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Spinoza et le Dr. Juan de Prado

Mouton (1959)

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  1. La potencia de los esclavos Conjetura sobre un silencio de Spinoza.Diego Tatián - 2018 - Co-herencia 15 (58):225-244.
    En una carta del 20 de julio de 1664 Spinoza le relata a su amigo Peter Balling un sueño con “cierto brasileño, negro y sarnoso”. Tal vez sea esa la única mención en la obra spinozista que refiere al Nuevo Mundo, donde Holanda poseía colonias. A partir de ese sueño, el presente trabajo inquiere sobre la coexistencia de las filosofías modernas de la libertad con la esclavitud real de miles de seres humanos en América, y en particular sobre el silencio (...)
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  • The Anti-Christ and the Anti-Moses: Nietzsche, Spinoza, and the Possibility of Sacrilegious Beatitude.Jeremy Fogel - 2018 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 10 (2):106-122.
    This paper explores similarities between the sacrilegious revaluations Nietzsche and Spinoza undertook with regards to Christianity and Judaism respectively. In both cases, these revaluations involve a devaluation of an ancestral religious tradition, followed by the infusion of alternative values posited through forms of secular salvation linked to immanent conceptions of eternity. Given the importance of the structural and phenomenological similarities the paper analyses, it is argued that if Nietzsche thought of himself as the Anti-Christ, there is a convincing case to (...)
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  • Spinoza: A Marrano of reason?Seymour Feldman - 1992 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 35 (1):37-53.
    In the first volume of his Spinoza and Other Heretics entitled The Marrano of Reason, Yovel proposes a different cultural context for the study of Spinoza: the Marrano mentalité. Living as crypto‐Jews in a Catholic Iberian world, the Marranos developed a certain life‐style that had specific religious and literary modes of expression: heterodox tendencies, the use of equivocation, and the zealous search for salvation, which often assumed secular forms. These Marrano traits are, Yovel claims, found in Spinoza as well, who (...)
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