Description | Savery Hall, Room 260 Title: "Spinozistic Selves" Samuel Newlands William J. and Dorothy K. O'Neill Collegiate Associate Professor in Philosophy University of Notre Dame Keynote of the Spinoza on Freedom and the Highest Good: Workshop on Ethics, Part V Spinoza’s system contains a pair of seemingly unrelated problems. First, he thinks that the main path for moral progress involves converting passions into actions, but, given his theory of actions, this seems to involve making changes to the past. Second, his austere substance-mode ontology seems to leave no room for a category of human selves or persons. Drawing on parallel work by Harry Frankfurt, I argue that these problems have a common solution in Spinoza’s constructivist account of selves and that this leads to a striking account of moral transformation. Samuel Newlands is the William J. and Dorothy K. O’Neill Collegiate Professor in Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame. His new book, Reconceiving Spinoza, appeared in August with Oxford University Press. He has published dozens of articles on early modern philosophy, and he co-edited New Essays on Leibniz’s Philosophy (OUP 2014) and Metaphysics and the Good (OUP 2014). He has also directed several large, multi-million dollar research projects spanning philosophy, psychology, sociology, and theology, including Hope and Optimism: Conceptual and Empirical Investigations and The Problem of Evil in Modern and Contemporary Thought. Newlands also serves as a Director of the Center for Philosophy of Religion at the University of Notre Dame. |
---|