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This is the archive for 30 July 2006

Sunday, July 30, 2006

By Ana Hontz Ward, VOA News

As the conflict in the Middle East heats up and the death toll continues to mount, world leaders are trying to end the crisis with diplomacy and dialogue. In an idyllic setting in the northeastern U.S. state of Maine, young people from the Middle East region are using the same approach, on a smaller scale.

Visit the Seeds of Peace homepage

seeds of peace/ state department photo
David Good, Director of the India, Nepal and Sri Lanka Affairs Office, talks with a Seeds of Peace Camper during the session at the State Department. A special Internet forum has been set up for all Seeds of Peace alumni to continue dialogue with their new friends and gives them a chance to meet other Seeds. (State Dept.)
quigman's/MCT
knocks panel  a/MCT
knocks panel b/MCT
Benedictus de Spinoza (November 24, 1632 – February 21, 1677), named Baruch Spinoza by his synagogue elders and known as Bento de Espinosa or Bento d'Espiñoza in his native Amsterdam, was a Jewish-Dutch philosopher. He is considered one of the great rationalists of 17th-century philosophy and, by virtue of his magnum opus the Ethics, one of the definitive ethicists. His writings, like those of his fellow rationalists, reveal considerable mathematical training and facility. Spinoza was a lens crafter by trade, an exciting engineering field at the time because of great discoveries being made by telescopes. The full impact of his work only took effect some time after his death and after the publication of his Opera Posthuma. He is now seen as having prepared the way for the 18th century Enlightenment, and as a founder of modern biblical criticism. Gilles Deleuze referred to Spinoza as "The absolute philosopher, whose Ethics is the foremost book on concepts". (Deleuze, 1990.)

Read Spinoza's The Ethics, one of 12 examples of his work available free from Project Gutenberg.

Baruch Spinoza/wikipedia photo
Baruch Spinoza