Abstract:This chapter argues that the cognition Spinoza calls “intuitive knowledge” (scientia intuitiva) is a confluence of two powerful intuitions, each of which can be understood as a Spinozistic version of a well-known Cartesian intuition. The first component intuition is an extension of Descartes’s Fifth Meditation ontological argument: that is, for Spinoza, given a clear and distinct idea of God, one does not just intuit, with the Cartesian Meditator, that God necessarily exists, but also that all of God’s effects… Show more
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