Literature type | Articles |
Author | Zaoui, Pierre |
Title | Spinoza |
Subtitle | Un autre salut par le corps? |
Title of magazine / anthology | Spinoza et le corps = Astérion : Philosophie, Histoire des Idees, Pensées Politique |
Counting | 3 |
Year | 2005 |
Pages | s.p. |
Contains summary in | English |
Language | French |
Thematic areas | Epistemology / methodology / philosophy of mind, Anthropology / psychology / doctrine of affections / body and mind |
Subject | E |
Autopsy | no |
Complete bibliographic evaluation | no |
German commentary | "One of the last proposals of Spinoza’s Ethica (the 39th of the fifth part) says this : «Who has a body able to the greatest number of acts, has a mind whom the greatest part is eternal». In relation with what was said about the unit of body and mind since the second part, that proposal seems obvious : who has a powerful body will get some affects suitable to the mind’s order, hence will get a mind as powerful, that is to say eternal. However, such a proposal becomes curious when it is analysed from the point of view of salvation which, in the Ethica, as Beatitude or third kind’s knowledge, follows a only intellectual way. Would it be un other kind of salvation, a salvation by the body, what Spinoza doesn’t describe but what would get a spinozistic meaning ? And if we answer positively, how to obtain such a salvation by changing his body’s acts before his mind ? Here is the mean question of this issue." (abstract). |
English commentary | "One of the last proposals of Spinoza’s Ethica (the 39th of the fifth part) says this : « Who has a body able to the greatest number of acts, has a mind whom the greatest part is eternal ». In relation with what was said about the unit of body and mind since the second part, that proposal seems obvious : who has a powerful body will get some affects suitable to the mind’s order, hence will get a mind as powerful, that is to say eternal. However, such a proposal becomes curious when it is analysed from the point of view of salvation which, in The Ethica, as Beatitude or third kind’s knowledge, follows a only intellectual way. Would it be un other kind of salvation, a salvation by the body, what Spinoza doesn’t describe but what would get a spinozistic meaning ? And if we answer positively, how to obtain such a salvation by changing his body’s acts before his mind ? Here is the mean question of this issue." (abstract) |
URL | http://https://journals.openedition.org/asterion/302 |
Link to this page | http://spinoza.hab.de/detail.php?id=19989&LANG=EN |
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