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Betraying Spinoza The Renegade Jew Who Gave Us Modernity Rebecca Goldstein

  • SKU: BELL-49858070
Betraying Spinoza The Renegade Jew Who Gave Us Modernity Rebecca Goldstein
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

4.4

42 reviews

Betraying Spinoza The Renegade Jew Who Gave Us Modernity Rebecca Goldstein instant download after payment.

Publisher: Random House, Inc.
File Extension: EPUB
File size: 2.57 MB
Author: Rebecca Goldstein
ISBN: 9780805211597, 0805211594
Language: English
Year: 2009

Product desciption

Betraying Spinoza The Renegade Jew Who Gave Us Modernity Rebecca Goldstein by Rebecca Goldstein 9780805211597, 0805211594 instant download after payment.

From Publishers Weekly

This biography of 17th-century philosopher Baruch Spinoza (1632–1677) may seem out of place in the Jewish Encounters series, devoted to Jewish thinkers and themes, because Spinoza denied the importance of Jewish identity, and Amsterdam's Jewish community expelled him for heresy. But Goldstein, author of _The Mind-Body Problem and Incompleteness_ and a professor of philosophy, reconstructs Spinoza's life and traces his metaphysics to his efforts to solve the dilemmas of Jewish identity. The philosopher grew up in a community of Jews who had fled the Spanish-Portuguese Inquisition. As Goldstein argues, Spinoza's "determination to think through his community's tragedy in the most universal terms possible compelled him to devise a unique life for himself, insisting on secularism when the concept of it had not yet been conceived." For Spinoza, "salvation" lay in achieving the radical objectivity of pure reason, which dissolves the contingent facts of one's personal history and religious and ethnic identity. Spinoza's effort to live as neither Jew nor Christian nor Muslim was unthinkable in the 17th century, but his arguments for political and religious tolerance were forerunners for the U.S. Constitution. In this admirable biography, Goldstein shows that Spinoza is paradoxically Jewish, "[f]or what can be more characteristic of a Jewish thinker than to use the Jewish experience as a conduit to universality?" (May)
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Review

“Beautifully crafted. What seem like separate issues—Spinoza’s pioneering advocacy of complete freedom of thought in religious matters; the turmoil in the Jewish community; the fateful events in Amsterdam in the closing years of Spinoza’s life; the philosophical developments of the seventeenth century; Spinoza’s idea of a philosophical religion utterly purged of all anthropomorphism, even to the extent of denying that God is a ‘person’ in any sense—come together as if by themselves (the sure sign of a fine artist!) to answer my puzzle: how to understand Spinoza the human being, a man for whom reason itself was a kind of salvation.”
—Hilary Putnam, New York Observer

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