Relations (1)

cross_type 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts

Baruch Spinoza is fundamentally related to the concept of God because he identified God as the single, infinite substance of which all mind and matter are attributes, as evidenced in his philosophical works [1], [2], [3], and [4].

Facts (4)

Sources
Panpsychism - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy plato.stanford.edu Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 2 facts
perspectiveBaruch Spinoza (1632–1677) regarded both mind and matter as aspects or attributes of a single, eternal, infinite, and unique substance identified with God.
quoteIn the illustrative scholium to proposition seven of book two of the Ethics, Baruch Spinoza writes: "a circle existing in nature and the idea of the existing circle, which is also in God, are one and the same thing … therefore, whether we conceive nature under the attribute of Extension, or under the attribute of Thought … we shall find one and the same order, or one and the same connection of causes…."
Panpsychism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy/Fall 2015 Edition) plato.stanford.edu William Seager, Sean Allen-Hermanson · Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy 1 fact
perspectiveBaruch Spinoza viewed mind and matter as attributes of a single, infinite substance he identified as God.
Critique of Panpsychism: Philosophical Coherence and Scientific ... thequran.love Zia H Shah MD · The Muslim Times 1 fact
claimBaruch Spinoza (1632–1677) advanced a form of dual-aspect monism, holding that there is only one substance—identified with God or Nature—which possesses infinite attributes, of which mind (thought) and matter (extension) are the two accessible to humans.