Lodewijk Meyer

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Jan van der Heyden: View of Oudezijds Voorburgwal with the Oude Kerk in Amsterdam, 1670. Bierkaai (beer quay) where Meyer was born in 1629.
(Anonymous, Lodewijk Meijer): Philosophia S. Scripturae interpres, "1674". Published in one book together (convolute) with Benedictus de Spinoza's here also anonymous Tractatus theologico-politicus. Added in handwriting: "Benedicto de Spinosâ".
Lodewijk Meyer: De materia, ejusque affectionibus motu, et quiete, dissertation Leiden University, 1660.

Lodewijk Meyer (also Meijer) (bapt. 18 October 1629,

Benedictus de Spinoza.[1][2]

He is generally considered the author of an anonymous work, the Philosophia S. Scripturae Interpres, although there are indications that his friend Johannes Bouwmeester may have been the co-author or even the author.[3] It was initially attributed to Spinoza, and caused a furor among preachers and theologians, with its claims that the Bible was in many places opaque and ambiguous; and that philosophy was the only criterion for interpretation of cruxes in such passages. Just after the death of Meyer his friends revealed that he was the author of the work, which had been banned by the Court of Holland together with Spinoza's Tractatus Theologico-Politicus in 1674.[4][5]

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