Cudworth, Ralph

Encyclopedia of Renaissance Philosophy (2022)
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Abstract

Ralph Cudworth was an expounder of “Cambridge Platonism.” His main tenet is that natural phenomena cannot be explained only by the principles of mechanism; therefore, the existence of a “plastic nature,” which orders the world in accordance with divine decrees, has to be postulated. The order of creation, in turn, does not depend only on divine will but also on the essences present in God’s intellect. These essences can be known through the notions innate to human soul, which recollects them by means of its active nature. On this basis, Cudworth opposes the Calvinist and the Hobbesian voluntarism, for which divine will is the only source of natural and moral laws. Hobbes is also attacked as a main expounder of atheism, which Cudworth traces back to the idea that matter alone is the source of any activity and phenomenon. To this idea, Cudworth opposes an argument of the existence of God that foreruns Locke’s.

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Andrea Strazzoni
Università di Torino

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The true intellectual system of the universe.Ralph Cudworth - 1845 - Bristol, England: Thoemmes Press.
A treatise concerning eternal and immutable morality.Ralph Cudworth - 1996 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Sarah Hutton & Ralph Cudworth.

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