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GOV 382M Unique number 38130 Spinoza and the Ethical Basis of Liberal Democracy (Spring 2016) 2-3:30 PM Mon/Wed in Batts 1.104 Professor Thomas L. Pangle Office hours: Tues. 2-5 PM (and by appt.) in Mezes 3.154; office tel. 232 1529 email address: [email protected] Prerequisites: Even a modest reading knowledge of Latin would be very helpful; students are strongly encouraged to consult the original texts as much as they are able, especially when they write their papers. Some knowledge of Hebrew would also be useful, since Spinoza quotes the Hebrew Bible in the original. An acquaintance with the Bible and the political philosophies of Hobbes, Plato, and Aristotle will be presumed. Any familiarity with Maimonides would be useful. Description: Spinoza’s Theologico-Political Treatise is the first elaboration in history of the philosophical foundation for what we call "liberal" democracy—that is, democratic republicanism dedicated to freedom of speech and thought. Spinoza lays the foundation for this regime by confronting the massive alternative to political rationalism: the Bible, understood as conveying a superhuman and supra-rational divine revelation that ought to be the supreme guide to human existence. In his Ethics, which presupposes and requires the Theologico-Political Treatise as a foundation, Spinoza elaborates his strictly rationalist metaphysical and moral and psychological principles. In his unfinished Political Treatise. Spinoza further develops or elaborates political implications—but he died before writing the crucial section on democracy. The course will be devoted to study of these works, and especially the Theologico-Political Treatise, with a view to clarifying—in the light of the growing contemporary crisis of enlightenment rationalism as it faces scripturally based politics—the nowadays mostly unknown theologicopolitical grounding of the modern theory of liberal democracy. A key background theme will be the quarrel between Spinoza’s enlightenment rationalism (which still reigns—if in ever more ignorant, embattled, and precarious condition—over our culture) and the profoundly different rationalism of the classical republican theorists: Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle—and their medieval reviver, Maimonides (to whom Spinoza directly responds). Required Texts (in the order they'll be treated in class): Spinoza's Theologico-Political Treatise. ("THPT") Trans. Yaffe (Focus). The only strictly accurate translation. Syllabus for GOV 382M: Spinoza 2 The Bible will need to be at your side as you read the THPT, since Sp. refers to it constantly. (The King James version remains overall the most literal and accurate, as well as felicitous.) Spinoza’s Ethics. Trans. Curley, in Penguin Classics; also in Collected Works of Spinoza, vol. 1. (Princeton). Spinoza’s (unfinished) Political Treatise. "PT" No strictly accurate translation available. Trans. Shirley (Hackett) or Wernham, with facing Latin (Oxford) 199.492 SP47 C1. Other Spinoza texts (see also bibliography in Yaffe’s trans. of THPT): Spinoza Opera, 4 vols., ed. Gebhardt (Heidelberg: Carl Winter, 1925 and 1972 repr.). 199.2 SP4 A1 The standard critical edition of Sp's works. Tractatus theologico-politicus/ Traité théologique-politique. Ed. Fokke Akkerman (Paris: Presses Universitaires). Contains annotated Latin text with some corrections of the Gebhardt edition, with French translation and notes. The leading scholarly edition of THPT. The Correspondence of Spinoza. Ed. and trans. Wolf (Dial 1928—199.2 SP4 B1); (Russell 1966—B 3964 E5 W6). Biography Steven Nadler, Spinoza: A Life (Cambridge). In the author’s words, “most definitely not an ‘intellectual biography.’” Helpful on the social and political context in which Spinoza wrote—but inadequate on understanding how Spinoza as an author responded to that context. For correction, see: Arthur Melzer, Philosophy Between the Lines; The Lost History of Esoteric Writing (U. of Chicago). Interpretative Edwin Curley, Behind the Geometric Method: A Reading of Spinoza’s ETHICS (Princeton). A helpful and stimulating interpretation of the first half of the Ethics. Leo Strauss, “How to Study Spinoza’s Theologico-Political Treatise,” in Persecution and the Art of Writing (U. of Chicago). _____, Spinoza’s Critique of Religion (U. of Chicago). Wayne I. Boucher, Spinoza in English: A Bibliography from the Sixteenth Century to the Present. (Brill, 1991). For other languages, see the bibliographies listed in Akkerman's ed. above, p. 827. Requirements: 25% Analytic paper, 12+ pages, elucidating key features of Spinoza's political theory as presented in chaps 16-20 of TH-PT, supplemented by PT; perhaps comparison with Hobbes or another contract theorist. DUE March 21 (day after Spring break ends). 20% Ten weekly one-page papers (2% each), on one of the study questions handed out the preceding week, or on a portion of Spinoza's text not yet covered in class. 6 before Spring break, 4 after. Syllabus for GOV 382M: Spinoza 3 15% Class participation. 40% EITHER revise and enlarge, for possible publication, previous analytic paper (integrating some response to secondary lit., etc.) OR write new 12+ analytic (suggested or model topics will be handed out). NO LATE PAPERS WILL BE ACCEPTED AFTER MAY 18; NO INCOMPLETES WILL BE ALLOWED. Students with disabilities may request appropriate academic accommodations from the Division of Diversity and Community Engagement, Services for Students with Disabilities, 512-4716259, http://www.utexas.edu/diversity/ddce/ssd/