Spinoza’s critique of final causes

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5380/dp.v16i3.65469

Keywords:

Spinoza, final cause, efficient cause, teleology, superstition.

Abstract

The spinosan reformulation of the Aristotelian doctrine of causality proclaims the predominance of the efficient cause and demands the abandonment of the doctrine of final cause. Considered the source of all prejudices, this doctrine is the object of fierce criticism in the appendix of the first part of Spinoza’s Ethics. This article intends to expose this criticism and show how the resumption of this issue in the preface of part IV of the same work does not imply any revision of the previous position.

Author Biography

Luís César Oliva, USP

Professor de História da Filosofia Moderna do Departamento de Filosofia

Published

2024-08-06

How to Cite

Oliva, L. C. (2024). Spinoza’s critique of final causes. DoisPontos, 16(3). https://doi.org/10.5380/dp.v16i3.65469