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====Uriel da Costa's early influence==== [[File:Dacosta und Spinoza.jpg|left|thumb|240x240px|[[Samuel Hirszenberg]]'s imagined scene of Uriel da Costa instructing Spinoza (1901)]] Through his mother, Spinoza was related to the philosopher [[Uriel da Costa]], who stirred controversy in Amsterdam's Portuguese Jewish community.{{sfn|Israel|2023|p=159}} Da Costa questioned traditional Christian and Jewish beliefs, asserting that, for example, their origins were based on human inventions instead of God's revelation. His clashes with the religious establishment led to his excommunication twice by rabbinic authorities, who imposed humiliation and social exclusion.{{sfn|Israel|2023|p=160}} In 1639, as part of an agreement to be readmitted, da Costa had to prostrate himself for worshippers to step over him. He died in 1640, reportedly committing suicide.{{sfn|Israel|2023|p=161}} During his childhood, Spinoza was likely unaware of his family connection with Uriel da Costa; still, as a teenager, he certainly heard discussions about him.{{sfn|Israel|2023|p=90}} [[Steven Nadler]] explains that, although da Costa died when Spinoza was eight, his ideas shaped Spinoza's intellectual development. Amsterdam's Jewish communities long remembered and discussed da Costa's skepticism about organized religion, denial of the soul's immortality, and the idea that Moses didn't write the Torah, influencing Spinoza's intellectual journey.{{sfn|Nadler|2018|p=84}}
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