Most philosophers - those that you have mentioned - are interested in Spinoza, surprise surprise, not for ethical reasons, but rather for his metaphysics. They want to take over Spinozist metaphysics because it avoids the difficulties of substance dualism, and is a coherent backbone for explaining the whole of reality, which accords physical science a fitting place. Furthermore, it is largely immanent, which means that it can allow them to dispense with God and/or the transcendent. — Agustino
The ethical stuff you cite, it doesn't sound all that different to me than some of the stoics. I can see the appeal, but not really the originality. — csalisbury
So this is the thing - I get what makes him historically interesting. And I give him plenty of kudos for his courage and iconoclasm. But all that stuff, for us, is a fait accompli . To read that kind of stuff now is to be preached to as the choir. It could be mildly pleasurable, I suppose. It seems extremely boring to me though. There's no challenge in it for us epigones. I feel like the appeal has to go beyond that, to some ingenuity in the Ethics . I just can't find what it is. — csalisbury
t's a matter of whether someone articulates stuff you've felt but couldn't quite put into words vs someone just saying something you already agree with (and perhaps bolstering with facts or arguments). — csalisbury
See, this Hippy talk is precisely what frustrates me about Spinoza.
What is mind? We all struggle with that.
So Spinoza thinks human mind is just the thoughts of God ??
That's nonsense.
We don't know what mind is, and this does not help us to find out.
It is just Hippy talk. It sounds beautiful and makes sense if you are smoking an opium pipe but only then. — YIOSTHEOY
I wonder if it comes down to temperament. I suffer from periodic irruptions of depression which usually aren't triggered by anything in particular, so I've struggled with neat and crisp theories of joy and sorrow. They just don't reflect my experience. I'm drawn more toward those accounts that emphasize spiritual and emotional crises whereby ones values and coordinates are reconfigured - I suppose you could call these synchronic rather than diachronic shifts. Spinoza seems to put a damper on this because he's installed a rigid structure that only allow for simple x-causes-joy, y-causes-sorrow accounts where events plays out deterministically in time while everything else in the metastructure remains the same. — csalisbury
I guess I see crisis as requiring us to change something that was hitherto part of our essence, — csalisbury
Or maybe I iust had more insight into what I actually needed. — csalisbury
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