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Published: 2014-04-26 19:10:08 +0000 UTC; Views: 2254; Favourites: 13; Downloads: 10
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Description
How useful are the queues in banks: did this sketch in a few minutes of boredom.
Baruch Spinoza (1632 - 1677); Prince of the philosophers of the West, the wisest of the wise.
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Comments: 8
LSCatilina [2014-04-26 20:40:40 +0000 UTC]
In a few minutes? That's quite of an achievement.
Spinoza isn't one of my favourites even if he's clearly the main philosopher of his time.
Aparts the hands, it's quite impressive especially the head and the look (juvenile, but I suppose it was intended)
What gave you the idea to drawning this? A paint or quote in the hall? (It would be astonishing in a bank, but we never know)
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bluessaurus In reply to LSCatilina [2014-04-26 21:21:12 +0000 UTC]
Well, I love Spinoza because of his approach about theology; more than prove that institutionalized religions are nothing but deceptions, he practically freed God from the tyranny of man.
But, you're right, his hands are forked, I drew in a big hurry.
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LSCatilina In reply to bluessaurus [2014-04-26 21:56:47 +0000 UTC]
Fortunatly, the look you gave attract the focus upwhere : if the hands were gaunted and more dark, it would have been less obvious but keeping them white allows to draw a line between Head , first hand (highlighted by the pipe) and second hand (highlighted by the book), eventually summarizing Spinoza's tought : Mind as source of inner and external conscience, Affect, Freedom trough knowledge.
I may be over-analysing though
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bluessaurus In reply to LSCatilina [2014-05-02 03:44:07 +0000 UTC]
That's a really cool analysis!
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