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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:20,240 --> 00:00:24,960 If you’ve ever wanted a complete scientific roadmap for how to live, 2 00:00:24,960 --> 00:00:31,680 a modern philosophy to go by, a lens through which to understand a complex world, a foundation, 3 00:00:33,200 --> 00:00:38,880 the 17th century Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza is as good as you'll find. 4 00:00:39,680 --> 00:00:43,840 Today, you’ll discover how to see yourself as part of something bigger, 5 00:00:43,840 --> 00:00:49,360 something infinite and awe-inspiring. How to see the world scientifically. 6 00:00:50,400 --> 00:00:56,720 What this means for reducing negative emotions, leading a more content, fulfilled, rational, 7 00:00:56,720 --> 00:01:04,400 meaningful, and joyful life. He asked questions like: why are we so dogmatic? What makes us 8 00:01:05,120 --> 00:01:12,240 irrational? Why do we live as slaves to our emotions and others opinions. We’ll find out 9 00:01:12,240 --> 00:01:19,520 why some of the most influential thinkers to have lived admired Spinoza. Einstein said if 10 00:01:19,520 --> 00:01:26,480 he believed in god it was ‘Spinoza’s god’ and Hegel said that “ You are either a Spinozist 11 00:01:26,480 --> 00:01:33,200 or not a philosopher at all.’ We’ll look at what made Spinoza one of the first truly modern and 12 00:01:33,200 --> 00:01:40,080 radical thinkers, why he was the first modern psychologist, and how he revolutionised how we 13 00:01:40,080 --> 00:01:48,000 think about concepts like god and nature. In short, and I think this is no exaggeration, 14 00:01:48,720 --> 00:01:58,480 the world we inhabit now would have not have taken the path it has without Spinoza. 15 00:02:02,160 --> 00:02:07,120 This is also the story of a man, lost in the forest, searching for 16 00:02:21,520 --> 00:02:22,600 the way out. 17 00:02:22,600 --> 00:02:22,800 Life 18 00:02:23,600 --> 00:02:30,160 I don’t want to dwell too much on Spinoza’s life. Accept to say he has good claim on being one of 19 00:02:30,160 --> 00:02:37,840 the most consequential philosophers to have ever lived, but he was also, as Bertrand Russell wrote, 20 00:02:37,840 --> 00:02:41,840 ‘the noblest and most lovable of the great philosophers.’ 21 00:02:44,800 --> 00:02:51,200 He was one of the first Enlightenment advocates for real democracy, and was the first to really 22 00:02:51,200 --> 00:02:57,840 criticise the bible as just a text. He was vilified for his perceived atheism and 23 00:02:57,840 --> 00:03:04,640 execommunicated from the Jewish community where he lived who said that‘The Lord will not spare him; 24 00:03:04,640 --> 00:03:11,440 the anger and wrath of the Lord will rage against this man, and bring upon him all the curses’ – 25 00:03:11,440 --> 00:03:19,280 Despire being ostracised, he searched his entire life for what he called the ‘true good.’ 26 00:03:22,800 --> 00:03:31,840 He wanted to find out how to live an ideal and virtuous life. How, ultimately, to be free. 27 00:03:31,840 --> 00:03:36,720 Spinoza’s Universe 28 00:03:36,720 --> 00:03:43,920 Before we get into the juicy bits, we have to do the grunt work. We have to map out Spinoza’s idea 29 00:03:43,920 --> 00:03:52,000 of the universe. Then we can understand our place in it. It’s might sound a bit complicated at 30 00:03:52,000 --> 00:03:59,840 first, but bare with me – if you get this, or just let it wash over you, and stick with it, 31 00:04:00,400 --> 00:04:06,160 it will change how you think. Give me a few minutes to get through the complicated stuff 32 00:04:06,160 --> 00:04:10,320 and then we’ll get to the interesting stuff – and it should all come together. 33 00:04:11,920 --> 00:04:18,880 If you could condense Spinoza’s metaphysics – his first principles - into one sentence 34 00:04:18,880 --> 00:04:27,840 it would be this: being is one. Put another way, the many is one. 35 00:04:28,800 --> 00:04:34,720 What that means is actually quite simple: everything – us, the forest, 36 00:04:35,360 --> 00:04:45,120 animals, the stars, and the laws of physics are many things part of one thing: nature. 37 00:04:46,240 --> 00:04:54,320 We forget this, of course. We think of ourselves as independent, as separate. But we also know 38 00:04:54,320 --> 00:05:02,800 we’re not - especially in the modern period. We know we’re made of atoms, we know we need food, 39 00:05:02,800 --> 00:05:10,480 water, oxygen, energy from outside us to sustain those atoms. We know that we rely on wood, and 40 00:05:10,480 --> 00:05:17,920 tools, and gravity, and, of course, each other. We know about the circle of life, the interdependent 41 00:05:17,920 --> 00:05:26,840 ecosystem that the animal kingdom lives within, and we know that one thing affects another – 42 00:05:28,880 --> 00:05:33,200 in short we know that everything is connected. 43 00:05:33,200 --> 00:05:34,101 This is Spinoza’s foundation. But he goes further. 44 00:05:34,101 --> 00:05:35,120 He reminds us that this should actually change how we think. 45 00:05:35,120 --> 00:05:41,040 So how does he understand this ‘many things’ in ‘one nature’ truth? Well, 46 00:05:41,040 --> 00:05:45,680 He wants to lay it out logically and represent it in a kind of 47 00:05:47,120 --> 00:05:52,560 mathematical pattern so that we can use it to build more complex ideas with. 48 00:05:52,560 --> 00:05:59,360 So instead of many things and one nature, he says there are three parts to the universe: 49 00:05:59,920 --> 00:06:02,800 substance, attributes, and modes. 50 00:06:04,000 --> 00:06:10,320 We usually think of substances as the different things in the universe – air, 51 00:06:13,440 --> 00:06:20,240 deer, wood, us, plasticine. Its just the stuff things are made of. 52 00:06:21,120 --> 00:06:25,440 Attributes are the ways we experience substances. 53 00:06:26,000 --> 00:06:29,200 Spinoza says there are two attributes that we know of: 54 00:06:29,920 --> 00:06:39,360 extension and thought – we have actual material trees and the ideas of trees in our heads. 55 00:06:40,240 --> 00:06:47,280 A mode is the form or shape the substance takes. The substance wood, for example, 56 00:06:47,280 --> 00:06:58,240 takes the shape of oaks or chairs or doors. Its the substance of wood in different modes. 57 00:07:00,400 --> 00:07:04,000 But wait, Spinoza wants to be more specific. 58 00:07:04,560 --> 00:07:12,640 A substance, he says, if its to be defined properly, should be an independent thing. 59 00:07:12,640 --> 00:07:14,160 He provides definitions: 60 00:07:14,160 --> 00:07:21,120 ‘D3: By ‘substance’ I understand: what is in itself and is conceived through itself, 61 00:07:21,120 --> 00:07:26,560 i.e. that whose concept doesn’t have to be formed out of the concept of something else.’ 62 00:07:28,320 --> 00:07:40,560 So lets take a leaf, say. Is it a substance? is only a substance in itself if its independent, 63 00:07:40,560 --> 00:07:47,760 if its conceived through itself, if it doesn’t have to be formed out of something else. But 64 00:07:48,800 --> 00:07:58,880 it does. Its dependent on the branch, and the tree. So is the tree a substance? Well, no 65 00:07:58,880 --> 00:08:04,720 because its formed out of the soil, the air, the birds that disperse its seeds. 66 00:08:06,240 --> 00:08:13,200 A substance should be an independent thing. Yet thinking through this thought experiment 67 00:08:13,200 --> 00:08:21,440 everything is in some sense determined dependent, and an extension of on things outside of it. 68 00:08:22,720 --> 00:08:29,120 So if we’re defining substances strictly it turns out there is only one: Nature. 69 00:08:29,920 --> 00:08:38,160 Trees, people, plants, animals they’re all different modes, different shapes, of matter. 70 00:08:40,000 --> 00:08:43,200 Spinoza saw nature as god. 71 00:08:43,200 --> 00:08:49,600 In fact, he usually wrote ‘god or nature’ – they’re one and the same thing 72 00:08:50,560 --> 00:08:53,840 Why is this? Well, He thought of it like this: 73 00:08:54,640 --> 00:09:01,680 God is meant to be this infinite, all-powerful, omnipresent, omniscient, a law-maker and 74 00:09:01,680 --> 00:09:08,400 law-giver. But if that’s the case he can’t be outside of nature. If he’s not part of 75 00:09:08,400 --> 00:09:14,000 nature – if he’s not everywhere at once – he can’t be omnipresent, he can’t be 76 00:09:14,000 --> 00:09:22,240 infinite. He must, to be those things, be part of everything, with nothing inseparable from him. 77 00:09:25,680 --> 00:09:32,320 God couldn’t be outside of the universe, Spinoza realised, he was the universe. 78 00:09:34,640 --> 00:09:40,560 The ultimate laws were gravity, mathematics, the laws of physics, of cause and effect, 79 00:09:40,560 --> 00:09:46,480 so god, knowing all, seeing all, controlling all, had to not just be 80 00:09:46,480 --> 00:09:54,240 part of those laws but actually be those laws, as if they were an extension of his body. 81 00:09:54,240 --> 00:09:56,800 Today, this is called pantheism. 82 00:09:57,360 --> 00:10:01,760 Spinoza was writing at the beginning of the Enlightenment and during the 83 00:10:01,760 --> 00:10:08,640 scientific revolution. He was trying, in some way, to square an old universe with a new one: 84 00:10:08,640 --> 00:10:15,600 one of science, reason, experimentation. He saw that all things, if you studied them 85 00:10:15,600 --> 00:10:23,600 carefully, were implicated and affected by everything else. Everything was part of one 86 00:10:23,600 --> 00:10:30,240 big ordered ecosystem, although he didn’t have that word to use yet. 87 00:10:30,240 --> 00:10:34,160 It was a revolutionary modern scientific view. 88 00:10:35,600 --> 00:10:41,680 He wrote that ‘In Nature there is nothing contingent; all things have been caused by 89 00:10:41,680 --> 00:10:46,960 the necessity of the divine nature to exist and produce an effect in a certain way.’ 90 00:10:58,000 --> 00:11:06,000 A storm pushes me one way, the wind pushes my boat. Berries draw me towards eating them. 91 00:11:09,440 --> 00:11:13,840 The tree grows depending on the rain and the sun, 92 00:11:14,960 --> 00:11:21,840 the deer is frightened in a different direction when startled. We have desires we can’t control. 93 00:11:22,480 --> 00:11:28,320 We are all like billiard balls, set off by causes outside of us. 94 00:11:28,320 --> 00:11:36,080 Spinoza’s universe is a description of a singular fact: everything is connected. 95 00:11:36,800 --> 00:11:45,040 Being is one. To understand ourselves, we must understand the natural world we are a part of. 96 00:11:57,440 --> 00:12:02,800 The Unfolding Determinism of Lines 97 00:12:15,760 --> 00:12:23,840 There’s a phrase that comes up often in scholars discussions about Spinoza’s universe: it unfolds. 98 00:12:24,480 --> 00:12:30,880 Cause and effect, cause and effect, cause and effect – this is the root of everything. 99 00:12:31,440 --> 00:12:38,160 A seed unfolds into a tree, that pang of hunger unfolds into the making of a meal, 100 00:12:38,160 --> 00:12:42,880 the desire for sex unfolds into a new human life, 101 00:12:42,880 --> 00:12:49,040 this path unfolds through the woods, and the cloud unfolds in the sky 102 00:12:49,840 --> 00:12:58,720 The universe – since the big bang – has unfolded into an infinity of different shapes and modes. 103 00:12:58,720 --> 00:13:03,280 Spinoza says that ‘I shall consider human actions and appetites 104 00:13:03,280 --> 00:13:06,960 as if it were a question of lines, planes and bodies.” 105 00:13:08,480 --> 00:13:09,360 What does this mean? 106 00:13:10,480 --> 00:13:18,320 That we can conceptualise, trace, and map lines through our appetites, actions, and ideas – they 107 00:13:18,320 --> 00:13:24,480 are caused by something before them and they in turn were caused by something before that. 108 00:13:25,040 --> 00:13:36,320 He writes that “‘the infant thinks that he freely wants the milk, the angry child that he freely 109 00:13:36,320 --> 00:13:43,840 wants vengeance, and the timid one that he freely wants to flee. The drunkard think it is from a 110 00:13:43,840 --> 00:13:50,160 free decision of the mind that he says things which when he sobers up he regrets having said.” 111 00:13:50,880 --> 00:13:57,280 This forces us to confront a frightening proposition: are we free at all? 112 00:13:58,080 --> 00:14:02,880 Spinoza says that all the evidences points to no: ‘“In the mind, 113 00:14:02,880 --> 00:14:09,040 there is no absolute, or free, will, but the mind is determined to will this or that by a 114 00:14:09,040 --> 00:14:16,080 cause which is also determined by another, and this again by another, and so to infinity.’’ 115 00:14:16,080 --> 00:14:22,320 We only think we’re free because our consciousness sits between one of those causes and 116 00:14:22,320 --> 00:14:30,160 effects – between for example, the pang of hunger and the decision to eat. But we see the effect 117 00:14:30,160 --> 00:14:39,680 of something like hunger or desire and see that effect as a volition, as a voluntary action. 118 00:14:41,760 --> 00:14:43,840 Let me explain: 119 00:14:44,960 --> 00:14:54,720 I just heard a lion over there – in the Enligh countryside – so I decide to go this way. Am I 120 00:14:54,720 --> 00:15:01,520 choosing freely? When moving my leg this way was caused by the effect of the lions roar. 121 00:15:02,320 --> 00:15:09,040 Everything is cause and effect. However, we rarely reflect on the long line of causation. 122 00:15:10,720 --> 00:15:13,920 All action is caused by something external. 123 00:15:14,560 --> 00:15:18,640 Just because we watch over our own appetites, ideas, and 124 00:15:18,640 --> 00:15:23,680 actions as they enter and leave our minds, we think we’re free. 125 00:15:24,240 --> 00:15:29,280 The French philosopher Giles Deleuze wrote that ‘consciousness is only a dream with 126 00:15:29,280 --> 00:15:34,320 one’s eyes open.’ Consciousness, in other worrds, is being sat 127 00:15:34,320 --> 00:15:39,680 over the top of the waterfall, watching mental stuff fly over. 128 00:15:40,400 --> 00:15:46,000 Spinoza writes: ‘A body in motion moves until another body causes it to rest; 129 00:15:46,000 --> 00:15:51,040 and a body at rest remains at rest until another body causes it to move.’ 130 00:15:51,600 --> 00:15:53,840 Now, here’s the interesting bit: 131 00:15:55,120 --> 00:16:04,000 How things – modes, objects, us, ideas, whatever – are affected by other things depends on the 132 00:16:04,000 --> 00:16:09,600 natures of each thing. The bird affects the tree in a different way than the rain, 133 00:16:11,920 --> 00:16:18,320 this berry affects me in a different way to a friend – but everything affects 134 00:16:18,320 --> 00:16:21,920 everything else in some specific way. 135 00:16:21,920 --> 00:16:25,600 What’s the scientifically-minded approach to this: 136 00:16:25,600 --> 00:16:31,680 to understand how things affect other things. That’s the key to the universe. 137 00:16:31,680 --> 00:16:38,400 As he says ‘it is clear that we are driven about in many ways by external causes, and that, 138 00:16:38,400 --> 00:16:45,440 like waves on the sea, driven by contrary winds, we toss about, not knowing our outcome and fate.’ 139 00:16:46,160 --> 00:16:50,160 He says that we have ‘inadequate ideas’ about the 140 00:16:50,160 --> 00:16:57,280 affects of things. The trick of life, of course, is to have adequate ideas. 141 00:17:04,240 --> 00:17:16,400 Our Relative Inadequate Ideas 142 00:17:21,760 --> 00:17:28,640 Ok, imagine for a moment those lines of cause and effect running through the universe. Deleuze calls 143 00:17:28,640 --> 00:17:35,840 those lines the plane of immanence. The bird is something to the tree, the tree to the soil. The 144 00:17:39,520 --> 00:17:41,280 lion to the person running. 145 00:17:44,480 --> 00:17:51,520 There is a line that can be drawn from my first videos to writing this one to this forest. 146 00:17:54,960 --> 00:17:58,160 When we think in terms of lines, we realise that 147 00:17:58,160 --> 00:18:03,840 everything in the universe it relative to something else. All is a web. 148 00:18:06,960 --> 00:18:14,160 This, again, has radical consequences that should change how we think. It means that nothing 149 00:18:14,160 --> 00:18:20,560 is good or bad in itself, but only relative to something else. The lion 150 00:18:20,560 --> 00:18:27,840 is bad for me so I run from it. The berry is good for me so I’m drawn to it. 151 00:18:28,640 --> 00:18:33,200 We tend to think of things as good or bad, beautiful or ugly, 152 00:18:33,200 --> 00:18:38,720 true or not true. We attach properties to objects and think of them as being 153 00:18:38,720 --> 00:18:45,760 certain things. This is red, its tasty, or its poisonous. Or that person is cheerful, 154 00:18:46,320 --> 00:18:50,720 intelligent, or interesting. Or that argument is a good or bad idea. 155 00:18:51,520 --> 00:18:58,000 But we forget that it is always us that’s attaching the property – the goodness or badness, 156 00:18:58,000 --> 00:19:04,160 the ugly or beautiful, the wise or unwise - so that these appraisals of objects, 157 00:19:04,160 --> 00:19:10,800 ideas, or people aren’t actually properties that are in the thing but are descriptions 158 00:19:10,800 --> 00:19:14,080 of a relationship. Everything is relative. 159 00:19:14,640 --> 00:19:20,960 And the consequences of thinking like this get even more radical: if things can’t be 160 00:19:20,960 --> 00:19:29,280 defined by their properties, but only by relations, they must be understood only 161 00:19:29,280 --> 00:19:37,280 in their capacities to do things to other things and or have things done to them by other things. 162 00:19:38,080 --> 00:19:42,960 What Spinoza calls it simply their ‘capacity to affect and be affected.’ 163 00:19:44,000 --> 00:19:48,000 Oh look a giraffe – in the English countryside. 164 00:19:48,880 --> 00:19:57,840 Why does it have a long neck? The reason is not within the giraffe, a property of the giraffe– 165 00:19:57,840 --> 00:20:06,320 but in its relationship to eating from trees, or drinking water, or fighting with other giraffes. 166 00:20:08,080 --> 00:20:10,240 This applies to everything. 167 00:20:10,960 --> 00:20:12,080 Deleuze writes that 168 00:20:30,800 --> 00:20:38,000 Ok, now things are getting interesting. If everything is about relationships, capacities 169 00:20:38,000 --> 00:20:45,920 to affect or be affected, cause and effect, then how should we think about our relationship to 170 00:20:45,920 --> 00:20:52,800 the things around us. What do we want to surround ourselves with? What do we want to avoid? 171 00:20:54,640 --> 00:20:59,120 The answer is quite simple: we should want to surround ourselves with 172 00:20:59,120 --> 00:21:03,520 perfection. We should try and organise our experience of the 173 00:21:03,520 --> 00:21:07,520 world so that we encounter things that will affect us positively. 174 00:21:09,840 --> 00:21:13,920 The things we call good, the things that our relationship with 175 00:21:13,920 --> 00:21:19,600 affect us positively, we, of course like, we approve of, we want more of. 176 00:21:22,240 --> 00:21:28,480 A good shelter has the affect of sheltering us from the rain – great start. This is why 177 00:21:28,480 --> 00:21:35,040 Spinoza sees goodness and perfection as synonymous. But more than this, 178 00:21:35,040 --> 00:21:41,280 he says by perfection and goodness he just means existing. What does this mean? 179 00:21:42,560 --> 00:21:48,800 Well, A house that exists for longer is more perfect than one that’s destroyed in a storm. 180 00:21:48,800 --> 00:21:54,960 A person that lives longer has a body that’s more perfect than one that dies from disease. 181 00:21:54,960 --> 00:22:03,280 A plant that gives us more energy is more perfect than one that doesn’t. God – or nature – is more 182 00:22:03,280 --> 00:22:10,560 perfect because it exists longer than an individual tree or a single animal. 183 00:22:11,280 --> 00:22:17,200 Things generally want to exist for as long as possible, so whatever helps that thing achieve 184 00:22:17,200 --> 00:22:22,720 that is more perfect in its relationship with it than something that doesn’t. 185 00:22:22,720 --> 00:22:29,040 Spinoza says simply: “Whatever helps us to attain that perfection, we shall call good, 186 00:22:29,040 --> 00:22:34,560 and whatever hinders our attaining it, or does not assist it, we shall call evil.” 187 00:22:35,680 --> 00:22:40,160 And we try to arrange our ideas of the world in this way as 188 00:22:40,160 --> 00:22:43,680 well. in such a way as to achieve this perfection: 189 00:22:45,040 --> 00:22:52,320 ‘After men began to form universal ideas, and devise models of houses, buildings, towers, etc., 190 00:22:52,960 --> 00:22:59,440 and to prefer some models of things to others, it came about that each one called perfect what 191 00:22:59,440 --> 00:23:12,000 he saw agreed with the universal idea he had formed of this kind of thing, and imperfect.’ 192 00:23:13,200 --> 00:23:14,400 Affections and Emotions 193 00:23:34,080 --> 00:23:40,080 Ok, so lines of cause and effect run through everything and everything has 194 00:23:40,080 --> 00:23:49,840 different capacities to be affected by and affect other things. Lets think about those affections. 195 00:23:50,640 --> 00:24:00,160 Look – a gorilla, in the English country side. I hear, the gorilla, see the gorilla feel fear, the 196 00:24:00,160 --> 00:24:08,960 gorilla’s capacity to beat me in an arm wrestle affects me, and I’m pushed – affected - into run. 197 00:24:10,880 --> 00:24:17,840 Spinoza says that: ‘Unpleasure is a man’s passing from a greater perfection to a lesser.’ 198 00:24:19,200 --> 00:24:26,880 Now, again, this applies to everything. Our sad, angry, fearful, hungry, annoyed, stressed, 199 00:24:26,880 --> 00:24:33,280 anxious, frustrated feelings about things are signals that something is affecting us 200 00:24:33,280 --> 00:24:38,640 in a negative way. That we’re passing into a lesser state of perfection. 201 00:24:40,480 --> 00:24:46,000 Think about hunger. You’re literally decomposing. So the hunger pushes you 202 00:24:46,000 --> 00:24:51,200 to eat for sustenance. Stress is based on the fear that, I don’t know, 203 00:24:51,200 --> 00:24:57,600 if you don’t finish this task you’ll be judged poorly by others and it will hurt your career. 204 00:24:57,600 --> 00:25:03,680 On the other hand, he says, ‘Pleasure is a man’s passing from a lesser perfection to a greater.’ 205 00:25:04,800 --> 00:25:12,160 Like the term ‘unfolding’ for the universe, and the ‘lines’ of cause and effect, our emotions 206 00:25:12,160 --> 00:25:18,400 and feelings are signals of a potential ‘passage’ to a better or worse condition, 207 00:25:18,400 --> 00:25:21,200 a reaction to objects we encounter. 208 00:25:23,760 --> 00:25:31,360 Spinoza calls feelings, emotions, and passions, ‘the affects’ – because they affect us. 209 00:25:31,360 --> 00:25:38,640 He thinks that all emotions boil down to three, from which all the others derive: 210 00:25:38,640 --> 00:25:43,040 Joy, sadness, and desire . 211 00:25:43,040 --> 00:25:50,240 And they’re all related to Spinoza’s idea of perfection: joy is the experience of our condition 212 00:25:50,240 --> 00:25:58,080 being improved. Sadness our condition worsening. Anger, fear, hunger, feeling cold are all ‘sad 213 00:25:58,080 --> 00:26:06,560 affects’. Whereas ‘love’ or ‘confidence’ are examples of the ‘joyful affects’. 214 00:26:06,560 --> 00:26:13,760 But remember, everything is relative. The affects are always about something – in 215 00:26:13,760 --> 00:26:20,160 that line of cause and effect. So he says that ‘a full account of the nature of each passion 216 00:26:20,160 --> 00:26:26,560 must bring in the nature of the external object by which the person having the passion is affected.’ 217 00:26:27,440 --> 00:26:31,120 Again, its the relationship we have to focus on. 218 00:26:31,120 --> 00:26:38,640 We try to organise our lives rationally around how often we’ll encounter, use, or avoid 219 00:26:38,640 --> 00:26:44,800 these things. We want the shelter for more warmth and less rain, we want the good ideas 220 00:26:44,800 --> 00:26:51,840 about raising our child or choosing new hobbies, we want to avoid the things that make us sick. 221 00:26:52,960 --> 00:26:58,160 So how does this relate to Spinoza’s big idea, the thing he spent his 222 00:26:58,160 --> 00:27:05,840 entire life trying to discover: finding what he called the ‘true good’ of being free? 223 00:27:09,200 --> 00:27:31,600 The Rational Joy of Conatus 224 00:27:43,280 --> 00:27:48,560 Ok, so we’re affected by things, we want to be affected by good things, 225 00:27:48,560 --> 00:27:52,560 we want to become more ‘perfect’ in Spinoza’s words, 226 00:27:52,560 --> 00:27:59,120 everything’s a relationship. How do we begin to bring all this together? 227 00:28:00,160 --> 00:28:08,240 First Spinoza is an ‘ethical egoist’. That means that what is good and bad for us, 228 00:28:08,240 --> 00:28:13,440 individually, guides us in what we do, how we think and act. 229 00:28:13,440 --> 00:28:19,520 He said that reason “demands that everyone love himself, seek his own advantage…and 230 00:28:19,520 --> 00:28:25,440 absolutely, that everyone should strive to preserve his own being as far as he can.’ 231 00:28:26,320 --> 00:28:30,560 He called this an organism’s ‘conatus’, which he defines in 232 00:28:30,560 --> 00:28:36,160 various ways at various times as the organisms ‘striving’, ‘endeavour’, 233 00:28:36,800 --> 00:28:46,000 ‘tendency’, ‘force’, and ‘power of acting.’ It applies to the plant as much as to our ideas 234 00:28:46,000 --> 00:28:51,600 Every organism strives to increase its conatus – to exist for longer, 235 00:28:51,600 --> 00:28:54,480 to achieve a better state of perfection. 236 00:28:54,480 --> 00:29:01,600 He says simply that ‘Each thing, as far as it can by its own power, tries to stay in existence.’ 237 00:29:02,240 --> 00:29:09,120 Because of our conatus, we have a desire for things that increase our well-being – food, sex, 238 00:29:09,120 --> 00:29:16,080 love, shelter, good ideas – and an aversion to those things that decrease it – poison, 239 00:29:16,080 --> 00:29:18,080 violence, lions, and gorillas. 240 00:29:18,800 --> 00:29:25,600 But how does our conatus guide us in doing this? What are we doing? Of course, 241 00:29:25,600 --> 00:29:31,520 we have those natural urges, of course some things are better for us and others not. 242 00:29:32,160 --> 00:29:37,120 But as usual with Spinoza, he takes the insight one step further: 243 00:29:37,680 --> 00:29:44,320 in knowing that the lion is bad for us and the berry good we’re doing something else too: 244 00:29:45,040 --> 00:29:51,840 we’re understanding those lines – the affections – the causes and effects in the world. 245 00:29:52,400 --> 00:29:55,120 The conatus needs to understand, 246 00:29:55,120 --> 00:30:00,880 to comprehend, so as to increase its power of doing the right thing to live longer. 247 00:30:01,680 --> 00:30:07,840 This is why Spinoza is a rationalist: understanding is the key to everything. 248 00:30:08,480 --> 00:30:11,120 Understanding is the key to freedom. 249 00:30:11,120 --> 00:30:14,160 Act as if you’re a free person/ The Free Person 250 00:30:14,160 --> 00:30:21,200 How can Spinoza argue that we’re all pushed around by affections out of our control, 251 00:30:21,200 --> 00:30:23,600 and argue that we can be free? 252 00:30:24,240 --> 00:30:32,480 Remember, he says ‘it is clear that we are driven about in many ways by external causes, and that, 253 00:30:32,480 --> 00:30:40,560 like waves on the sea, driven by contrary winds, we toss about, not knowing our outcome and fate.’ 254 00:30:41,440 --> 00:30:45,760 It’s that tossing about that he wants to address. 255 00:30:48,560 --> 00:30:56,560 The affects, passion, and emotions are passive, they happen to us. Like the wind hitting a sail, 256 00:30:56,560 --> 00:31:03,280 a wave crashing over the ship. I see a cake and my mouth salivates and I eat it. 257 00:31:03,280 --> 00:31:10,000 I feel like an idea is a good one so I do it. I think the sound is bad so I run. 258 00:31:10,800 --> 00:31:16,720 But often our ideas are mistaken about whether those affects are really helping us. 259 00:31:17,440 --> 00:31:22,800 What we want to do is understand the real causes and effects of what we do. 260 00:31:22,800 --> 00:31:26,720 We want to know what really caused that sound that sound in the woods before we run, 261 00:31:30,320 --> 00:31:37,840 if that cake is really what I want to improve my condition, if that idea really is accurate. 262 00:31:38,560 --> 00:31:44,640 Spinoza says that just relying on feelings and affects is basically a state of 263 00:31:44,640 --> 00:31:51,600 slavery because were pushed around by them, not understanding and choosing for ourselves. 264 00:31:52,160 --> 00:31:55,840 Instead of being passive we want to be active 265 00:31:55,840 --> 00:32:00,880 He writes that ‘‘The difference is between a man who is led only by an affect or by opinion, 266 00:32:00,880 --> 00:32:07,360 and one who is led by reason. For the former, whether he will or no, does those things he is 267 00:32:07,360 --> 00:32:12,720 most ignorant of, whereas the latter complies with no one’s wishes but his own, 268 00:32:13,280 --> 00:32:19,120 and does only those things he knows to be the most important in life, and therefore 269 00:32:19,120 --> 00:32:25,120 desires very greatly. Hence, I call the former a slave, but the latter, a free man.’ 270 00:32:26,880 --> 00:32:30,560 Ok, so what does being active actually entail? 271 00:32:32,560 --> 00:32:40,720 Someone who is active is guided by their contaus – the desire for longevity, joy, and perfection - 272 00:32:40,720 --> 00:32:47,120 and they should be what Spinoza calls the adequate or sufficient cause of what they’re doing. 273 00:32:47,760 --> 00:32:55,760 To do this we use our reason to study the causes and effects of those relationships between things. 274 00:32:57,120 --> 00:33:05,200 We want to understand those affects on us, and the effect they in turn have in the future. 275 00:33:06,080 --> 00:33:11,920 Adequate ideas are ‘clear and distinct’ knowledge about what increases a person’s 276 00:33:11,920 --> 00:33:16,960 conatus because a person has studied the causes and effects of things. 277 00:33:19,280 --> 00:33:25,520 Ok, an example. Inadequate knowledge is eating because you desire to, because 278 00:33:25,520 --> 00:33:33,280 you’re hungry. It might have a good effect, it might not. This berry might actually poison me. 279 00:33:34,080 --> 00:33:37,840 Adequate knowledge, however, is eating in a rational way, 280 00:33:38,560 --> 00:33:43,360 knowing the nutrients, where it grows and what goes into it, 281 00:33:43,360 --> 00:34:14,960 and the effect it has in the long-term, how it contributes to health, when you’ve had too much. 282 00:34:22,560 --> 00:34:28,720 Spinoza writes that ‘when a rational being is truly active insofar as he is moved by 283 00:34:28,720 --> 00:34:34,000 the knowledge he possesses, the things he does are guided by a true understanding 284 00:34:34,000 --> 00:34:40,320 of what is in his own best interest and thus bring about an improvement in his condition.’ 285 00:34:41,040 --> 00:34:47,840 In other words, the free, active, reasonable person is driven by ‘self-determination.’ 286 00:34:47,840 --> 00:34:52,880 Being active and reasonable requires thinking through the causes and effects 287 00:34:52,880 --> 00:34:58,160 of things sufficiently enough to be able to overcome our simple passions and emotions. 288 00:34:59,360 --> 00:35:06,880 In knowing that I’m hungry, or that I can store them, that this berry contributes to my 289 00:35:06,880 --> 00:35:11,760 vitamin C intake, I’ve done the research, I know how much I need, 290 00:35:14,080 --> 00:35:20,960 then I’m acting, in picking and eating it, actively not passively. 291 00:35:22,400 --> 00:35:28,320 An adequate idea of what to do takes into account all the factors – if we do this 292 00:35:29,680 --> 00:35:35,040 reason will overcome weaker impulses or misguided ideas. 293 00:35:35,680 --> 00:35:39,520 Deleuze writes that ‘once we have attained adequate ideas, 294 00:35:39,520 --> 00:35:45,360 we connect effects to their true causes, and consciousness, having become a reflection 295 00:35:45,360 --> 00:35:50,320 of adequate ideas, is capable of overcoming its illusions, 296 00:35:50,320 --> 00:35:56,080 forming clear and distinct ideas of the affections and affects it experiences’. 297 00:35:56,960 --> 00:36:00,800 Spinoza scholar Steven Nadler gives the example of the choice 298 00:36:00,800 --> 00:36:05,200 between staying home and studying or going out partying with friends. 299 00:36:05,840 --> 00:36:10,960 In the moment, going out might have a stronger affect on your desire. 300 00:36:10,960 --> 00:36:16,800 But if we consider all the factors about our finances, or the job we get from the effect 301 00:36:16,800 --> 00:36:22,080 of staying in studying, we might come to the decision that its more rational to stay in 302 00:36:22,080 --> 00:36:27,680 and study. Alternatively, We might decide we need a night off, because we’re over worked. 303 00:36:29,040 --> 00:36:35,920 Spinoza is not saying one thing is better than an other: only that we have to consider 304 00:36:35,920 --> 00:36:43,040 our options and really understand the effects of our choices. We have to use our heads. 305 00:36:43,680 --> 00:36:50,320 Nadler writes that: ‘A person is therefore free when his adequate ideas are more powerful, 306 00:36:50,320 --> 00:36:55,440 affectively speaking, than his passions or inadequate ideas.’ 307 00:36:55,440 --> 00:36:59,280 For Spinoza, freedom is about reason, 308 00:36:59,280 --> 00:37:04,560 and someone who is free is someone who acts ‘according to the dictate of reason’ 309 00:37:05,120 --> 00:37:10,160 He says that ‘the only thing that reason makes us try to get is understanding.’ 310 00:37:13,320 --> 00:37:21,840 Reasoning your way to Nature and God 311 00:37:25,920 --> 00:37:33,600 Spinoza spends a lot of time in his Ethics commenting on virtue, vice, emotions, and feelings 312 00:37:33,600 --> 00:37:41,360 and trying to understand their relationship to reason. He is a rationalist, after all; he 313 00:37:41,360 --> 00:37:49,880 wants to make the case that using our reason will direct us without error along the correct path. 314 00:37:49,880 --> 00:37:54,800 A vice, for example, is ‘an immoderate love 315 00:37:54,800 --> 00:37:59,840 or desire for eating, drinking, sexual union, wealth and esteem.” 316 00:38:00,400 --> 00:38:05,600 The might bring pleasure in the short-term but are harmful over a longer period. 317 00:38:06,240 --> 00:38:11,120 Fortitude, for Spinoza, is a virtue above all others. He says: 318 00:38:11,680 --> 00:38:18,000 ‘“from the guidance of reason we want a greater future good in preference to a lesser present one, 319 00:38:18,000 --> 00:38:21,760 and a lesser present evil in preference to a greater future one.” 320 00:38:23,520 --> 00:38:29,200 Fortitude is the act of working hard, looking forward, thinking broadly, 321 00:38:29,200 --> 00:38:35,280 investing our time in understanding how the world works so that we can reap future rewards. 322 00:38:37,920 --> 00:38:47,520 But here’s the beautiful bit. Everything in Spinoza connects. Remember how for Spinoza god is 323 00:38:48,080 --> 00:38:57,680 nature. God is in everything. And god is perfect. Nature just is. It’s the unfolding line of cause 324 00:38:57,680 --> 00:39:07,120 and effect that runs through everything, its the fact that the many are one, all is one substance. 325 00:39:08,560 --> 00:39:15,520 He says to overcome and choose the rational thing, to live with fortitude, we must 326 00:39:16,160 --> 00:39:22,000 look to god – to Nature – to see what lasts, what works, whats most perfect and most 327 00:39:22,000 --> 00:39:29,040 beautiful to increase our own conitus as a species in relationship with the rest of nature. 328 00:39:29,920 --> 00:39:35,600 He wants to look from what he describes as the ‘perspective of eternity;’ 329 00:39:57,360 --> 00:40:02,480 Think about how people give up smoking when they have kids. Or maybe get more humble 330 00:40:02,480 --> 00:40:08,480 and tolerant from travelling the world. The wider the view the more long term orientated 331 00:40:08,480 --> 00:40:16,160 you become. You look at causes over the perspective of a longer period of time. 332 00:40:20,480 --> 00:40:27,200 Looking to eternity is the most godly way of thinking, looking at everything from a gods 333 00:40:27,200 --> 00:40:35,120 eye view, the perspective of eternity. AT what causes what over the longterm. 334 00:40:36,320 --> 00:40:40,960 He says ‘Perfecting the intellect is nothing but understanding God, 335 00:40:40,960 --> 00:40:45,920 his attributes, and his actions, which follow from the necessity of his nature.’ 336 00:40:50,000 --> 00:40:57,920 To take one more example. Think about growing a plant to eat. We learn from god – nature- by 337 00:40:57,920 --> 00:41:02,960 watching, by experiencing, seeing what happens when it rains, what 338 00:41:02,960 --> 00:41:10,400 soil it grows best in, which nutrients and what amount of sunlight.Or in building a house 339 00:41:10,400 --> 00:41:15,920 we look for the strongest wood that’s the best insulator and lasts the longest. 340 00:41:18,240 --> 00:41:23,680 Spinoza says simply that everything in life works in the same way. 341 00:41:42,800 --> 00:41:48,720 He says: ‘“He who understands himself and his affects clearly and distinctly 342 00:41:48,720 --> 00:41:54,560 loves God, and does so the more, the more he understands himself and his affects.” 343 00:41:54,560 --> 00:42:01,520 Scotism and Virtue 344 00:42:01,520 --> 00:42:05,600 Spinoza says a few things about the ‘free person’s character’, 345 00:42:05,600 --> 00:42:12,800 and talks at length about different virtues, emotions, and vices, but fundamentally, 346 00:42:12,800 --> 00:42:19,680 the person led by reason and guided by nature will have two things: 347 00:42:20,480 --> 00:42:27,600 Strength of character: that’s the fortitude, the striving, the will to understand the world. 348 00:42:27,600 --> 00:42:35,680 And they’ll be active – choosing by reason – not passive – pushed by affections 349 00:42:39,200 --> 00:42:45,040 Spinoza was influenced by the Stoics of Ancient Greece and Rome. Instead of relying on 350 00:42:45,040 --> 00:42:52,480 capricious and unpredictable joys like sensual pleasure and fears or anger, ultimate freedom, 351 00:42:52,480 --> 00:42:59,760 he says, is grounded in reason. And from this will come a joyful serenity that arises 352 00:42:59,760 --> 00:43:04,480 from knowledge that doing the rational correct thing should pay off in the end. 353 00:43:05,200 --> 00:43:10,960 Joy remember, is the feeling of, an increase in our conatus, an increase 354 00:43:10,960 --> 00:43:18,800 in power. So Spinoza’s ethics is grounded in increasing an active, in control, rational joy. 355 00:43:20,640 --> 00:43:22,720 But because we’re part of the universe, 356 00:43:22,720 --> 00:43:29,600 we’ll also take joy from seeing the affections and relationships of the world for what they are. 357 00:43:34,400 --> 00:43:41,280 He says ‘A person who sees the necessity of things regards their passage with calm and composure.’ 358 00:43:43,680 --> 00:43:48,080 Getting frustrated and angry at the universe is the result of seeing 359 00:43:48,080 --> 00:43:54,720 the world through the lens of inadequate ideas. Imagine getting angry with the lion, 360 00:43:54,720 --> 00:44:01,600 blaming the lion for wanting to eat you. It’s not the lions choice, not her fault, shes not 361 00:44:01,600 --> 00:44:07,920 morally responsible. Spinoza says we should look at the rest of the world in this way too. 362 00:44:08,640 --> 00:44:14,720 Seeing from the ‘perspective of eternity’ means looking at how different affections, 363 00:44:14,720 --> 00:44:19,280 different causes and effects, affect things with different levels of 364 00:44:19,280 --> 00:44:20,080 power. HE says “The power of an effect has its limits set by the power of its cause” 365 00:44:20,080 --> 00:44:27,200 So the power of the lion biting your leg has cause in the lions hunger. We don’t get angry, 366 00:44:27,200 --> 00:44:30,800 upset, or frustrated with the lion personally. 367 00:44:30,800 --> 00:44:36,560 Now imagine asking for directions in the street and the person ignores us. We get a 368 00:44:36,560 --> 00:44:41,600 little frustrated. But then we discover the person speaks a different language, 369 00:44:41,600 --> 00:44:47,200 or is deaf, or is scared of us because they were harassed on the street last week. 370 00:44:47,200 --> 00:44:53,680 There are causes we didn’t consider that have a powerful affect on the person. And when 371 00:44:53,680 --> 00:45:00,320 we look from the ‘perspective of eternity’ it becomes difficult for us to direct our negative 372 00:45:00,320 --> 00:45:06,720 emotions at single people, ideas, or objects. It becomes unreasonable. 373 00:45:07,280 --> 00:45:14,080 Spinoza says: ‘If we separate an emotion-affect from the thought of an external cause and join 374 00:45:14,080 --> 00:45:20,160 it to other thoughts, then the love or hate toward the external cause is destroyed, 375 00:45:20,160 --> 00:45:24,000 as is the mental instability arising from these affects.’ 376 00:45:25,680 --> 00:45:33,520 Powerfully, we should think of all of the causes of things – again, giving us a gods-eye view, 377 00:45:33,520 --> 00:45:42,720 but also lessening the blame or negative emotion we feel towards one thing or one person. 378 00:45:43,520 --> 00:45:49,760 As Steven Nadler writes ‘this view serves to distribute the causal responsibility for the 379 00:45:49,760 --> 00:45:55,360 affect widely and dilute its power significantly, perhaps taking away 380 00:45:55,360 --> 00:46:00,880 its strength altogether. The intensity of the affect is weakened as it becomes less 381 00:46:00,880 --> 00:46:08,000 focused on one particular individual and more on a long sequence of necessitating causes.’ 382 00:46:08,000 --> 00:46:14,320 The same applies to our own negative emotions, our own problems. We must have knowledge about 383 00:46:14,320 --> 00:46:19,920 their causes, and their effects, otherwise we are slaves to them. Because, ultimately, 384 00:46:19,920 --> 00:46:24,720 we want to increase the joyful affects and decrease the negative ones. 385 00:46:24,720 --> 00:46:30,800 HE says ‘So someone who is led solely by his love of freedom to moderate his affects and 386 00:46:30,800 --> 00:46:38,000 appetites will try his hardest to come to know the virtues and their causes, and to fill his mind 387 00:46:38,000 --> 00:46:44,720 with the joy that comes from the true knowledge of them; he will not think about men’s vices, 388 00:46:44,720 --> 00:46:49,760 or disparage men, or take pleasure from putting up a show of being a free man. 389 00:46:50,320 --> 00:46:56,240 If you observe these carefully (they aren’t difficult) and regularly put them into practice, 390 00:46:56,240 --> 00:47:01,786 you will soon be able to direct most of your actions according to the command of reason. ‘ 391 00:47:01,786 --> 00:47:02,561 Morality & Benevolence 392 00:47:02,560 --> 00:47:05,440 If you follow his advice, Spinoza says, 393 00:47:05,440 --> 00:47:13,040 you’ll find your way out from the confusion of the forest of affects. You’ll be able to see the wood 394 00:47:13,040 --> 00:47:19,360 through the trees. You’ll see the bigger picture, the one from eternity, the gods eye view. 395 00:47:20,000 --> 00:47:26,640 You’ll have perspective. And Spinoza’s ethics have been applied to many areas and I've only 396 00:47:27,360 --> 00:47:37,840 scratched the surface but it boils down to this – reflect on the causes of things. 397 00:47:41,280 --> 00:47:50,080 But, you may be wondering what has this got to do with morality? His most famous work is called the 398 00:47:50,080 --> 00:47:57,200 ethics after all. Spinoza’s picture of the world seems to be quite self-centered. So 399 00:47:57,200 --> 00:48:05,840 before we end I want to touch on what Spinoza says about community, morality, and benevolence. 400 00:48:09,440 --> 00:48:14,560 For Spinoza, morals can only be grounded on the simple fact that 401 00:48:14,560 --> 00:48:19,840 every organism and being wants to increase their own conatus 402 00:48:19,840 --> 00:48:25,600 Spinoza's morality (or benevolence) is based on the idea that its rationally 403 00:48:25,600 --> 00:48:30,960 wise to surround oneself with people who are also rational – as 404 00:48:30,960 --> 00:48:35,280 rational people, he says, will want the same things as one another. 405 00:48:35,280 --> 00:48:41,760 He says ‘there is nothing more useful to a man than a man. Men, I repeat, 406 00:48:41,760 --> 00:48:47,040 can wish for nothing more helpful to their staying in existence than that 407 00:48:47,040 --> 00:48:52,000 all men should be in such harmony that the minds and bodies of them all 408 00:48:52,560 --> 00:48:59,440 would be like one mind and one body; that all together should try as hard as they can to stay 409 00:48:59,440 --> 00:49:05,760 in existence; and that all together should seek for themselves the common advantage of all.’ 410 00:49:06,560 --> 00:49:12,960 The opposite to a joy grounded in understanding and an increase in contatus are a life 411 00:49:12,960 --> 00:49:19,440 lived under the influence of the sad passions. So it’s only logical to want to minimise negativity. 412 00:49:19,440 --> 00:49:24,080 We assemble the world rationally in order to avoid the sad passions. 413 00:49:24,080 --> 00:49:31,760 We create assemblages of medicines, technologies, norms and values, 414 00:49:31,760 --> 00:49:38,080 entertainment, information, family and friends -we have a species ‘common ideas.’ 415 00:49:38,080 --> 00:49:45,280 He says ‘the body has been affected most forcefully by what is common ·to all the men·, ‘ 416 00:49:45,280 --> 00:49:48,400 We all want to preserve the things that are good for our 417 00:49:48,400 --> 00:49:51,600 nature. And many of those things are common to us all. 418 00:49:52,400 --> 00:49:58,720 And If we’re arguing, angry, suspicious, and fearful rather than joyful, calm and 419 00:49:58,720 --> 00:50:05,360 rational we’re increasing the sad passions, and that shouldn’t be anyone’s foundational goal. 420 00:50:05,360 --> 00:50:11,280 Moreover, two heads are better than one when it comes to tasks, and the rational person 421 00:50:11,280 --> 00:50:17,280 should always want to convince the other to their own cause, to be rational too. 422 00:50:19,040 --> 00:50:24,080 Take the example of working out how to grow an apple tree. 423 00:50:25,520 --> 00:50:30,560 The more people working on the problem, with the same goal, the better it will be. 424 00:50:31,440 --> 00:50:42,000 Scholars have been critical of Spinoza's view here, but I think his point is that we should come 425 00:50:42,000 --> 00:50:53,280 together positivity and ground that any debate or competition in joy rather than negativity. 426 00:50:55,280 --> 00:51:01,840 I’m not going to summarise, its impossible to. I’ll leave you with the last few lines of the 427 00:51:01,840 --> 00:51:07,200 Ethics: ‘The road to these things that I have pointed out now seems very hard, 428 00:51:07,200 --> 00:51:13,360 but it can be found. And of course something that is found so rarely is bound to be hard. 429 00:51:13,920 --> 00:51:19,280 For if salvation were ready to hand and could be found without great effort, how could it 430 00:51:19,280 --> 00:51:35,840 come about that almost everyone neglects it? But excellence is as difficult as it is rare.’ 51083

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