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    Adequate knowledge of things under the form of eternity r... — Carmelics
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    Home/Virtue Ethics
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    Supports→The more we join our minds with God through adequate knowledge of things under the form of eternity, the less we are affected by our own passions

    Adequate knowledge of things under the form of eternity reduces the influence of external things on us

    Truth & KnowledgeVirtue Ethics
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    Topics

    Virtue EthicsTruth & Knowledge

    Key Terms

    knowledge(Distinguished from mere true belief, which may be the product of indoctrination and need not exercise deliberative capacities.)
    Justified true belief — true belief that has been arrived at through the exercise of deliberative capacities, including comparison of and deliberation among alternatives.

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    Consciousness & Mind2 linkedDivine Attributes1 linked

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    Passions are nothing but our passivity in the face of forces external to usReduced influence of external things diminishes the passivity that constitutes p...The more we join our minds with God through adequate knowledge of things under t...

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    The more we join our minds with God through adequate knowledge of thin...85%Aristotle does not unambiguously hold that the world is eternal73%Apodictic certainty about external things is unavailable except throug...73%Sanches doubts the possibility of perfect knowledge of external things...72%

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    SEP: continental-rationalism
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    This epistemological ideal forms the core of Spinoza’s rationalistic ethics—and, hence, on one plausible account, the core of his Ethics. Spinoza’s monism entails that the sort of individuals that Aristotle regarded as primary substances are distinguished not by their own substantial unity, but by their conatus—their striving to persist. Thus, self-preservation is not just one possible goal of ethical agents; it is the very thing that makes those agents individuals. Our essence, and our ethical

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