Abstract A central objection to objectivist interpretations of Spinoza’s theory of attributes is their alleged inconsistency with his commitment to the simplicity of God’s essence. This paper offers a novel response to this objection. I begin by outlining two main arguments for the claim that, for Spinoza, God’s essence must be simple: his alignment with a longstanding tradition that treats simplicity as a necessary divine property, and his endorsement of the principle that parts are by nature prior to their wholes. I then introduce a distinction, available within Spinoza’s framework, between integral and metaphysical parts. I argue that while Spinoza is committed to the view that God’s essence cannot have integral parts, he is not committed to denying it metaphysical parts. This reading not only addresses the simplicity objection but also clarifies Spinoza’s definition of ‘attribute’ and strengthens the case for both structural and constitutive forms of objectivism.
Antonio Salgado Borge (Mon,) studied this question.