Abstract
The title of this issue, Spinoza Today', takes up a question central to Genevieve Lloyd's
substantial oeuvre, whether she is writing about feminist philosophy or historical phi-
losophers and movements. That is, how do we draw on past philosophers to address
contemporary problems, while also doing justice to the context for which they
wrote? More particularly, why be interested today in what Spinoza wrote in the seven
teenth century? But also: How do we read so as to be attentive to Spinoza's particular
concerns, and without subordinating his insights to neat dichotomies that aid the
teaching, if not the thinking, of his philosophy?