion, and Judaism. Fosters further cross-fertilization between Anglo-American and European Spinoza scholarship in a way that is fruitful, timely, and welcome. Supplements core readings or an instructor's own materials in courses such as History of Modern Philosophy and Modern Intellectual History. Simultaneously a comprehensive Spinoza reference resource and a vehicle for cutting-edge research to advance Spinoza studies, informed by a multicultural and balanced representation of perspectives from leading global philosophers and scholars"--
Assigning source Provided by publisher.
588 ## - SOURCE OF DESCRIPTION NOTE
Source of description note Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed.
600 10 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Spinoza, Benedictus de,
Dates associated with a name 1632-1677.
600 10 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Spinoza, Benedictus de,
Dates associated with a name 1632-1677
General subdivision Influence.
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Philosophers
Geographic subdivision Netherlands
Form subdivision Biography.
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Philosophy, European
General subdivision History.
650 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--TOPICAL TERM
Topical term or geographic name as entry element Philosophy, Modern
Chronological subdivision 17th century.
651 #0 - SUBJECT ADDED ENTRY--GEOGRAPHIC NAME
Geographic name Europe
General subdivision Intellectual life
Chronological subdivision 17th century.
655 ## - INDEX TERM--GENRE/FORM
Genre/form data or focus term Electronic books.
700 1# - ADDED ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Melamed, Yitzhak Y.,
Dates associated with a name 1968-
Relator term editor.
776 08 - ADDITIONAL PHYSICAL FORM ENTRY
Display text Print version:
Title A companion to Spinoza
Place, publisher, and date of publication Hoboken, NJ : Wiley-Blackwell, 2021.
International Standard Book Number 9781119538646
Record control number (DLC) 2020038645
856 ## - ELECTRONIC LOCATION AND ACCESS
Uniform Resource Identifier https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781119538349
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          COLLEGE LIBRARY COLLEGE LIBRARY 2023-10-23 53107 199.492 C73816 2021 CL-53107 2023-10-23 2023-10-23 EBOOK