"Aiming to extract life lessons from the philosophy of Spinoza, this vibrant study focusses on the concept of ‘homo liber,’ or the free person, a supremely rational figure continually striving for power and virtue. . . . Spinoza’s work serves as a hopeful, timely statement of what the truth-seeking individual can accomplish."
New Yorker
"As an accessible introduction to the complex thought of Spinoza, it is a success."<b>---Jeffrey Collins, <i>Wall Street Journal</i></b>
"If you want to become a better person, you ought to study the philosophy of Baruch Spinoza. That at least is the message of Steven Nadler’s delightful new book."<b>---Jonathan Rée, <i>Literary Review</i></b>
"A helpful explication of [Spinoza’s] ideas about ethics, the afterlife, and human nature."
Kirkus Reviews
"If you want the clearest and most sympathetic introduction as exists to Spinoza’s ideas . . . then Nadler’s your man. This, his latest book, is a must-read for our present, troubled times."<b>---David Conway, <i>Jewish Chronicle</i></b>