Literatursorte | Monografien |
Verfasser | Taube, Mortimer |
Titel | Causation, Freedom amd Determinism |
Untertitel | An attempt to solve the causal problem through a study of the origins in seventeenth-century philosophy |
Verlagsort | London |
Verlag | Allen & Unwin |
Jahr | 1936 |
Umfang Seiten (des Bandes) | 264 |
Spinoza-Erwähnung | III. Science and determinism. Section 3. The argument for determinism in Spinoza: 59-75 ; ferner/further: 15, 20n, 30-32, 33, 36, 41, 86, 160-173, 176, 181, 221, 239-240, |
Sprache | englisch |
Sachgebiete | Metaphysik / Ontologie, Erkenntnistheorie / Methodologie / Philosophie des Geistes, Anthropologie / Psychologie / Affektenlehre / Körper und Geist |
Behandelte Werke Spinozas | E |
Andere Ausgaben / Auflagen / Übersetzungen | Erneut/again: 1938 // 2006 |
Autopsie | ja |
Vollständig bibliografisch ausgewertet | ja |
Kommentar deutsch |
"... if we suppose Spinoza to have meant by God either of the interpretations I reject, then we must also suppose that Spinoza did not deny freedom nor affirm determinism or necessary connection in any significant sense. The two interpetations which I reject are: (1) the notion that by God or Substance Spinoza meant the totality of existing things ; and (2) the notion that by God or Substance Spinoza meant the one reality of which all finite entities are delusive appearences." (S. 60) |
Kommentar englisch |
"... if we suppose Spinoza to have meant by God either of the interpretations I reject, then we must also suppose that Spinoza did not deny freedom nor affirm determinism or necessary connection in any significant sense. The two interpetations which I reject are: (1) the notion that by God or Substance Spinoza meant the totality of existing things ; and (2) the notion that by God or Substance Spinoza meant the one reality of which all finite entities are delusive appearences." (S. 60) |
Link zu dieser Seite | http://spinoza.hab.de/detail.php?id=18307 |
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