Spinoza speculated on how ethics could emerge from biology and psychology rather than disrupt them and recent evidence suggests he might have gotten it right. His radical deconstruction and reconstruction of ethics is supported by a number of avenues of research in the cognitive and neurosciences. This paper gathers together and presents a composite picture of recent research that supports Spinoza’s theory of the emotions and of the natural origins of ethics. It enumerates twelve naturalist claims of Spinoza that now seem to be supported by substantial evidence from the neurosciences and recent cognitive science. I focus on the evidence provided by Lakoff and Johnson in their summary of recent cognitive science in Philosophy in the Flesh: The Embodied Mind and Its Challenge to Western Thought (1999); by Antonio Damasio in his assessment of the state of affective neuroscience in Descartes’ Error (1994) and in The Feeling of What Happens (1999) (with passing references to his recent Looking for Spinoza (2003); and by Giacomo Rizzolatti, Vittorio Gallese and their colleagues in the neural basis of emotional contagion and resonance, i.e., the neural basis of primitive sociality and intersubjectivity, that bear out Spinoza’s account of social psychology as rooted in the mechanism he called attention to and identified as affective imitation.
2021. Reason and passion. In Problems of Living, ► pp. 61 ff.
Eeles, Eamonn, Renee England, Andrew Teodorczuk, Shaun Pandy, Donna Pinsker & Aurelia Armstrong
2020. Delirium Management: Anything’s Possible. Canadian Journal on Aging / La Revue canadienne du vieillissement 39:1 ► pp. 89 ff.
Sticchi, Francesco
2020. Beyond the Individual Body. Projections 14:1 ► pp. 18 ff.
Uhlmann, Anthony
2020. Affect, Meaning, Becoming, and Power: Massumi, Spinoza, Deleuze, and Neuroscience. In Affect and Literature, ► pp. 159 ff.
Veit, Walter
2020. Dennett and Spinoza. Australasian Philosophical Review 4:3 ► pp. 259 ff.
Bula, German
2019. Passions, consciousness, and the Rosetta Stone: Spinoza and embodied, extended, and affective cognition. Adaptive Behavior 27:1 ► pp. 7 ff.
England, Renee
2019. The Cognitive/Noncognitive Debate in Emotion Theory: A Corrective From Spinoza. Emotion Review 11:2 ► pp. 102 ff.
England, Renee
2020. Rethinking emotion as a natural kind: Correctives from Spinoza and hierarchical homology. Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences 84 ► pp. 101327 ff.
김은주
2018. The Development of Spinoza’s Theory of the Human Body in Contemporary Thought. CONCEPT AND COMMUNICATION null:21 ► pp. 217 ff.
Boukouvala, Αnna
2017. Imitation of Affects and Mirror Neurons: Exploring Empathy in Spinoza’s Theory and Contemporary Neuroscience. Philosophia 45:3 ► pp. 1007 ff.
Meehan, William
2014. In a Grain of Sand: Spinoza’s Conception of Intuition. In Rational Intuition, ► pp. 90 ff.
Meehan, William
2014. Return of the Repressed: Spinozan Ideas in the History of the Mind and Brain Sciences. In Brain, Mind and Consciousness in the History of Neuroscience [History, Philosophy and Theory of the Life Sciences, 6], ► pp. 21 ff.
Pitts-Taylor, Victoria
2013. I Feel Your Pain: Embodied Knowledges and Situated Neurons. Hypatia 28:4 ► pp. 852 ff.
Wider, Kathleen
2013. Sartre and Spinoza on the nature of mind. Continental Philosophy Review 46:4 ► pp. 555 ff.
Stafford, Barbara Maria
2009. Thoughts Not Our Own. Theory, Culture & Society 26:2-3 ► pp. 275 ff.
Panksepp, Jaak, Antonio Damasio & Heidi M. Ravven
2003. Book Reviews. Neuropsychoanalysis 5:2 ► pp. 201 ff.
[no author supplied]
2021. References. In Problems of Living, ► pp. 235 ff.
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