Spinoza and Rational Pantheism: Deus sive Natura, Monism, and Conatus

There is a philosopher who, writing in Latin in a small house in The Hague in the seventeenth century, formulated one of the most radical worldviews Western philosophy has ever produced — and did so in the unlikely form of a treatise of geometry. That philosopher is Baruch (Bento) Spinoza (1632–1677), and the treatise is the Ethics demonstrated in geometrical order, published posthumously in the year of his death. In a little over two hundred pages, organized into definitions, axioms, propositions, and demonstrations, Spinoza proposes simultaneously a metaphysics of the absolute, a theory of human affects, a psychology of knowledge, and an ethics of freedom. His influence runs across three centuries — Lessing, Goethe, Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, Deleuze, Antonio Damasio — and his name still functions, in the history of philosophy, as a cipher for an intellectual decision: thinking God, nature, and the human being as expressions of a single reality. ...

21 May 2026 · 11 min · Resumidor de Filosofia

Baruch Spinoza (Benedict of Spinoza)

Baruch Spinoza (Benedict of Spinoza) Born in Amsterdam in 1632, into a family of Sephardic Jews of Portuguese origin who had fled the Inquisition, Baruch Spinoza received a rabbinic education, but his ideas soon put him on a collision course with the community: in 1656 he was subjected to a herem (excommunication) of rare severity. He declined chairs and honors to preserve his independence of thought and supported himself humbly by grinding optical lenses. He died young, in 1677, and his principal works — among them the Ethics — were published only after his death. He is regarded as the most radical of the seventeenth-century rationalists. ...

1 January 2026 · 3 min · Resumidor de Filosofia

Giordano Bruno

Giordano Bruno Born in Nola, near Naples, in 1548, Giordano Bruno was a Dominican friar, but, accused of heresy, he abandoned the habit while still young and began a wandering life that took him through Geneva, Paris, London, Germany, and Prague, teaching cosmology, the art of memory, and his own daring ideas. Back in Italy, he was arrested by the Inquisition, held in prison for eight years and, refusing to recant, burned alive in Rome, in the Campo de’ Fiori, on 17 February 1600. He has since become a symbol of freedom of thought in the face of dogma. ...

1 January 2026 · 2 min · Resumidor de Filosofia
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