Brings Spinoza’s philosophy into engagement with contemporary debates on climate change.
Central to Genevieve Lloyd’s approach is a fresh look at Spinoza’s critique of what he regards as Descartes’ flawed way of imagining the nature and status of human thought in relation to the rest of Nature. Lloyd argues that the influence of the Cartesian model lingers in the contemporary collective imagination. She challenges a common way of reading the Ethics, which reflects and reinforces the figure of Spinoza as a ‘rationalist’ — committed to the superiority and dominance of Reason within human minds. By offering a more nuanced account of Spinoza’s version of Reason, Lloyd brings his philosophy to bear on a range of familiar, but largely unexamined attitudes, which connect the supposed supremacy of Reason within the human mind to humanity’s supposed supremacy within Nature.
Arvustused
Over many years, and across several publications, Genevieve Lloyd has demonstrated that Spinozas thought is not a mere historical curiosity, but offers crucial resources to comprehend our contemporary predicament and to engage with the world around us. Reading Spinoza in the Anthropocene is a brilliant effort to think through the major challenges faced by humanity duty from the perspective of Spinozas radical philosophy. A must read for Spinoza scholars and anyone who cares about the fate of humanity today. * Dimitris Vardoulakis, author of Spinoza, the Epicurean * The originality of [ Lloyd's] approach here consists in emphasizing the "epistemological" aspects of the ecological problem, the purpose of the book being to examine the singular status of reason in Spinoza. -- Mathieu Le Pors * Archives de philosophie *
Spinoza Texts and Abbreviations
Introduction: Spinoza in a Contemporary Context
God and Nature
Embodied Knowing
The Whole Mind
The Power of the Human Mind
Beyond Reason
Alternative Interpretations
Rethinking the Present
Imagining the Future
Concluding Remarks: Descartes and Spinoza
Bibliography
Genevieve Lloyd is Emeritus Professor in Philosophy at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia and a fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities. Her main research areas have been in History of Philosophy, Philosophy and Literature and Feminist Philosophy. She is the author of Reclaiming Wonder: After the Sublime (Edinburgh University Press, 2018), Enlightenment Shadows (Oxford University Press, 2013), Providence Lost (Harvard University Press, 2008), Collective Imaginings(Routledge, 1999), Spinoza and the Ethics (Routledge, 1996), Part of Nature (Cornell University Press, 1994), Being in Time (Routledge, 1993) and The Man of Reason (2nd edn) (Routledge,1993).