Translated by W.H.White
and A.K.Stirling with an Introduction by Don Garrett
Benedict de Spinoza lived a life of blameless simplicity as a lens-grinder
in Holland. And yet in his lifetime he was expelled from the Jewish
community in Amsterdam as a heretic, and after his death his works
were first banned by the christian authorities as atheistic, then hailed
by humanists as the gospel of Pantheism. His Ethics Demonstrated in
Geometrical Order shows us the reality behind this enigmatic figure.
First published by his friends after his premature death at the age
of forty-four, the Ethics uses the methods of Euclid to describe a
single entity, properly called both 'God' and 'Nature', of which mind
and matter are two manifestations. From this follow, in ways that are
strikingly modern, the identity of mind and body, the necessary causation
of events and actions, and the illusory nature of free will.