In Where No Man Has Gone Before...
When Mitchell claims to have read the "long-haired hippy stuff" that Kirk likes, Kirk is amazed. Mitchell goes on to call Spinoza, "simple". Although Star Trek's Spinoza could be a 21st or early 22nd century philosopher, Baruch Spinoza was a 17th century philosopher whose writings were banned by the Vatican.
What is even more interesting is the fact that Spinoza believed that good and evil were relative concepts. I find this interesting because as Where No Man Has Gone Before develops Mitchell increasingly applies Spinozan ethics as he becomes increasingly powerful. In the end, Kirk himself chooses the Spinozan path as he kills his friend Gary Mitchell...a task he has struggled with during the episode.
When Mitchell claims to have read the "long-haired hippy stuff" that Kirk likes, Kirk is amazed. Mitchell goes on to call Spinoza, "simple". Although Star Trek's Spinoza could be a 21st or early 22nd century philosopher, Baruch Spinoza was a 17th century philosopher whose writings were banned by the Vatican.
What is even more interesting is the fact that Spinoza believed that good and evil were relative concepts. I find this interesting because as Where No Man Has Gone Before develops Mitchell increasingly applies Spinozan ethics as he becomes increasingly powerful. In the end, Kirk himself chooses the Spinozan path as he kills his friend Gary Mitchell...a task he has struggled with during the episode.