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Inquiry
An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy
Volume 12, 1969 - Issue 1-4
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Original Articles

Basic concepts in Spinoza's social psychology

Pages 105-132 | Published online: 29 Aug 2008
 

Spinoza's philosophical anthropology is reconstructed with a view to its relevance to theoretical and practical problems in social psychology. An attempt is made to show how he conceives the interrelations between cognitions, sentiments (i.e. emotions and attitudes), and interests (i.e. drives and desires) as relational concepts and as anchored in social interaction rather than in a purely individualistic conception of man. Spinoza's determinism is interpreted as a personal and social causation, rather than a physical, causal determinism, and his theory of cognition is interpreted partly in relation to the Hegelian distinction between undialectical and dialectical thinking.

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