Why does Spinoza think Unity is a necessary property of substance? Is this something he posits or is there an argument behind this?
1 Answers
Here's a basic answer :
Spinoza's account is inextricably linked to the one substance and its essence. "All things ... are in God, and everything which takes place takes place by the laws alone of the infinite nature of God, and follows ... from the necessity of His essence" {Ethics, I, prop. XV, dem.). But according to Spinoza, substance is not essence, so an explanation of Unity in terms of substance as essence is not possible. It has an essence, and other things have essences too. Thus, Spinoza can say that unlike substance whose "essence necessarily involves existence, or, in other words, it pertains to its nature to exist" {Ethics, I, prop. VII, dem.), "the essence of things produced by God does not involve existence" {Ethics, I, prop. XXIV). For Spinoza, Unity consists of, or is based upon, one infinite substance or God whose essence is existence and from which everything necessarily follows. Unity is connected with substance and essence in such a way that it is difficult to see how one can even approximate Spinozistic Unity apart from substance and essence. (Michael P. Levine, 'Pantheism, Substance and Unity', International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, Vol. 32, No. 1 (Aug., 1992), pp. 1-23 : 15.
Levine could be clearer but the main point is that while Aristotle, for instance, recognises a plurality of substances, Spinoza acknowledges only one, infinite substance which calls 'deus sive natura' - 'God or nature'. He does not believe that more than one entity can satisfy his definition of substance as 'that which is in itself and is conceived through itself'(Ethics, I, Definition 3). If there were more than one substance, the nature of each substance would have to be conceived - specified - in terms of its relation to the other substance(s). E.g., through the spatial relation of one substance to another, of their causal interaction or independence, of their similarities and differences. No substance could be 'conceived through itself' but only through its relation to another substance or other substances, whose existence would condition its own. This would violate the definition of substance.
Difficult, obscure matters but I hope this throws some light.
- 35,647
- 4
- 43
- 146
https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/52987/leibniz-why-must-substance-be-indivisible-unified
– Robert C Jun 11 '18 at 05:44