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177. - Suicide

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Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2025

Karolina Hübner
Affiliation:
Cornell University, New York
Justin Steinberg
Affiliation:
Cornell University, New York
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Summary

“Suicide” rarely comes up in Spinoza’s works, though the concept crops up at E4p18s: “that those that kill themselves are weak-minded and completely conquered by external causes contrary to their nature.” The concept is also found at E2p49s: “just as I also do not know how highly we should esteem one who hangs himself, or children, fools, and madmen,” and in Ep23, Spinoza’s letter to Willem van Blijenbergh: “Then I say (whether I grant free will or not) that if anyone sees that he can live better on the gallows than at his own table, he would act very foolishly if he did not go hang himself.” A longer passage in E4p20s deals with Seneca’s self-destruction when he was “forced by the command of a Tyrant … to open his veins, i.e., he desires to avoid a greater evil by [submitting to] a lesser.” That scholium concludes with “But that a man should, from the necessity of his own nature, strive not to exist, or to be changed into another form, is as impossible as that something should come from nothing” (E4p20s).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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References

Recommended Reading

Barbone, S., and Rice, L. C. (1994). Spinoza and the problem of suicide. International Philosophical Quarterly, 34(2), 229–41.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buyse, F. (2016). Spinoza on conatus, inertia, and the impossibility of self-destruction. Society and Politics, 10(2), 115–34. https://philarchive.org/archive/BUYSOCGoogle Scholar
Delassus, E. (2012). Le suicide de Spinoza: Un problème éthique et philosophique. Interrogations?, 15. www.revue-interrogations.org/Le-suicide-de-Spinoza-un-problemeGoogle Scholar
Grey, J. (2017). Reply to Nadler: Spinoza and the metaphysics of suicide. British Journal for the History of Philosophy, 25(2), 380–88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ivic, S. (2007). Spinoza and Kant on suicide. Res Cogitans, 1(4), 132–44.Google Scholar
Matson, W. (1977). Death and destruction in Spinoza’s Ethics. Inquiry, 20, 403–17.Google Scholar
Nadler, S. (2016). Spinoza on lying and suicide. British Journal for the History of Philosophy, 24(2), 257–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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