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Spinoza : The Ethics of an Outlaw

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Spinoza is among the most controversial and asymmetrical thinkers in the tradition and history of modern European philosophy. Since the 17th century, his work has aroused some of the fiercest and most intense polemics in the discipline. From his expulsion from the synagogue and onwards, Spinoza has never ceased to embody the secular, heretical and self-loathing Jew. Ivan Segre, a philosopher and celebrated scholar of the Talmud, discloses the conservative underpinnings that have animated Spinoza's numerable critics and antagonists.

Through a close reading of Leo Strauss and several contemporary Jewish thinkers, such as Jean-Claude Milner and Benny Levy (Sartre's last secretary), Spinoza: the Ethics of an Outlaw aptly delineates the common cause of Spinoza's contemporary censors: an explicit hatred of reason and its emancipatory potential. Spinoza's radical heresy lies in his rejection of any and all blind adherence to Biblical Law, and in his plea for the freedom and autonomy of thought. Segre reclaims Spinoza as a faithful interpreter of the revolutionary potential contained within the Old Testament.

Author: Segre Ivan
Publisher: BLOOMSBURY
Pages: 192
ISBN: 9781350016613
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2017

Translator's Note
Prologue
Part One: Election, Hatred, and The Philosopher: Spinoza and "Bourgeois" Theorists
Introduction
1. Discourse on Method
2. The Song of the Sign
3. Kingship
4. On Contradiction
Part Two: The Bible Spinoza
Introduction
1. The At Judaei Manifesto
2. A 'Christ' without the Passion
3. The Origin of the Law
4. True Otherness
5. The Masquerade
6. The Tree of Knowledge

Epilogue
Apologue: The Spectre's Manifesto
Notes
Index

Ivan Segre is a doctor in philosophy and student of the Talmud who lives in Israel. He is the author of Qu'appelle-ton penser Auschwitz? (2009) and co-editor (with Alain Badiou and Eric Hazan) of Reflections on Anti-Semitism (2013).

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