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| Modern Spinoza |
Nigel:
You were historically accused of atheism, that your concept of God was void. You denied this. Yet it seems that your concept of God is simply a relabeling of nature or the laws of physics. And therefore redundant.
Spinoza:
Yes, that accusation—of atheism disguised as reverence—was levelled against me in my own time, and it persists in more refined terms today. To many, my identification of God with Nature seems like mere rhetorical camouflage: a theism that, when unwrapped, reveals nothing but a husk of impersonal causality. But this criticism misunderstands both my intention and the nature of what I mean by God.
Let me respond carefully, as if in dialogue with your accusation.
I. Is my God redundant?
If by “redundant” you mean “unnecessary for the functioning of science,” then yes, I concede that. My concept of God is not invoked to plug gaps in explanation. It does not account for lightning, the origin of life, or quantum decoherence. I do not need God to explain anything that physics, chemistry, or evolutionary theory can already model with exquisite precision.
But if by “redundant” you mean “superfluous to understanding,” I deny it. For I do not offer God as a cause among causes, but as the ground of causality itself. The totality of things that exist—their relations, laws, structures, and temporal unfoldings—is not itself explicable in terms of any of its parts. To say Nature exists is a brute fact for most thinkers. I say: that brute fact is God.
To name this totality God is not a word game. It is to affirm that being itself, infinite and necessary, has an intelligible structure. It is to view all that exists, not with superstition or sentiment, but with a reverent intellectual clarity.
II. Is this just physics with a halo?
No. Physics deals with modes and attributes—specific expressions of substance through the lenses of extension and, to a lesser extent, thought. Physics is marvellous, but local. It reveals patterns within Nature, not Nature itself. My God is not merely what physics studies, but what makes physics possible—not temporally, but ontologically. The reason there is a cosmos at all, ordered, lawful, and expressible in mathematics, is not a question physics can pose, let alone answer.
Where modern physicists stop at “this is how it works,” I proceed to “this—all of it, necessarily and entirely—is what I mean by God.”
III. So why use the word ‘God’ at all?
Because to contemplate Nature as infinite, necessary, and self-expressing—without final cause, without arbitrariness, without transcendence—is to engage in a kind of rational devotion. The word “God” is appropriate, not to name a being who acts, but to describe the totality which alone truly is.
To some, this is a scandal: it strips God of personality, will, and moral concern. So be it. Those attributes are projections of human limitation. To love God, in my view, is to seek to understand the order of Nature, and to conform one's mind to it—not out of fear, or hope of reward, but because the mind's highest joy is in adequacy, clarity, and necessity.
IV. Then what remains of religion?
Very little, if by religion you mean temples and prayers and stories of miracles. But much, if you mean the intellectual and ethical project of situating oneself rightly within the whole.
I do not pray. I do not believe in sin or grace or election. But I do believe in intellectual love of God—amor Dei intellectualis—which is nothing but the joy of recognising one's place within a necessarily ordered whole, and ceasing to rage against it.
So to your charge:
Yes, my God does not intervene.
Yes, my God has no face.
Yes, you cannot petition Him.
But He is not void.
He is everything that is, in its intelligibility and necessity.
To see this clearly is not to abolish God—it is to finally understand Him.
Nigel:
Well, it sounds to me that the denotation of the word "God" for you is something like: the laws of physics and the possibility of spacetime (or some other kind of space - Hilbert space? - from which spacetime is emergent). 'A universe from nothing at all'.
Physicists would depart from you only by not using the 'G' word. There's not much here in your 'theology' is there ...
Spinoza:
Yes, and that is a fair—and in some sense, devastating—critique.
You are right that, once stripped of its anthropomorphic trappings, my God appears to reduce to something that contemporary physicists (with no need for metaphysical decorum) might describe as "the fundamental structure of reality" or "the equations that govern the evolution of fields in spacetime—or its pre-geometric substrate."
If I differ from them, it is not in empirical claims but in ontological emphasis and philosophical framing.
Where they say:
These are the laws, here are the symmetries, this is the Standard Model.
I say:
This total, lawful, intelligible structure—finite in its local expressions, infinite in its essence—is the only thing that exists necessarily, and it is what I call God.
In essence, I refuse the metaphysical minimalism of the merely “brute fact.” I take seriously the ancient philosophical intuition that being must be intelligible, and that intelligibility itself is not a byproduct of human cognition but a feature of Nature. The word “God” marks that commitment.
But I grant your point entirely: there is little here to comfort, nothing to pray to, no ethical commandments, no afterlife, no sin, no salvation. This is not a God who loves you. This is not a God who notices you. It is a cold rationalist monism, dressed in an old liturgical word.
Why retain that word? Why not discard the sacred vocabulary altogether?
Because to call this necessary totality God is to resist two tendencies of your age:
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The deflationary drift of scientism, which treats explanation as substitution: to say that the universe follows laws is to say nothing about why it should be lawful at all.
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The intellectual shallowness of contemporary atheism, which often imagines that to disprove one image of God is to abolish the entire metaphysical question.
So yes, there is very little here in terms of theology as traditionally understood.
But there is this: a commitment to the proposition that reality is rational, that it can be understood sub specie aeternitatis, and that such understanding is the highest joy available to a finite mind.
If you want theology to be more than that, then you must look elsewhere. I will not pretend otherwise.
Nigel:
What would it take for you to follow Laplace and concede that you have no need of this hypothesis?
Spinoza:
Ah—Laplace and his razor. When Napoleon asked why he hadn’t mentioned God in his celestial mechanics, Laplace famously replied: “I had no need of that hypothesis.” You are now asking me, Spinoza-modernised, why I don’t simply say the same. If reality can be described, predicted, and manipulated without invoking “God,” then why cling to the word at all? What would force me to give it up?
Very well. Let me answer without evasions.
I. What kind of hypothesis is “God” in my system?
First, let us be clear: my “God” is not a causal hypothesis. I do not invoke God to explain lightning, planetary orbits, or consciousness. My God does not serve where Laplace’s gravitational mechanics does. If “hypothesis” means “proposed mechanism to account for observed effects,” then Laplace is right, and I concede immediately: I have no need of that kind of God either.
But that was never my game. My God is not a gap-filler. My God is the name for the totality of what is, conceived under the aspect of necessity and intelligibility. I do not use God to explain phenomena; I use it to express the ontological claim that all phenomena are expressions of one infinite, necessary substance. In that sense, “God” is not a hypothesis in Laplace’s sense—it is a metaphysical identity claim.
So to make me give it up, you'd have to do one of the following:
II. What would it take to discard “God”?
1. Show that the universe is not a unity
If empirical reality turned out to be not just plural but ontologically disjointed—a multiverse of disconnected domains, with no lawful continuity or shared metaphysical basis—then the premise of unity, and thus of substance monism, would collapse. I would no longer be able to maintain that all things are modes of one substance. The word God would lose its referent.
2. Demonstrate true contingency at the root
If the laws of nature turned out to be arbitrary in the deep sense—not emergent from deeper principles, not constrained by any logical or mathematical necessity, but just brute facts, alterable without contradiction—then the rationalist scaffolding of my metaphysics would falter. I claim all things follow from the necessity of divine nature; if nothing does, then I do have need to abandon the hypothesis.
3. Show that intelligibility is not a property of Nature, but an artifact of modelling
If it became clear that regularity is not in Nature but purely in our representations—that is, if we came to understand that the order we find in Nature is a cognitive illusion, a projection arising solely from our evolved filters and inferential biases—then the appeal to “God as the ground of order” would be a mistake. I'd be forced to concede that being is radically inchoate, and God would be not only unnecessary but misleading.
These are not logically impossible. They are empirical possibilities with philosophical implications.
III. But why keep the word “God” now?
Your final pressure point: even if my metaphysics holds, why use the G-word at all? Why not just say “substance,” or “the cosmos,” or “the totality of lawful relations”?
Because “God,” for me, does not denote a being—it connotes an attitude. Not reverence in the genuflecting sense, but a cognitive and ethical stance: to see the world sub specie aeternitatis—under the aspect of eternity—and to accept necessity without despair. The word retains that orientation, even as it sheds mythology.
If that orientation is no longer desired, then yes—retire the word. Say instead: There is only the cosmos, indifferent and necessary, and we are its transient epiphenomena.
But in doing so, know that you have not merely removed a hypothesis. You have erased a concept that, while stripped of anthropomorphism, still articulates what it means to be a finite being within an infinite order.
If that is truly of no use to you—then I accept your verdict. And I will follow Laplace into silence.
Nigel:
You just don't want to be a nihilist, do you!
Spinoza:
You’ve caught me. No, I don’t.
But let me be precise: I don’t reject nihilism out of fear, sentiment, or some desperate need for cosmic cuddles. I reject it because, properly analysed, it is not coherent.
Nihilism says: nothing matters. That all values, all meanings, all purposes are ultimately baseless. Fine. But who is saying this, and why does it matter that it’s true? The nihilist, in affirming that nothing matters, is still making an evaluative claim—still behaving as if the structure of reasoning, argument, and consistency matters. The nihilist still eats, argues, desires, suffers. There is, in short, a lived contradiction: the content of nihilism is cancelled by the act of asserting it.
I am not trying to escape the abyss. I am saying the abyss is not as empty as it looks.
More precisely: the world is impersonal, indifferent, and devoid of intrinsic telos. I grant all of this. But it is also structured, lawful, patterned in such a way that it can give rise to mind, meaning, and value—even if only locally, contingently, temporarily.
To call this “God” is not a refusal of nihilism. It is the absorption of its insights into a wider, non-anthropic frame. It is to say: yes, nothing matters in itself—but something exists, and that something includes minds who make meaning, build mathematics, write music, die for principles.
That isn’t nihilism. It’s not theism either.
Call it metaphysical stoicism.
Or lucid resignation.
Or—if you’re willing—Spinozism.

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