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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Ivan Segré (philosopher and Talmudic scholar) , David Broder (London School of Economics, UK)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Dimensions: Width: 12.90cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 19.80cm Weight: 0.327kg ISBN: 9781472596437ISBN 10: 1472596439 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 09 February 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of Contents"Translator's Note Prologue Part One: Election, Hatred, and The Philosopher: Spinoza and ""Bourgeois"" Theorists Introduction 1. Discourse on Method 2. The Song of the Sign 3. Kingship 4. On Contradiction Part Two: The Bible Spinoza Introduction 1. The At Judaei Manifesto 2. A 'Christ' without the Passion 3. The Origin of the Law 4. True Otherness 5. The Masquerade 6. The Tree of Knowledge Epilogue Apologue: The Spectre's Manifesto Notes Index"ReviewsIvan Segre's Spinoza: The Ethics of an Outlaw is a major and long overdue contribution to our understanding of Spinoza's complex and overdetermined relation not merely to Judaism, but to the great texts of the Jewish tradition as Spinoza understood it. Segre possesses the ability to follow Spinoza through the labyrinth of Maimonides' Guide and contextualize the citations and criticisms whose orientation has escaped most readers. Of particular interest is his demonstration that Christianity from Spinoza's perspective is as concerned with the disposition of the flesh as the Judaism it claimed to supersede: if circumcision is nothing, then so is the crucifixion. Segre's Spinoza neither celebrates (a) religion nor does he demand its suppression in favor of of a secularism that rests on a disavowed sacralization of state sovereignty. His god is the collective power by which the Jews were delivered from the House of Servitude. This is a powerful and original reading that opens new areas of research and offers conclusive proof of Spinoza's contemporaneity. Warren Montag, Brown Family Professor in Literature, Occidental College, Los Angeles, USA Ivan Segre's Spinoza: The Ethics of an Outlaw is a major and long overdue contribution to our understanding of Spinoza's complex and overdetermined relation not merely to Judaism, but to the great texts of the Jewish tradition as Spinoza understood it. Segre possesses the ability to follow Spinoza through the labyrinth of Maimonides' Guide and contextualize the citations and criticisms whose orientation has escaped most readers. Of particular interest is his demonstration that Christianity from Spinoza's perspective is as concerned with the disposition of the flesh as the Judaism it claimed to supersede: if circumcision is nothing, then so is the crucifixion. Segre's Spinoza neither celebrates (a) religion nor does he demand its suppression in favor of of a secularism that rests on a disavowed sacralization of state sovereignty. His god is the collective power by which the Jews were delivered from the House of Servitude. This is a powerful and original reading that opens new areas of research and offers conclusive proof of Spinoza's contemporaneity. * Warren Montag, Brown Family Professor in Literature, Occidental College, Los Angeles, USA * [An] excellent and original engagement with Spinoza's thought ... Segre accomplishes no small feat: he gives a coherent reading of Spinoza in light of Jewish exegetical tradition that does not come from a place of harsh judgment ... but rather, from a place of love. * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews * Ivan Segre's Spinoza: The Ethics of an Outlaw is a major and long overdue contribution to our understanding of Spinoza's complex and overdetermined relation not merely to Judaism, but to the great texts of the Jewish tradition as Spinoza understood it. Segre possesses the ability to follow Spinoza through the labyrinth of Maimonides' Guide and contextualize the citations and criticisms whose orientation has escaped most readers. Of particular interest is his demonstration that Christianity from Spinoza's perspective is as concerned with the disposition of the flesh as the Judaism it claimed to supersede: if circumcision is nothing, then so is the crucifixion. Segre's Spinoza neither celebrates (a) religion nor does he demand its suppression in favor of of a secularism that rests on a disavowed sacralization of state sovereignty. His god is the collective power by which the Jews were delivered from the House of Servitude. This is a powerful and original reading that opens new areas of research and offers conclusive proof of Spinoza's contemporaneity. * Warren Montag, Brown Family Professor in Literature, Occidental College, Los Angeles, USA * Author InformationIvan Segré is a doctor in philosophy and student of the Talmud who lives in Israel. He is the author of Qu’appelle-ton penser Auschwitz? (2009) and co-editor (with Alain Badiou and Eric Hazan) of Reflections on Anti-Semitism (2013). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |