ABSTRACT

Published in 1999, this study focuses on the work of absolute idealist readers of Spinoza's metaphysics, such as John Clark Murray and Leslie Armour. The text is intended to establish a better absolute idealist interpretation of the identity of Spinoza's one substance (reality) with each of its diversity of "attributes". Consideration is given to the interpretations developed by these earlier commentators, who read the attributes as one metaphysical being diversely interpreted. The author finds this disadvantageous in understanding the "parallelism" of the attributes, or Spinoza's doctrine that the same order and connection of things is found in each. This problem can be solved with an alternative absolute idealist reading of the attributes as one order diversely intuited.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part I|42 pages

The Identity and Diversity of the Attributes

chapter 1|11 pages

The Uniqueness of Substance

chapter 2|13 pages

The Identity of Substance and Attribute

chapter 3|14 pages

The Diversity of the Attributes

part II|38 pages

The Perspectival Theory of the Attributes and the Absolute Idealist Spinoza

part III|35 pages

The Intuitionist Theory

chapter 6|9 pages

Conceptual Independence

chapter 7|12 pages

Thought and Its Object in Extension

chapter 8|11 pages

The One and the Many