
Think Least of Death
Spinoza on How to Live and How to Die
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Narrated by:
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Christopher Douyard
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By:
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Steven Nadler
About this listen
In 1656, after being excommunicated from Amsterdam's Portuguese-Jewish community for "abominable heresies" and "monstrous deeds", the young Baruch Spinoza abandoned his family's import business to dedicate his life to philosophy. He quickly became notorious across Europe for his views on God, the Bible, and miracles, as well as for his uncompromising defense of free thought. Yet the radicalism of Spinoza's views has long obscured that his primary reason for turning to philosophy was to answer one of humanity's most urgent questions: How can we lead a good life and enjoy happiness in a world without a providential God? In Think Least of Death, Steven Nadler connects Spinoza's ideas with his life and times to offer a compelling account of how the philosopher can provide a guide to living one's best life.
In the Ethics, Spinoza presents his vision of the ideal human being, the "free person" who, motivated by reason, lives a life of joy devoted to what is most important-improving oneself and others. Untroubled by passions such as hate, greed, and envy, free people treat others with benevolence, justice, and charity. Focusing on the rewards of goodness, they enjoy the pleasures of this world, but in moderation. "The free person thinks least of all of death", Spinoza writes, "and his wisdom is a meditation not on death but on life."
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- Length: 10 hrs and 7 mins
- Unabridged
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Vividly written, The Infidel and the Professor is a compelling account of a great friendship of two towering Enlightenment thinkers that had great consequences for modern thought. David Hume is widely regarded as the most important philosopher ever to write in English, but during his lifetime, he was attacked as "the Great Infidel" for his skeptical religious views and deemed unfit to teach the young. In contrast, Adam Smith was a revered professor of moral philosophy and is now often hailed as the founding father of capitalism.
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a thoroughly enjoyable account of friendship
- By henryj on 02-21-20
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5 Lessons from Spinoza
- By: Oswald Sobrino
- Narrated by: Virtual Voice
- Length: 1 hr and 13 mins
- Unabridged
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Baruch de Spinoza (also known as Benedict or Bento de Spinoza;1632-1677) is a titan of philosophy who drew on his Sephardic Jewish background and on his education in the classics and in philosophy at the hands of an ex-Jesuit. He grew up speaking Portuguese in Amsterdam but was educated in Spanish and Hebrew. A quiet, calm man, Spinoza nevertheless angered the theological authorities of his Sephardic community of Portuguese and Spanish Jews. The result was a harsh decree of excommunication. Many consider his greatest work to be his Ethics (1677), published posthumously. In this work, he ...
By: Oswald Sobrino
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Bugsy Siegel
- The Dark Side of the American Dream (Jewish Lives Series)
- By: Michael Shnayerson
- Narrated by: Steven Jay Cohen
- Length: 7 hrs and 12 mins
- Unabridged
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In a brief life that led to a violent end, Benjamin "Bugsy" Siegel (1906-1947) rose from desperate poverty to ill-gotten riches, from an early-20th-century family of Ukrainian Jewish immigrants on the Lower East Side to a kingdom of his own making in Las Vegas. In this captivating portrait, author Michael Shnayerson sets out not to absolve Bugsy Siegel but rather to understand him in all his complexity.
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Strange Memorial
- By Gordon A. Raley on 09-16-21
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The Courtier and the Heretic
- Leibniz, Spinoza, and the Fate of God in the Modern World
- By: Matthew Stewart
- Narrated by: Graham Rowat
- Length: 13 hrs and 3 mins
- Unabridged
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Once upon a time, philosophy was a dangerous business-and for no one more so than for Baruch Spinoza, the seventeenth-century philosopher vilified by theologians and political authorities everywhere as "the atheist Jew." As his inflammatory manuscripts circulated underground, Spinoza lived a humble existence in The Hague, grinding optical lenses to make ends meet. Meanwhile, in the glittering salons of Paris, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz was climbing the ladder of courtly success.
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A Fascinating and Surprisingly Comprehensive Work
- By Gus on 03-15-24
By: Matthew Stewart
What listeners say about Think Least of Death
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- Buyer of things
- 03-07-23
Fantastic
Great book. Great reading. A meaningful philosophy that anyone can learn from. It is good.
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- M.Biblioswine
- 10-16-21
Amazing
This book is amazing. I have no criticisms of the book or of the performance.
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4 people found this helpful
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- Alex Hale
- 01-07-25
Circular and antiquated
For his time, Spinoza was a philosophical genius, but his determinism is circular and contradictory. For his time, it makes sense to have that view in reaction to a religious culture of guilt where scientific and psychological reasoning hadn’t become ubiquitous even among educated people, so to take his ideas and apply them as if his philosophy hadn’t been improved on is like saying Newton would deny Quantum Theory. If he’d lived longer, I think the idea of freedom would have developed beyond determinism. The author shoehorns the philosophy into modern neo-spinozistic interpretation without accounting for temporal context. At one point he tries to critique Spinoza’s views of women as they relate to access of freedom, but that also is contradictory to a deterministic view of the will—where would the impetus for equality come from without it, especially if in his time it was apparently not true based on observation. The philosophy was good for its time, even vital, but outdated by any viewpoint not desperately trying to invalidate personal responsibility.
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- John C
- 10-07-24
Superficial introduction
Nadler thinks he can skip over the metaphysics of parts 1 and 2 of The Ethics. He has emasculated Spinoza's whole vision, made it sound conventional. Hence this overview concludes with a lot of normative moral exhortation -- preaching about being rational, rather than addressing the individual's natural drive to realize his or her unique self. It is also telling that the conclusion makes Spinoza and Kant sound comparable, even similar. That misses the superiority of a shrewd psychologist like Spinoza to a moralist of duty like Kant. Quite misleading, if still edifying for the common reader.
The Ethics astonished profound thinkers like Goethe, Nietzsche, and Jacques Lacan. On Nadler's reading, one cannot imagine how that could have been so.
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