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Spinoza,
Benedict De "On the Improvement of the Understanding"
in Ethics [abstract 235 words]
After experience
had taught me that all the usual surroundings of social life are
vain and futile, I finally resolved to inquire whether
there
might be anything of which the discovery and attainment would enable
me to enjoy continuous, supreme, and unending happiness
The ordinary
surroundings of life which are esteemed by men to be the highest
good, may be classed under the three headsRiches, Fame, and
the Pleasures of Sense.
These objects
pursued by the multitude not only bring no remedy that tends to
preserve our being, but even act as hindrances, [often] causing
the death of those who possess them, and always of those who are
possessed by them. There are many examples of men who have died
in pursuit of wealth. The pursuit of fame or sensual pleasure likewise
have hastened many deaths.
Because Riches,
Fame, and the Pleasures of Sense are perishable they disturb the
mind. But love towards a thing eternal and infinite feeds the mind
wholly with joy
That eternal
and infinite thing is the knowledge of the union existing being
the mind and the whole of nature. This, then, is the end for which
I strive, to attain to such a character myself, and to endeavor
that many should attain to it with me. In other words, it is part
of my happiness to lend a helping hand, that many others may understand
even as I do
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