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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 January 2025
The laws (leges, singular: lex) of nature play a central, if not always adequately appreciated, role in Spinoza’s system (for a detailed account, see Curley forthcoming; cf. Curley 2016b, 2019). Some things are obvious enough to be undeniable: in the Preface to Part 3 of the Ethics Spinoza writes that nature has a power of acting which is everywhere and always the same, a power of acting which he identifies with the laws of nature, “according to which all things happen and change from one form to another” (ii/138). He infers that to understand the occurrence of anything that happens, we must understand the laws of nature according to which it happens. This is clear and widely recognized.
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