Literature type | Monographs |
Author | Kors, Alan Charles |
Title | Naturalism and Unblelief in France, 1650-1729 |
Place published | Cambridge |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Year | 2016 |
Pages in total (of the volume) | (VII), 328 |
Contains bibliography | [289]-309 |
Mention of Spinoza | 2. Reading the Ancients and Reading Spinoza: 48-101 (Spinoza: 69-101) ; ferner/further: 3, 121, 122,123, 142, 152, 164, 165, 167, 168, 172, 183, 199-200, 201, 201-209, 271, 288 |
Language | English |
Thematic areas | Metaphysics / ontology, Theology / biblical hermeneutics / philosophy of religion, Reception history |
Subject | E, TTP |
Subject (individuals) | Bayle, Pierre und zahlreiche englische, französische und deutsche Autoren der Folgezeit / and numerous English, French and German authors of the time |
Autopsy | yes |
Complete bibliographic evaluation | no |
German commentary |
" My interest here ... is purely ... historical, and ... yet further limited to his relationship to the problem of naturalism as part of the inheritance and debates of early-modern French learned culture." (P. 69) "Once his complete metaphysics of infinite being was established, ... Spinoza 'indirectly' affected the intellectual life of France profoundly." (p. 75) |
English commentary |
" My interest here ... is purely ... historical, and ... yet further limited to his relationship to the problem of naturalism as part of the inheritance and debates of early-modern French learned culture." (P. 69) "Once his complete metaphysics of infinite being was established, ... Spinoza 'indirectly' affected the intellectual life of France profoundly." (p. 75) |
Link to this page | http://spinoza.hab.de/detail.php?id=21394&LANG=EN |
Have you discovered inaccurate information?