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46Dall'origine della superstizione all'origine del movimento: lo strano caso della confutazione tolandiana di SpinozaRivista di Storia Della Filosofia 68 (4): 645-671. 2013.
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138Locke and Spinoza on the epistemic and motivational weakness of reason: the Reasonableness of Christianity and the Theological-Political TreatiseIntellectual History Review 26 (4): 477-495. 2016.
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36L’imperativo dell’eterno come morale meta-nichilistica: note per una discussione su Alberto CaraccioloActa Philosophica 22 (2): 361-376. 2013.
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130Spinoza on Reason, Passions, and the Supreme GoodOxford University Press. 2019.Andrea Sangiacomo offers a new understanding of Spinoza's moral philosophy, how his views significantly evolved over time, and how he himself struggled during his career to develop a theory that could speak to human beings as they actually are--imperfect, passionate, and often not very rational.
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68Spinoza and Relational Autonomy: Being with Others (edited book)Edinburgh University Press. 2019.Integrates Spinoza's thought into the contemporary debate on interpersonal relationships and individual autonomy The question of how to understand autonomy has emerged as a critical issue in contemporary political philosophy. Feminists and others argue that autonomy cannot be adequately conceived without taking into consideration the ways in which it is shaped by our relationships with others. This collection of 13 new essays shows what Baruch Spinoza can add to our understanding of the relation…Read more
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77Samuel Clarke on Agent Causation, Voluntarism, and OccasionalismScience in Context 31 (4): 421-456. 2018.ArgumentThis paper argues that Samuel Clarke's account of agent causation (i) provides a philosophical basis for moderate voluntarism, and (ii) both leads to and benefits from the acceptance of partial occasionalism as a model of causation for material beings. Clarke's account of agent causation entails that for an agent to be properly called an agent (i.e. causally efficacious), it is essential that the agent is free to choose whether to act or not. This freedom is compatible with the existence…Read more
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128Modelling the history of early modern natural philosophy: the fate of the art-nature distinction in the Dutch universitiesBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 27 (1): 46-74. 2019.The ‘model approach’ facilitates a quantitative-oriented study of conceptual changes in large corpora. This paper implements the ‘model approach’ to investigate the erosion of the traditional art-nature distinction in early modern natural philosophy. I argue that a condition for this transformation has to be located in the late scholastic conception of final causation. I design a conceptual model to capture the art-nature distinction and formulate a working hypothesis about its early modern fate…Read more
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105Spinoza's Rethinking of Activity: From the Short Treatise to the EthicsSouthern Journal of Philosophy 56 (1): 101-126. 2018.This paper argues that God's immanent causation and Spinoza's account of activity as adequate causation (of finite modes) do not always go together in Spinoza's thought. We show that there is good reason to doubt that this is the case in Spinoza's early Short Treatise on God, Man and His Well‐being. In the Short Treatise, Spinoza defends an account of God's immanent causation without fully endorsing the account of activity as adequate causation that he will later introduce in the Ethics (E3def2)…Read more
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1Miracles and the metamorphosis of Spinoza's leviathan: On the creation of liberal thoughtRivista di Storia Della Filosofia 66 (4): 633-658. 2011.
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1282Divine Action and God’s Immutability: A Historical Case Study On How To Resist OccasionalismEuropean Journal for Philosophy of Religion 7 (4): 115--135. 2015.Today’s debates present ”occasionalism’ as the position that any satisfying account of divine action must avoid. In this paper I discuss how a leading Cartesian author of the end of the seventeenth century, Pierre-Sylvain Régis, attempted to avoid occasionalism. Régis’s case is illuminating because it stresses both the difficulties connected with the traditional alternatives to occasionalism and also those aspects embedded in the occasionalist position that should be taken into due account. The …Read more
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Sul naturalismo informatico: contro il paradigma indessicale della soggettivitàEtica E Politica 14 (1): 488-505. 2012.
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57I miracoli e la metamorfosi spinoziana del Leviatano: sulla costituzione del pensiero liberaleRivista di Storia Della Filosofia 4 633-658. 2011.
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L'uomo libero a nulla pensa meno che alla morte: Spinoza contra HeideggerGiornale di Metafisica 33 (2): 371-390. 2011.In this essay a theoretical comparison is presented between the perspective developed by Heidegger in Being and time regarding authentic existence and the analogous one afforded by the ethics of Spinoza. The bearing thesis is that these two perspectives have a common theoretical presupposition: the essence of every entity is founded in its rooting in the world or nature in which it exists. Nevertheless, it appears that the results which the two authors reach are opposite. While Heidegger develop…Read more
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49Marco Sgarbi, The Italian Mind. Vernacular Logic in Renaissance ItalyJournal of Early Modern Studies 4 (1): 136-140. 2015.
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176Fixing Descartes: Ethical Intellectualism in Spinoza's Early WritingsSouthern Journal of Philosophy 53 (3): 338-361. 2015.This paper aims at reconstructing the ethical issues raised by Spinoza's earlyTreatise on the Emendation of the Intellect. Specifically, I argue that Spinoza takes issue with Descartes’ epistemology in order to support a form of “ethical intellectualism” in which knowledge is envisaged as both necessary and sufficient to reach the supreme good. First, I reconstruct how Descartes exploits the distinction between truth and certainty in hisDiscourse on the Method. On the one hand, this distinction …Read more
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41The completeness of de intellectus emendatione by SpinozaRivista di Storia Della Filosofia 65 (1): 1-23. 2010.
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163Louis de La Forge and the 'Non-Transfer Argument' for OccasionalismBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 22 (1): 60-80. 2014.In this paper, I investigate Louis de La Forge's argument against body–body causation. His general strategy exploits the impossibility of bodies communicating their movement by transfer of motion. I call this the ‘non-transfer’ argument . NT allows La Forge both to reinterpret continuous creation in an occasionalistic fashion and to support his non-occasionalistic view concerning mind–body union. First, I present how NT emerges in Descartes’ own texts. Second, I show how La Forge recasts it to d…Read more
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30La ragione della parola: religione, ermeneutica e linguaggio in Baruch Spinoza (edited book)Il prato. 2013.
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1205Nota sul ruolo dell’"essentia corporis" nell’Etica di SpinozaIsonomia: Online Philosophical Journal of the University of Urbino 1-19. 2013.This paper outlines the role of the bodily essence in Spinoza’s epistemology. Spinoza maintains in the Ethics that the power of the imagination depends on bodily affections and it explains the inadequateness of imaginative ideas. However, Spinoza also exploits the capabilities of the human body to work out his account of common notions, which grounds the adequate knowledge provided by reason. Moreover, the essentia corporis plays a crucial role in the fifth part of the Ethics. Indeed, the “etern…Read more
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73From secondary causes to artificial instruments: Pierre-Sylvain Régis's rethinking of scholastic accounts of causationStudies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 60 7-17. 2016.
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2538Adequate knowledge and bodily complexity in Spinoza’s account of consciousnessMethodus 6 77-104. 2011.This paper aims to discuss Spinoza’s theory of consciousness by arguing that consciousness is the expression of bodily complexity in terms of adequate knowledge. Firstly, I present the link that Spinoza built up in the second part of the Ethics between the ability of the mind to know itself and the idea ideae theory. Secondly, I present in what sense consciousness turns out to be the result of an adequate knowledge emerging from the epistemological resources of a body as complex as the human one…Read more
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104The young Spinoza: a metaphysician in the making (review)British Journal for the History of Philosophy 25 (2): 413-415. 2017.
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114Aristotle, Heereboord, and the Polemical Target of Spinoza’s Critique of Final CausesJournal of the History of Philosophy 54 (3): 395-420. 2016.Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgiastic future that year by year recedes before us. It eluded us then, but that’s no matter—tomorrow we will run faster, stretch out our arms farther.... And one fine morning—So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past. in the appendix to the first part of the Ethics, Spinoza famously claims that “all final causes are nothing but human fictions”. From the very beginning of its reception until the present day, supporters…Read more
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1Steven Nadler, A Book Forged in Hell. Spinoza's Scandalous Treatise and the Birth of the Secular AgeRivista di Storia Della Filosofia 67 (3): 650. 2012.
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2Instrumenta mentis. Contributi al lessico filosofico di SpinozaGiornale Critico Della Filosofia Italiana 7 (3): 693-695. 2011.