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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10012/4051

Title: The Episodic Nature of "Blessedness" in Spinoza's Ethics
Authors: Griem, Dennis
Keywords: Spinoza's Ethics
Spinoza's Ethics Part 5
Jonathan Bennett
Edwin Curley
The third kind of knowledge
The intellectual love of God
The eternity of the mind
Virtue and Power in Spinoza
Approved Date: 26-Sep-2008
Date Submitted: 23-Sep-2008
Abstract: The final chapter of Spinoza’s Ethics has elicited numerous interpretations, and in this work, I discuss Jonathan Bennett’s and Harry Wolfson’s. Bennett claims that the doctrine of blessedness is unintelligible, while Wolfson claims that Spinoza’s account of blessedness actually defends traditional, medieval views of the immortality of the soul. I find neither of these acceptable accounts for the reasons presented below, and I have a simple alternative explanation for this doctrine. Essentially, I argue that by ‘blessedness’ Spinoza means being happy with being virtuous. In my reading of the Ethics, Spinoza first offers the account that we should help others in order to help ourselves, and then he explains that we should enjoy doing so, and he writes that being happy with this is called ‘blessedness.’
Program: Philosophy
Department: Philosophy
Degree: Master of Arts
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10012/4051
Appears in Collections:Faculty of Arts Theses and Dissertations
Electronic Theses and Dissertations (UW)

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