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The thinker and the stinker

Irvin Yalom's novel of ideas speculates on the intellectual conundrum posed by a Nazi theorist's interest in a Jewish philosopher

July 27, 2012 14:05
Baruch Spinoza

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Anonymous

2 min read

What is the link between 17th-century, Jewish-Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza and Estonian Nazi ideologue Alfred Rosenberg?

In 1942, Rosenberg’s task-force, the Einsatzstab Reichsleiter Rosenberg, confiscated a collection of books from the Spinoza Museum in the Netherlands that they believed had been owned by Spinoza himself. A report written by Rosenberg’s chief officer declared that the books might be “of great importance for the exploration of the Spinoza problem”.

Could Rosenberg have had some personal interest in Spinoza? And if so, what? Irvin D Yalom imagines an answer to these questions in The Spinoza Problem, a novel that presents, in alternating chapters, fictional accounts of the lives of both Rosenberg and Spinoza.

It begins with a teenage Rosenberg, already an antisemite, appalled to discover that his idol, Goethe, admired the Jewish Spinoza above all philosophers. A few years later, Rosenberg reads Spinoza’s writings for himself, and is taken aback by their wisdom and power.This, in essence, is Yalom’s conception of Rosenberg’s Spinoza problem: how can a Jew, even one who distanced himself from Judaism, have written such great philosophy?

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