Spinoza's Ethics is one one of the most influential books in Western philosophy. It was published by a friend in 1677, shortly after he had died. It was immediately attacked as being atheistic, because it suggests a conception of God without any anthropomorphic characteristics. The God of Spinoza is not personal; it is a God without  will, emotion, purpose, or mercy. According to Spinoza, this is not necessary since the world is perfect as it is; only our perception is so dim that we cannot grasp the deeper structure of nature.

Spinoza also rejects the idea of free will in the traditional sense. In Part 2 of the Ethics he writes:  "In the Mind there is no absolute, or free, will, but the Mind is determined to will this or that by a cause which is also determined by another, and this again by another, and so to infinity."

Spinoza attempts to construct his Ethics more geometrico, according to a geometric method. He starts with definitions and axioms, from which he deducts and tries to prove propositions. Wittgenstein was so impressed by this rigor that he emulated Spinoza's style in the Tractatus.

The Ethics has five parts: Of God, of the Nature and Origin of the Mind, of the Origin and Nature of the Affects, of Human Bondage, or the Power of the Affects, and of the Power of the Intellect, or of Human Freedom.

Here is the beginning of Part one, which includes the basic definitions and axioms, and the first eleven propositions, which culminates in Spinoza's proof for the necessary existence of God.