The Spinoza Problem by Irvin D. Yalom
I love this book by my favorite psychoanalyst/author, Irvin Yalom. As he did
in his novels, When Nietzsche Wept and The Schopenhauer Cure,
Yalom uses his psychoanalytic training and philosophical knowledge to construct
a gripping work of historical fiction. He offers plausible theories about the internal lives of the brilliant
philosopher Baruch Spinoza and the demented Nazi ideologue Alfred
Rosenberg. Yalom expertly alternates
between the story of Spinoza’s life as an excommunicated Jew from Amsterdam in
the 17th century and Rosenberg’s life as a Nazi in 20th century Germany.
In 2007 Yalom visits the Spinoza Museum in Rijnsburg, 45
minutes outside of Amsterdam. He learns
that in 1942, Alfred Rosenberg, the prominent anti-Semitic Nazi ideologue, had
organized his henchmen to pack all the books from the Spinoza Museum and take
them to Germany. The official Nazi Report
about the looting states, “The museum
contains possible early works of great importance for the exploration of the
Spinoza problem.” Yalom asks himself, "Why
would one of the strategists of the plot to eradicate the Jewish population in
Europe personally travel to Amsterdam to over see the stealing and preserving
of Spinoza’s books? Why not simply burn
the museum and its contents?" It turns out that when Rosenberg made
anti-Semitic comments in boarding school, the headmaster instructed him to read
the German philosopher Goethe’s writings. Goethe admired Spinoza and praised Spinoza in his writings. This does
not make sense to Rosenberg. How could
his hero, Goethe, admire this Jewish philosopher? It is a question that haunts him.
Spinoza’s orthodox community believed that the Torah was the
exact word of God and that science should not be pursued. Spinoza came to believe in a paradigm based
on thought, reasoning, science and evidence, not superstition. He was a kind and gentle man, but was still
excommunicated from his Jewish community. He left Amsterdam and began a life of
reading, writing and contemplation of non-Talmudic authors. As Yalom states, "Spinoza’s ideas paved
the way for the Enlightenment." Different from the shallow rote thinking of Rosenberg, Spinoza was
curious, analytical and self-reflective. He believed that current thoughts and
feelings were most likely shaped by previous experiences. He was a thinker ahead of his time.
By the 1940s, Rosenberg had risen to a high position in the
Nazi Party. Yalom includes the venomous lies and disgusting insults written by
Rosenberg in his Nazi sponsored newspaper. He then imagines a “therapy” that
might explore Rosenberg's petrifying pathology and uncover his obsession with
Spinoza and the “Jewish problem.” Yalom
suggests that Rosenberg has such an extreme inferiority complex that he
develops a compensating “superiority complex." Why the Jewish people are Rosenberg’s
particular target is not a point Yalom dwells upon. After all, the odious bigotry of
anti-Semitism had permeated many aspects of European culture for centuries.
Rosenberg never repented for his involvement in the Final Solution. He was hung
at the end of the Nuremberg trials.
The Spinoza Problem is another superb novel by Irvin
Yalom. Integrating history, philosophy
and psychology, he takes us on another deep dive into understanding why human
beings behave the way they do.