Forbes: ‘Stranger Things’ Wanted To Avoid Being ‘Game Of Thrones,’ But It’s Mirrored It
‘Stranger Things’ Wanted To Avoid Being ‘Game Of Thrones,’ But It’s Mirrored It
MSN: Stranger Things' ending isn't another Game of Thrones, but it is the new Lost
The end of Netflix's Stranger Things marked the first time since Game of Thrones that a TV finale became a true cultural event, and that brought with it a great amount of pressure. Game of Thrones ...
Stranger Things' ending isn't another Game of Thrones, but it is the new Lost
bleedingcool: Stranger Things 5 Team Didn't Want Finale to Be "Game of Thrones" 2.0
Stranger Things 5 Team Didn't Want Finale to Be "Game of Thrones" 2.0
Forbes: Bad ‘Game Of Thrones,’ ‘Stranger Things’ Endings Are Being Remade Convincingly, Poorly, With AI
Bad ‘Game Of Thrones,’ ‘Stranger Things’ Endings Are Being Remade Convincingly, Poorly, With AI
Baruch (de) Spinoza[b] (24 November 1632 – 21 February 1677), also known under his Latinized pen name Benedictus de Spinoza, was a philosopher of Portuguese-Jewish origin, who was born and lived in the Dutch Republic.
All of this has given rise to a great deal of scholarly debate as to what Spinoza means by saying all things being modes of or “in” God. They may also explain why, as of Proposition Sixteen, there is a subtle but important shift in Spinoza’s language.
Benedict de Spinoza, Dutch Jewish philosopher, one of the foremost exponents of 17th-century Rationalism and one of the early and seminal figures of the Enlightenment. His masterwork is the treatise Ethics (1677). Learn more about Spinoza’s life and work.