Spinoza Bibliography

Published by the Spinoza-Gesellschaft e.V. and directed by Manfred Walther

Quick Search

Search
Report bibliographic entry
Report bibliographic correction
Links
Contact
Imprint

Recent Entries > Detailed View (Table view)

Default view

Eintrag Nr. 19982
Literature type Articles
Author Scribano, Emanuela
Title Causalité de la raison et liberté selon Spinoza
Title of magazine / anthology Revue Philosophique de Louvain
Counting 107, 7
Year 2009
Pages 567-582
Language French
Thematic areas Metaphysics / ontology, Epistemology / methodology / philosophy of mind, Ethics
Subject E
Autopsy no
Complete bibliographic evaluation no
German commentary "Spinoza maintains that only God can properly be said to be free. Yet, Spinoza himself speaks of «free man», and devotes the last section of the Ethics to human freedom. In this article, I investigate the relationship between human freedom and that of God in Spinoza. Human and divine freedom are understood univocally only within speculative science, in which adequate ideas of the human mind are the same ideas God entertains. On the other hand, knowledge of moral values in regard to practical action always implies a certain degree of inadequate knowledge of things and of oneself. Hence, God does not share moral values. Human mind itself, when it achieves the eternal dimension of adequate knowledge, is beyond practical virtues." (absract)
English commentary "Spinoza maintains that only God can properly be said to be free. Yet, Spinoza himself speaks of «free man», and devotes the last section of the Ethics to human freedom. In this article, I investigate the relationship between human freedom and that of God in Spinoza. Human and divine freedom are understood univocally only within speculative science, in which adequate ideas of the human mind are the same ideas God entertains. On the other hand, knowledge of moral values in regard to practical action always implies a certain degree of inadequate knowledge of things and of oneself. Hence, God does not share moral values. Human mind itself, when it achieves the eternal dimension of adequate knowledge, is beyond practical virtues" (abstract)
Link to this page

Back

Have you discovered inaccurate information?

Report bibliographic correction / completion

Top of page Back to top of page