Baruch Spinoza... claimed that "Whatsoever is, is in God, and without God nothing can be, or be conceived. "Individual things are nothing but modifications of the attributes of God, or modes by which the attributes of God are expressed in a fixed and definite manner." Though Spinoza has been called the "prophet" and "prince" of pantheism, in a letter to Henry Oldenburg Spinoza states that: "as to the view of certain people that I identify god with nature (taken as a kind of mass or corporeal matter), they are quite mistaken". For Spinoza, our universe (cosmos) is a mode under two attributes of Thought and Extension. God has infinitely many other attributes which are not present in our world.
According to German philosopher Karl Jaspers, when Spinoza wrote "Deus sive Natura" (God or Nature) Spinoza did not mean to say that God and Nature are interchangeable terms, but rather that God's transcendence was attested by God's infinitely many attributes, and that two attributes known by humans, namely Thought and Extension, signified God's immanence. Furthermore, Martial Guéroult suggested the term panentheism, rather than pantheism to describe Spinoza's view of the relation between God and the world. The world is not God, but it is, in a strong sense, "in" God.
It seems to me that in this sense Spinoza's God is almost the Western philosophical equivalent of the ancient Chinese philosophical concept of the Tao. The Tao is not itself "the ten thousand things" (i.e. material existence) but "The name that can be named is not the eternal name. The nameless is the beginning of Heaven and Earth. The named is the mother of ten thousand things." (Laozi) To sit quietly and recall that the coming to be of things in time is no more than the result of things that have been, and that things themselves rest in the open ground as wavelets rest in the flowing stream, is to see that the stream itself - the Tao, God, Being - is prior to all that is. "He is before all things, and in him all things hold together" (Colossians 1:17 NIV).
As Spinoza himself pointed out, there are three kinds of knowledge:
In Ethics (Part II, Proposition 40, Scholium 2), Spinoza outlines three kinds of knowledge:
1. Opinion or Imagination (opinio): Based on sensory experience and hearsay—fragmentary and often confused.
2. Reason (ratio): Deductive, conceptual understanding of things through their common properties—clearer, but still mediated.
3. Intuitive Knowledge (scientia intuitiva): A direct, immediate grasp of things through their essence in God—non-discursive, holistic, and transformative.
Spinoza writes that intuitive knowledge “proceeds from an adequate idea of the formal essence of certain attributes of God to the adequate knowledge of the essence of things.” It’s not inference—it’s seeing. (Microsoft Copilot, in repsponse to user query, 31 October 2025)
The second kind of knowledge, rational thought, cannot make the connection with the Ground. But to sit still with the knowledge, to sit stil in the impossibility of speech, like a Zen monk with a koan, is to allow "the fundamental unknowability of God" (Wikipedia) to open into the Ground all by itself. When we come to an end of what we can say - what we can think - the only path open is the way of emptiness, into the infinite pleroma of what actually is.
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