Substance: Difference between revisions

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For Spinoza, the substance is a materiality already latent with a form. When many religious scholars and religious thinkers say "the material world" they mean the substantial world. By material they are not referring to this kind of "mystical real" or whatever; they're referring to a material always, already, and, un-dialectically latent with form.
For Spinoza, the substance is a materiality already latent with a form. When many religious scholars and religious thinkers say "the material world" they mean the substantial world. By material they are not referring to this kind of "mystical real" or whatever; they're referring to a material always, already, and, un-dialectically latent with form.
==See Also==
[[Essence]]

Latest revision as of 19:34, 24 June 2024

For Spinoza, the substance is a materiality already latent with a form. When many religious scholars and religious thinkers say "the material world" they mean the substantial world. By material they are not referring to this kind of "mystical real" or whatever; they're referring to a material always, already, and, un-dialectically latent with form.

See Also[edit | edit source]

Essence