Spinoza’s Place in Twentieth Century Anglo-American Philosophy
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21827/jss.3.1.41839Keywords:
Spinoza, Spinoza reception, British Idealism, Santayana, Russell, Hampshire, CurleyAbstract
This paper began as an address at the 100th anniversary celebration of the Vereniging het Spinozahuis in Amsterdam in 1997. I trace the highlights of Spinoza reception and scholarship in the Anglo-American philosophical community from the late nineteenth to the late twentieth century. Beginning with the British Idealists’ enthusiasm for Spinoza as a systematic metaphysician, I move through the indifference of the (anti-metaphysical) positivists to the renewal of interest among more naturalistically-minded analytical philosophers in the second half of the twentieth century. Along the way there are brief discussions of a few individual thinkers who engaged with Spinoza in especially interesting or influential ways, such as Caird, Santayana, Russell, Wolfson, Hampshire, and Curley.
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Copyright (c) 2024 J. Thomas Cook
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