Short Treatise on God
Korte Verhandeling van God, de Mensch, en Deszelvs Welstand (Short Treatise on God, Man, and His Well-Being) — Spinoza's c. 1660-62 early Dutch-language draft of what would become the Ethics
Tradition: Early modern philosophy
The early draft of the Ethics — Spinoza's first systematic presentation of his metaphysics, written before the more-Latin geometric form was fully developed
The Korte Verhandeling (Short Treatise) is Spinoza's early systematic presentation of his metaphysics, composed c. 1660-62 in the years before the Ethics. The work circulated only in Dutch manuscript among Spinoza's closest correspondents during his lifetime and was not published in his Opera Posthuma — it was lost until 1862, when a Dutch manuscript was rediscovered. Its substance is recognisably the Ethics in seed form: one substance with infinite attributes, the identification of God and Nature, the conatus doctrine, the analysis of the passions, the path to blessedness through adequate knowledge. The form is much less developed — the geometric-deductive method that organises the Ethics is absent, the treatment of the passions is shorter and less systematic. The Short Treatise is essential for understanding the development of Spinoza's thought from his early Cartesian-rationalist starting point to the mature Ethics, and is the principal source for the chronology of Spinozan ideas in the 1660s.
Author
Editions cited
- Korte Verhandeling van God, de Mensch, en Deszelvs Welstand (composed c. 1660-62 in Dutch translation from a lost Latin original; rediscovered 1862, first published Van Vloten edition 1862); modern critical edition in Spinoza Opera (Carl Winter, 1925); English trans. Samuel Shirley in Spinoza: Complete Works (Hackett, 2002)
School Embodiments
The Short Treatise is the foundational text for understanding the development of Spinozism — the early form of every major doctrine of the mature Ethics.
"God or Nature — these are not two things but one; the substance whose existence is necessary, whose attributes are infinite, and whose modes are everything that is." (Short Treatise, I.2)
The work is paradigm Cartesian-rationalist seventeenth-century philosophy: substance, attributes, modes, necessary existence — the categories of post-Cartesian metaphysics applied with Spinozan rigour.
"From the definition of substance follows necessarily its existence; for substance is that which exists in itself and is conceived through itself." (Short Treatise, I.1, in Cartesian-Spinozan form)
Spinoza is realist about the one substance, its attributes, its modes — these are not constructions but the actual structure of being.
"What is, is one substance; what we perceive as many things are modes of this one substance; this is the deepest truth of metaphysics." (Short Treatise, I.2)
The identification of God and Nature is a naturalist move: the divine is not transcendent of the natural order but identical with it.
"God is the immanent, not the transitive, cause of all things; God acts only by the necessity of his own nature, not by external compulsion or by choice." (Short Treatise, I.4)
The metaphysical framework of substance and modes has classical-Platonic resonances mediated through Aquinas and the scholastic-Cartesian tradition.
"What the schoolmen called the universal and particular, I treat as the relation between the attribute and the mode." (Short Treatise, methodological remark)
The apophatic-mystical tradition that Spinoza absorbed through his reading of medieval Jewish mysticism and Renaissance Christian Neoplatonism has elements in the Short Treatise that the more austere Ethics suppresses.
"The intellectual love of God is the highest blessedness available to the human mind; in this love the soul finds rest." (Short Treatise, II.22, the seed of Ethics V)
The treatise's treatment of the passions and the path to blessedness has a pragmatic-realist dimension — what actually makes the soul blessed, not what abstract theory recommends.
"To free the soul from the disturbing passions is the proper work of philosophy; understanding the passions adequately is the path to that freedom." (Short Treatise, II.6)
Internal Tensions
The Short Treatise's 1862 rediscovery transformed Spinoza scholarship by opening direct access to the development of his mature views. Its relation to the lost Latin original (Spinoza's correspondents are known to have translated it into Dutch) means that the surviving text is at one remove from Spinoza's own composition. Modern Spinoza scholarship treats it as the principal source for the genetic understanding of Spinozism.
I. Time
The eternal time of substance; the temporal-developmental time of Spinoza's own thinking in the early 1660s.
Attributes
II. Space
The Amsterdam-Rijnsburg space of Spinoza's early intellectual community.
Attributes
III. Matter
Matter as one of the attributes of substance (extension), alongside thought; particular bodies as modes of extension.
Attributes
IV. Observer
The philosophical mind seeking intellectual love of God; Observer Number Singular at the metaphysical depth Spinoza reaches.
Attributes
V. Energy
The conatus — the striving by which each mode preserves itself in being — as the dynamic of every existing thing.
Attributes
VI. Information
The substance-attribute-mode structure as the deepest information about being.
Attributes
Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How Short Treatise on God resolves each dilemma
51 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 32 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 6 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.
4 mainstream positions
Matter · 7 dilemmas · 4 distinctive
What stuff is — fundamental, relational, or appearance.
3 mainstream positions
Observer · 37 dilemmas · 5 distinctive
Mind, agency, and the knower's relation to the known.