The Struggle with the Demon [Der Kampf mit dem Daemon] (1929), p. 256, as translated by Marion Sonnenfeld
“The rediscovery of Spinoza by the Germans contributed to the shaping of the cultural destinies of the German people for almost two hundred years. Just as at the time of the Reformation no other spiritual force was as potent in German life as the Bible, so during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries no other intellectual force so dominated German life as Spinozism. Spinoza became the magnet to German steel. Except for Immanuel Kant and Herbart, Spinoza attracted every great intellectual figure in Germany during the last two centuries, from the greatest, Goethe, to the purest, Lessing.”
S. M. Melamed, Spinoza and Buddha: Visions of a Dead God (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1933)
M - R
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Baruch Spinoza 210
Dutch philosopher 1632–1677Related quotes
Selected works, Spinoza and Buddha: Visions of a Dead God (1933)
German versions of the Bible that preceded the Luther Bible
Daniel Barenboim, " Germans, Jews, and Music https://www.nybooks.com/articles/2001/03/29/germans-jews-and-music/" (The New York Review of Books, 29 March 2001)
A - F, Daniel Barenboim
Goethes Gespraeche (December 13, 1813)
“I twitch every time anyone mentions ‘Germanic’ culture.”
Replying to @lhardingwrites, Halsall, Guy, 19 May 2019, Twitter, http://archive.is/Pvr6O, 27 January 2020, 1 February 2020 https://twitter.com/Real_HistoryGuy/status/1130126559413772289,
Quotaes, Twitter (2019)