Mention830631

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so:text Not only Goethe's poetry but his science is Spinozistically motivated. Convinced of the oneness of nature, he approached it with a certainty to discover in it oneness, and his discovery of the os intermaxtllare in man, which influenced the development of comparative anatomy, is one of the by-products of his Spinozistic sentiments. In his theory of the metamorphosis of the plants, which he expounded scientifically and poetically, he also expressed a good deal of Spinozism. Spinoza enabled him to read the various pages of nature as one book. Goethe respected Kant and may be described as a Kant scholar, but he was a Spinoza adherent. His world-picture is Spinozistic and not Kantian. (en)
so:isPartOf https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Baruch_Spinoza
so:description Spinoza and Buddha: Visions of a Dead God (1933) (en)
so:description Selected works (en)
so:description Quotations regarding Spinoza (en)
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