APA Citation

Spinoza, B. d. (1737). A treatise partly theological: And Partly political, containing some few discourses, to prove the liberty of philosophizing (that is Making Use of Natural Reason) may be allowed without any prejudice to piety, or to the Peace of any Commonwealth. And that The Loss of Public Peace and Religion itself must necessarily follow, where such a Liberty of Reasoning is taken away. Translated from the Latin of Spinoza. London: printed in the year 1737. And sold by the booksellers of London and Westminster.

Chicago Style Citation

Spinoza, Benedictus de. A Treatise Partly Theological: And Partly Political, Containing Some Few Discourses, to Prove the Liberty of Philosophizing (that Is Making Use of Natural Reason) May Be Allowed Without Any Prejudice to Piety, or to the Peace of Any Commonwealth. And That The Loss of Public Peace and Religion Itself Must Necessarily Follow, Where Such a Liberty of Reasoning Is Taken Away. Translated From the Latin of Spinoza. London: printed in the year 1737. And sold by the booksellers of London and Westminster, 1737.

MLA Citation

Spinoza, Benedictus de. A Treatise Partly Theological: And Partly Political, Containing Some Few Discourses, to Prove the Liberty of Philosophizing (that Is Making Use of Natural Reason) May Be Allowed Without Any Prejudice to Piety, or to the Peace of Any Commonwealth. And That The Loss of Public Peace and Religion Itself Must Necessarily Follow, Where Such a Liberty of Reasoning Is Taken Away. Translated From the Latin of Spinoza. London: printed in the year 1737. And sold by the booksellers of London and Westminster, 1737.

Warning: These citations may not always be 100% accurate.