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Steph Marston
Birkbeck College
  1.  12
    Interrogating Understanding in Conatus: A Commentary on Genevieve Lloyd’s ‘Reconsidering Spinoza’s “Rationalism”’.Steph Marston - 2020 - Australasian Philosophical Review 4 (3):266-270.
    ABSTRACT According to Genevieve Lloyd, conatus is manifested in body as a fixed ratio of motion and rest and in mind as increasing adequate understanding. The commentary provides textual analysis to resolve the apparent paradox that bodily stability corresponds to intellectual growth. The activity of adequate ideas and passivity of inadequate ideas are identified as analogues of motion and rest in Spinoza’s philosophy of mind and these are put to work in exploring what is required for increasing one’s adequate understanding: (...)
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  2.  9
    Expression as Creativity - Exploring Spinoza’s Dynamic of Politics.Steph Marston - 2023 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 11 (2):95-115.
    Deleuze (1990) reads Part I of the Ethics as articulating an expressionist philosophy, in which to express (exprimere) is the ontological criterion for existence throughout Spinoza’s metaphysical system. However, he argues that inadequate ideas and passions are non‑expressing, such that finite modes express substance only in their adequate ideas. I argue, contra Deleuze, that Spinoza’s account of the workings of the human mind presses us to understand inadequate ideas as genuine expressions of substance which nonetheless are specific to the individuals (...)
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    Expression as Creativity.Steph Marston - 2022 - Journal of Early Modern Studies 11 (2):95-115.
    Deleuze (1990) reads Part I of the Ethics as articulating an expressionist philosophy, in which to express (exprimere) is the ontological criterion for existence throughout Spinoza’s metaphysical system. However, he argues that inadequate ideas and passions are non‑expressing, such that finite modes express substance only in their adequate ideas. I argue, contra Deleuze, that Spinoza’s account of the workings of the human mind presses us to understand inadequate ideas as genuine expressions of substance which nonetheless are specific to the individuals (...)
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  4.  29
    Spinoza and Dutch Cartesianism: Philosophy and Theology By Alexander X. Douglas Oxford University Press, 2015, pp. 184 pages ISBN 978-0-19-873250-1. [REVIEW]Steph Marston - 2016 - Philosophy 91 (1):136-139.
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    The Spiritual Automaton: Spinoza's Science of the Mind. By Eugene Marshall. Oxford University Press, 2014, p. 256, £35 ISBN 978-0-19-967553-1. [REVIEW]Steph Marston - 2015 - Philosophy 90 (3):524-528.
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