Stewart, Matthew

Courtier and the heretic : Leibniz, Spinoza, and the fate of God in the modern world - New Haven : Yale University Press, 2007 - 351 p. ; 22 cm

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Philosophy in the late seventeenth century was a dangerous business. No careerist could afford to side with the reclusive philosopher and "atheist Jew" Spinoza. Yet the ambitious young genius Leibniz became obsessed with Spinoza's writings, wrote him clandestine letters, and ultimately called on Spinoza in person at his home in The Hague. Both men were at the center of the intense religious, political, and personal battles that gave birth to the modern age. One was a hermit with many friends; the other, a socialite no one trusted. One believed in a God whom almost nobody thought divine; the other defended a God in whom he probably did not believe. They would come to represent radically different approaches to the challenges of the modern era. In this philosophical romance of attraction and repulsion, greed and virtue, religion and heresy, Matthew Stewart dramatizes a contest of ideas that continues today.

9780300125078


Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm, 1646-1716
Spinoza, Benedictus de, 1632-1677
God
History of doctrines
Philosophers, Netherlands
Biography
Calculating machine
Colerus
Determinism
Egypt plan
Brunswick genealogy
Personality, character
Mining operations
Newton, Isac
Nature
Occasionalism
Protestantism
Royal Society, London
Sensual pleasure
Death, funeral
Oldenburg
Social life, friendships
Substance
Windmill invention

211 / STE

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