[The Ethics by Benedict de Spinoza]@TWC D-Link book
The Ethics

PREFACE
42/68

For the mind feels those things that it conceives by understanding, no less than those things that it remembers.

For the eyes of the mind, whereby it sees and observes things, are none other than proofs.

Thus, although we do not remember that we existed before the body, yet we feel that our mind, in so far as it involves the essence of the body, under the form of eternity, is eternal, and that thus its existence cannot be defined in terms of time, or explained through duration.

Thus our mind can only be said to endure, and its existence can only be defined by a fixed time, in so far as it involves the actual existence of the body.

Thus far only has it the power of determining the existence of things by time, and conceiving them under the category of duration.
PROP.XXIV.


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