Literature type | Articles |
Author | Nadler, Steven |
Title | Benedictus Pantheissimus |
Title of magazine / anthology | Insiders and Outsiders in Seventeenth-Century Philosophy |
Editor (surname first) | Rogers, G. A. J. ; Sorell, Tom ; Kraye, Jill (Hrsg./eds.) |
Place published | New York [e.a.] |
Publisher | Routledge |
Year | 2010 |
Pages | [238]-256 |
Pages in total (of the volume) | VI, (I), 325 |
Series ; volume | Routledge Studies in Seventeenth-Century Philosophy ; 12 |
Language | English |
Thematic areas | Metaphysics / ontology, Theology / biblical hermeneutics / philosophy of religion, Reception history |
Subject | E, TTP |
Subject (individuals) | mehrere/several |
Autopsy | yes |
Complete bibliographic evaluation | yes |
German commentary |
Das Spinoza-Bild im 17. Jahrhundert als Atheist, im 18. Jahrhundert als Pantheist, über die Begriffsbestimmung von 'Pantheismus', Spinozas Bstimmung des Verhältnisses Gott-Welt. "Spinoza did not elevate nature into the divine. On the contrary, he reduced the divine to nature - he naturalized God - in the hope of diminishing the power of the passions and superstitious beliefs to which the traditional and even untraditional conceptions of God give rise." (p. 253) |
English commentary |
The picture of Spinoza as an atheist in the 17th century, as a pantheist in the 18th century, on the definition of 'pantheisms', Spinoza's notion of the relation God-world. "Spinoza did not elevate nature into the divine. On the contrary, he reduced the divine to nature - he naturalized God - in the hope of diminishing the power of the passions and superstitious beliefs to which the traditional and even untraditional conceptions of God give rise." (p. 253) |
Link to this page | http://spinoza.hab.de/detail.php?id=21017&LANG=EN |
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