FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   >>  
ought he had--but of His infinite attributes and their modes--which Spinoza recognized that he had not--he declared that love toward God was the very highest good. And it was supremely blessed in this, that it could engender no jealousy nor selfishness, nor sectarian zeal, but rather a large-hearted charity which would gather all mankind into the present heaven of that love. FOOTNOTES: [Footnote 15: It is not within the scope of the present essay to give a life of Barach (or Benedict) de Spinoza. But for the sake of those to whom the work of Sir Frederick Pollock is not easily accessible, the following particulars may be given. Spinoza was born in Amsterdam, November, 1632, of a fairly prosperous Jewish family, originally from Portugal. He received thorough instruction in the language and literature of the Hebrews, and in addition became a good Latin scholar, so far as to write and correspond in that language. He was early interested in philosophy, and especially attracted for a time by the writings of Descartes. By the time he was twenty-three years old he was suspected of heresy, and in his twenty-fourth year (1655) was cut off from the Synagogue with a frightful curse. His family disowned him, and for his maintenance he turned to the polishing of lenses, a trade already learned in accordance with the Jewish custom that every boy must have a handicraft. What he earned would hardly be considered a "living wage" in these days. But according to Colerus, his first biographer, who enquired of the householders with whom Spinoza lodged, his day's maintenance of often cost no more than 4-1/2_d_. Various incidents proved his total indifference to money, except as far as needed to "provide things honest in the sight of all men." Though of an amiable and sociable disposition he lived a solitary life, while not indisposed to kindly talk with his humbler neighbours. He had some of the greatest scholars of the day among his correspondents. He published but little during his life, leaving his greatest work as a legacy to the world on his early death, at the Hague, from consumption, in 1677.] [Footnote 16: "It is to be observed that, inasmuch as Attribute is defined by reference to intellect, and Thought itself is an attribute, Thought appears to be in a manner, counted twice over."--_Spinoza: His Life and Philosophy_, by Sir Frederick Pollock. Second edition, 1899, p. 153.] [Footnote 17: It is of course true that Spinoza con
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   >>  



Top keywords:

Spinoza

 
Footnote
 

maintenance

 
present
 

Jewish

 

language

 
twenty
 

Pollock

 

greatest

 

family


Frederick

 
Thought
 

incidents

 

indifference

 

needed

 

provide

 

edition

 
Various
 

proved

 

living


considered

 

earned

 

handicraft

 

householders

 

lodged

 
things
 
enquired
 

Colerus

 
biographer
 

leaving


intellect
 

legacy

 

published

 

correspondents

 
attribute
 

scholars

 

consumption

 

observed

 
reference
 

defined


Attribute

 
appears
 

amiable

 

sociable

 

disposition

 
Philosophy
 

Second

 
Though
 

solitary

 

neighbours