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Spinoza

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Title: Spinoza


1
Spinoza
  • PHI 185

2
Substance
  • A technical term in metaphysics
  • A logical subject referred to in judgments
  • The bearer of properties
  • Persists through changes
  • An independent thing
  • Something indestructable

3
Descartes Substance
  • Does not apply univocally to God and his
    creatures.
  • By substance we can understand nothing other
    than a thing which exists in such a way as to
    depend on no other thing for its existence.
    (Principles I, 51)
  • Only one depends on no otherGod.

4
Descartes Substance
  • In the case of all other substances, we perceive
    that they exist only with the help of Gods
    concurrence. (Principles I, 51)
  • In the case of created things, some are of such
    a nature that they cannot exist without other
    things, while some need only the ordinary
    concurrence of God in order to exist.
  • Former are substances latter are qualities

5
Descartes Substance
  • The term substance applies univocally to mind
    and body
  • Corporeal substance and created thinking
    substance need only the concurrence of God to
    exist.
  • We come to know a substance through its attributes

6
Questions for Descartes
  • What is the relation between God and created
    substances?
  • God is a thinking substance, but not extended.
  • How does God interact with the corporeal world?
  • In what sense is God omnipresent but not extended?

7
Questions for Descartes
  • What is the relation between corporeal substance
    and created thinking substance?
  • Immaterial things have no mass, location,
    surface, size.
  • How could an immaterial thing interact with a
    material thing?

8
Spinoza and Substance
  • How does Spinoza understand the relation between
    God and creations?
  • How does Spinoza understand the relation between
    mind and body?

9
Method
  • Both Descartes and Spinoza interested in the
    improvement of the intellect.
  • Both Descartes and Spinoza reduce certainty to
    that found in logical necessity.
  • Both Descartes and Spinoza emphasize the
    Geometric method
  • Meditations synthetic presentation
  • Ethics analytic presentation

10
Method
  • Descartes reduces our beliefs to certainty
    through the method of doubt
  • Spinoza starts with axioms and definition and
    deduces the rest of the theory.

11
Rationality
  • Descartes God is a rational thinking substance
    and God
  • Creates the world to be rationally ordered
  • Creates rational minds with intellectual
    abilities to come to understand the world
  • Spinoza How do we explain Gods intentions? Why
    this world and not some other?

12
Definitions
  • Self-caused
  • Finite in its own kind
  • Substance
  • Attribute
  • Mode
  • God
  • Free
  • Eternity

13
Axioms
  • a1. in themselves or in something else.
  • a2. conceived in themselves or through something
    else.
  • a3. Cause and effect
  • a4. Knowledge of an effect
  • a5. not understood through each other
  • a6. A true idea
  • a7. Essence and existence

14
There Is At Least One Substance
  • Suppose God does not exist. (assumption)
  • If a thing can be conceived as not existing its
    essence does not involve existence. (a7)
  • So, Gods essence does not include existence.
  • Existence belongs to the nature of substance.
    (p7)
  • So, Gods essence does not include existence.
  • (3) contradicts (5) and assumption (1) is false.
  • So, God necessarily exists. (p11)

15
There Is At Most One Substance
  • If God exists, then God has infinite (i.e.,
    every) attribute. (d6)
  • God necessarily exists. (p11)
  • No two substances can have the same attributes.
    (p5)
  • So, there can be no other substance but God. (p14)

16
p4 Required for p5
  • All things are either in themselves or in
    something else. (a1)
  • Those which are in themselves are substances.
    (d3)
  • Those which are in something else are affections
    of substances. (d5)
  • So, all things are either substances or
    affections of substance.
  • So, the only way to distinguish things is by
    attribute or affection.
  • So, two or more things are distinguished from one
    another either (a) by difference of attributes or
    (b) by difference of affections. (p4)

17
Argument for p5
  • Distinct things are distinguished either by
    attribute or affection. (p4)
  • Difference in attribute is irrelevant to p5.
    (Could two substances have the same attribute?)
  • Suppose two substance have same attribute and
    different affections.
  • A substance is that which is in itself and is
    conceived through itself. (d3)
  • A true idea must agree with its object. (a6)
  • So, substance must be considered apart from their
    affections.
  • Then the substances have the same nature and are
    indistinguishable.
  • Then there cannot be two substances.
  • But (9) contradicts (3) and assumption (3) is
    false.
  • So, no two substances can have the same
    attribute. (p5)

18
Could Two Substances Have the Same Attribute?
  • Consider two substances.
  • If they have the same attributes and same
    affections, there arent really two, but one
    substance.
  • If they have the same attributes and different
    affections, then there is no necessary difference
    between them and there arent really two, but one
    substance.

19
Only One substance?
  • To say that God is absolutely infinite (d6) is to
    say that God is without limits.
  • Another substance with the same attribute would
    be indistinguishable from God, even if it had
    different affections.
  • Another substance with different attributes would
    limit God.
  • So there couldnt be another substance.

20
Two Traditional Arguments
  • The Causal Argument for Gods existence
  • There must have been a first cause, i.e., God
  • But if God can have no beginning or cause why
    couldnt the universe?
  • What could a first (uncaused) event be like? Was
    it motivated? How do we understand the
    psychology of a creator who acts to create
    something?

21
Two Traditional Arguments
  • The Contingency Argument for Gods existence
  • There must be an ultimate explanation sufficient
    for the state of the universe right now.
  • That explanation must itself be self-explanatory
    and also serve to explain everything else.

22
Two Traditional Arguments
  • The Contingency Argument for Gods existence
  • Principle of Sufficient Reason for every fact
    there is a sufficient explanation
    (self-explanatory and necessary, or explained by
    something else and contingent).

23
Spinozas View
  • As in the Contingency Argument the ultimate
    explanation is God
  • A necessary being
  • A self-explanatory being
  • Everything depends (logically, not
    psychologically or causally) on God
  • What depends on God is also necessary

24
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25
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26
God and the World
  • Whatever is, is in God, and nothing can be or be
    conceived without God. (p15)
  • Particular things are nothing but affections of
    the attributes of God. (p25c)

27
Gods Relation to the World
  • God acts solely from the laws of his own nature,
    constrained by none. (p17)
  • God is the immanent, not the transitive, cause of
    all things. (p18)

28
Necessity
  • Nothing in nature is contingent, but all things
    are from the necessity of the divine nature
    determined to exist and to act in a definite way.
    (p29)
  • Things could not have been produced by God in any
    other way or in any other order than is the case.
    (p33)

29
Free Will
  • God alone is a free cause. For God alone exists
    solely from the necessity of his own nature.
    (p17c2)
  • Will cannot be called a free cause, but only a
    necessary cause. (p32)

30
God and Nature
  • God is not a personal being.
  • God does not act through intentions or for
    reasons.
  • There are no final causes.

31
Questions for Descartes
  • What is the relation between God and created
    substances?
  • God is a thinking substance, but not extended.
  • How does God interact with the corporeal world?
  • In what sense is God omnipresent but not
    extended?
  • How does Spinoza understand the relation between
    God and creations?

32
Rationality
  • Descartes God is a rational thinking substance
    and God
  • Creates the world to be rationally ordered
  • Creates rational minds with intellectual
    abilities to come to understand the world
  • Spinoza How do we explain Gods intentions? Why
    this world and not some other?

33
DescartesDualism
  • Material things
  • Extension is the attribute or essence
  • Can imagine/understand a material object without
    thinking
  • Divisible
  • Can explain every physical property in terms of
    smaller extended parts
  • Impact mechanics no attractive forces

34
DescartesDualism
  • Mind
  • Thinking is the attribute or essence
  • Can imagine/understand a mind without extension

35
DescartesDualism
  • What is the relation between corporeal substance
    and created thinking substance?
  • Not like a sailor in a ship
  • A commingling
  • A minds special relationship with one body
  • I and my body constitute one single thing.

36
DescartesDualism
  • What is the relation between corporeal substance
    and created thinking substance?
  • Immaterial things have no mass, location,
    surface, size.
  • How could an immaterial thing interact with a
    material thing?
  • The pineal gland and animal spirits

37
Spinoza
  • One substance with infinite attributes
  • Mind and body are attributes of the one substance
  • Conceptually distinct attributes
  • Two ways to understand the same thing

38
Mind and Body
  • Body - a mode that expresses in a definite and
    determinate way Gods essence insofar as he is
    considered as an extended thing. (IId1)
  • Idea - a conception of the Mind which the Mind
    forms because it is a thinking thing. (IId3)

39
Parallelism
  • The order and connection of ideas is the same as
    the order and connection of things. (IIp7)
  • For every idea there is an object.
  • For every object there is an idea.
  • Is there a one-to-one correspondence?

40
Mind and Body
  • Ideas are representations
  • That which constitutes the actual being of the
    human mind is basically nothing else but the idea
    of an individual actually existing thing. (IIp11)
  • The object of the idea constituting the human
    mind is the body (IIp13)

41
Double Aspect Theory
  • mind and body--are one and the same individual
    thing, conceived now under the attribute of
    Thought and now under the attribute of
    Extension. (IIp21s)

42
Beyond Parallelism
  • For every object there is an idea of that object.
  • Omniscience, no gaps in Gods knowledge
  • For every idea there is an object.
  • Infallibility, no errors in Gods thought

43
Dualism or Materialism?
  • Is Spinoza a conceptual dualist rather than a
    substance dualist?
  • Does Spinoza give priority to the material?
  • The essence of the mind is to represent the body.
  • More discussion of how mind reflects the
    affections of the body than of the opposite.
  • Greater priority to knowledge of the body.

44
Ethics
  • How could Spinoza both commit to determinism
    without free will and also attempt to formulate
    an ethical system?
  • Naturalism and Morality
  • Determinism and normativity
  • Can psychology and biology (etc.) explain
    morality?

45
Descartes
  • Controlling the passions by reason
  • Avoid misuse find usefulness of passions
  • Contentment of mind and inner satisfaction the
    Stoic goal by which we should guide our conduct.
  • What about ones relationship with others, with
    society?

46
Hobbes
  • Self-interest (egoism) and people in the state of
    nature
  • The good is what we desire Whatsoever is
    voluntarily done, is done for the good to him
    that wills it.

47
Hobbes
  • Mans natural condition is like war the notions
    of right and wrong, justice and injustice have no
    place.
  • Self-interest (self-preservation) motivates one
    to subordinate individual desires to those of
    society (social contract).

48
Spinoza Conatus
  • The striving for self-preservation found in all
    nature
  • Each thing, as far as it can by its own power,
    strives to persevere in its being. (IIIp6)
  • Compare with a tendency of bodies to remain in
    state of rest or uniform motion (Descartes)
  • Compare with Hobbes natural striving for
    self-preservation

49
The Good
  • we neither strive for, nor will, neither want
    nor desire, anything because we judge it to be
    good on the contrary, we judge something to be
    good because we strive for it, will it, want it,
    desire it. (IIIp9s)
  • The subjectivity of good and evil

50
Shift to Objectivity
  • Perfection originally meant finished according
    to a plan
  • but there is no maker or plan
  • still we must retain these words. Forwe desire
    to form an idea of man, as a model of human
    nature, which we may look to.
  • Good known means to approach model
  • Evil known means preventing us

51
Acting from Ones Essence
  • Joy increase in perfection or the capacity to
    be active
  • Sadness decrease in perfection or the capacity
    to be active
  • Free to the degree one is determined to action by
    its own nature.
  • Bondage is mans lack of power to moderate and
    restrain the affects.

52
Virtue
  • By virtue and power I understand the same thing,
    i.e., virtue, insofar as it is related to man, is
    the very essence, or nature, of man, insofar as
    he has the power of bringing about certain
    things, which can be understood through the laws
    of his nature alone. (IVd8)

53
Knowledge of God/Nature
  • The Greatest Good Knowledge and Love of God
  • We shall determine, by the minds knowledge
    alone, the remedies for the affects. (V preface)

54
Knowledge as Therapy
  • Knowledge shows us how little we know about what
    affected us.
  • Knowledge shows us the necessity of all things.

55
Exam 1
  • Write a two page essay for (each of) two of the
    following
  • In what ways (what concepts, issues, methods,
    assumptions) can we say that Spinozas views are
    extensions of Descartes?
  • Compare the philosophical role that God plays in
    both Descartes and Spinozas thought.
  • What does each philosopher take substance to be
    and how does that concept figure into their
    theories about the mind and the physical world.
  • What common views do the two philosophers
    maintain about the nature and scope of knowledge?
  • Demonstrate your understanding the relevant
    issues, arguments, objections, and positions that
    we discussed in class.
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