Combining Philosophers

Ideas for Lynch,MP/Glasgow,JM, Tim Button and Baruch de Spinoza

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5 ideas

9. Objects / D. Essence of Objects / 1. Essences of Objects
The essence of a thing is what is required for it to exist or be conceived [Spinoza]
     Full Idea: Many assert that that without which a thing cannot be nor be conceived, belongs to the essence of that thing.
     From: Baruch de Spinoza (The Ethics [1675], II Pr 10)
     A reaction: This is one Aristotelian idea that won't go away, despite the seventeenth century onslaught. It seems obvious that natural kinds, natural objects and human artefacts have properties that can be divided into essential and non-essential.
9. Objects / D. Essence of Objects / 6. Essence as Unifier
Essence gives existence and conception to things, and is inseparable from them [Spinoza]
     Full Idea: To the essence of anything pertains ...that without which the thing can neither be nor be conceived, and which in its turn cannot be nor be conceived without the thing.
     From: Baruch de Spinoza (The Ethics [1675], II Def 2)
     A reaction: Note that essence concerns not only what things are, but also our ability to conceive them.
9. Objects / D. Essence of Objects / 7. Essence and Necessity / b. Essence not necessities
Nothing is essential if it is in every part, and is common to everything [Spinoza]
     Full Idea: That which is common to everything, and which is equally in the part and in the whole, forms the essence of no individual thing.
     From: Baruch de Spinoza (The Ethics [1675], II Pr 37)
     A reaction: I like this, because treating essences as mere necessary properties threatens to include utter trivia and universal generalities, just because they are necessary. Rejecting things as 'trivial' by stipulation won't do.
9. Objects / D. Essence of Objects / 8. Essence as Explanatory
All natures of things produce some effect [Spinoza]
     Full Idea: Nothing exists from whose nature an effect does not follow.
     From: Baruch de Spinoza (The Ethics [1675], I Pr 36)
     A reaction: I take it that this is because it is analytic that essences produce effects, since that is the point of the concept of an essence - as the source of the explanations of the effects.
9. Objects / D. Essence of Objects / 14. Knowledge of Essences
Experience does not teach us any essences of things [Spinoza]
     Full Idea: Experience does not teach us any essences of things.
     From: Baruch de Spinoza (Letters to De Vries [1664], 1664?)
     A reaction: This, along with Leibniz's claim that experience cannot reveal necessities, may constitute a striking criticism of empiricism, but it invites the obvious reply 'so much the worse for essences'. An essence seems to be a theoretical concept, not a priori.