Literature type | Articles |
Author | Schröder, Winfried |
Title | 'Concordia Res Parvae Crescunt' |
Subtitle | The Context of Seventeenth-Century Dutch Radicalism |
Title of magazine / anthology | The Dutch Legacy : Radical Thinkers of the 17th Century and the Enlightenment |
Editor (surname first) | Lavaert, Sonja ; Schröder, Winfried (Hrsg./Eds.) |
Place published | Leiden [e.a.] |
Publisher | Brill |
Year | 2017 |
Pages | [16]-34 |
Pages in total (of the volume) | VI, 260 |
Contains bibliography | 30-34 |
Mention of Spinoza | durchgehend/throughout |
Language | English |
Thematic areas | Anthropology / psychology / doctrine of affections / body and mind, Philosophy of politics and law, Theology / biblical hermeneutics / philosophy of religion, Contemporaries and context |
Subject | E, TP |
Subject (individuals) | Koerbagh, Adriaan ; Meyer [Meijer], Lodewijk |
Autopsy | yes |
Complete bibliographic evaluation | yes |
German commentary | "... the first emergence of the Dutch Radical Enlightenment can be situated in the city of Amsterdam during the decade stretching from Spinoza's ban from the Jewish community in 1656 to the anonymous appearence of Lodewijk Meyer's 'Philosophia S. Scripturae Interpres' in 1666. By them all the relevant characters in Spinoza's 'circle' had made their mark." (p. 16) |
English commentary | "... the first emergence of the Dutch Radical Enlightenment can be situated in the city of Amsterdam during the decade stretching from Spinoza's ban from the Jewish community in 1656 to the anonymous appearence of Lodewijk Meyer's 'Philosophia S. Scripturae Interpres' in 1666. By them all the relevant characters in Spinoza's 'circle' had made their mark." (p. 16) |
Link to this page | http://spinoza.hab.de/detail.php?id=18865&LANG=EN |
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