Tag: Spinoza

Major Works

  • “Marx’s Anomalous Reading of Spinoza”

    - Gordon Hull. “Marx’s Anomalous Reading of Spinoza.” Interpretation, Vol. 28 (2000), pp. 17–32.
    Excerpt: ” Spinoza and Marx were thinkers who attained sufficient notoriety to become associated with certain, rather fixed, doctrinal positions. For this reason, the study of Spinoza and Marx is never fully dissociable from an encounter with Spinozism… More

Other Works

  • “Marx’s Anomalous Reading of Spinoza”

    - Gordon Hull. “Marx’s Anomalous Reading of Spinoza.” Interpretation, Vol. 28 (2000), pp. 17–32.
    Excerpt: ” Spinoza and Marx were thinkers who attained sufficient notoriety to become associated with certain, rather fixed, doctrinal positions. For this reason, the study of Spinoza and Marx is never fully dissociable from an encounter with Spinozism… More

Commentary

  • “Marx’s Anomalous Reading of Spinoza”

    - Gordon Hull. “Marx’s Anomalous Reading of Spinoza.” Interpretation, Vol. 28 (2000), pp. 17–32.
    Excerpt: ” Spinoza and Marx were thinkers who attained sufficient notoriety to become associated with certain, rather fixed, doctrinal positions. For this reason, the study of Spinoza and Marx is never fully dissociable from an encounter with Spinozism… More

Multimedia

  • “Marx’s Anomalous Reading of Spinoza”

    - Gordon Hull. “Marx’s Anomalous Reading of Spinoza.” Interpretation, Vol. 28 (2000), pp. 17–32.
    Excerpt: ” Spinoza and Marx were thinkers who attained sufficient notoriety to become associated with certain, rather fixed, doctrinal positions. For this reason, the study of Spinoza and Marx is never fully dissociable from an encounter with Spinozism… More

Teaching

  • “Marx’s Anomalous Reading of Spinoza”

    - Gordon Hull. “Marx’s Anomalous Reading of Spinoza.” Interpretation, Vol. 28 (2000), pp. 17–32.
    Excerpt: ” Spinoza and Marx were thinkers who attained sufficient notoriety to become associated with certain, rather fixed, doctrinal positions. For this reason, the study of Spinoza and Marx is never fully dissociable from an encounter with Spinozism… More