TL;DR: In this paper, Bennett expounds, compares, and criticises Spinoza's theses in a direct no-nonsense style, with an astonishing erudition and an astonishing no-onsense style.
Abstract: "With an astonishing erudition ...and in a direct no-nonsense style, Bennett expounds, compares, and criticises Spinoza's theses ...No one can fail to profit from it. Bennett has succeeded in making Spinoza a philosopher of our time." -- W N A Klever, Studia Spinoza
TL;DR: In this paper, the conatus doctrine is used to describe the dynamics of individuality in the form of power, existence, activity, and power, power, and existence of individuals.
Abstract: Introduction 1. Spinoza on being 2. Causation and geometry 3. Power, existence, activity 4. The derivation of the conatus doctrine 5. The meaning of the conatus doctrine 6. Geometrical dynamics of individuality Conclusion.
TL;DR: In this paper, it was pointed out that the human mind is associated with thinking and being conscious, and that having a mind is recognizable from behavior of a certain sort, and the absence of mentality from behaviour of other sorts.
Abstract: Spinoza identifies the minds or souls of finite things with God’s ideas of those things. Margaret Wilson famously suggests that this identification prevents Spinoza from giving an adequate account of the human mind: Descartes’s position on the mind-body issue is notoriously beset with difficulties. Still, [his] theory of res cogitantes does recognize and take account of certain propositions about the mental that seem either self-evidently true or fundamental to the whole concept. These include ... that the mind (in a straightforward and common sense of the terms) represents or has knowledge of external bodies; that it is ignorant of much that happens in “its” body; that having a mind is associated with thinking and being conscious; that mentality is recognizable from behavior of a certain sort, and the absence of mentality from “behavior” of other sorts. Will not Spinoza’s theory of “minds” simply fail to be a theory of the mental if it carries the denial of all or most of these propositions? More specifically, will it not fail to make sense of the specific phenomena of human mentality by attempting to construe the human mind as just a circumscribed piece of God’s omniscience? (Wilson 1980: 111)