History of Jewish PhilosophyDaniel Frank, Oliver Leaman Routledge, 2005/10/20 - 952 ページ Jewish philosophy is often presented as an addendum to Jewish religion rather than as a rich and varied tradition in its own right, but the History of Jewish Philosophy explores the entire scope and variety of Jewish philosophy from philosophical interpretations of the Bible right up to contemporary Jewish feminist and postmodernist thought. The links between Jewish philosophy and its wider cultural context are stressed, building up a comprehensive and historically sensitive view of Jewish philosophy and its place in the development of philosophy as a whole. |
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... Moses, Sinai, the Jewish nation, Palestine—none of these appears. The one strikingly Jewish feature that characterizes every answer is the reference of all things to God, and even when that reference degenerates into a mere “tag,” the ...
... Moses continually says in his description of creation, “And God spoke and it came to pass.” As for God's resting on the seventh day, this does not signify the end of his work but only that “after he had finished ordering all things, he ...
... Moses speaking Attic Greek?” (Stern 1976:2:209). 3 Special Laws 4.61; Questions on Genesis 3.5; 4.152, 167; Allegorical Interpretation 1.108; Every Good Man is Free 57; On God 6–7: Moses spoke of the “designing fire” (pyr technikon) ...
... Moses is portrayed as being disturbed that he could not understand the intricate legal interpretations of Rabbi Aqibah, into whose second-century CE academy he had been miraculously transported incognito. But, as the legend continues ...
... Moses ibn Ezra, whose son became a “philosophical convert”; 'Abd al-Baghdādī, who studied the Guide of the Perplexed; and ibn Sab'īn, who also studied Maimonides' masterwork.42 Second, the philosophers associated with ishrāq met and ...
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9 | |
64 | |
III Modern Jewish philosophy | 514 |
IV Contemporary Jewish philosophy | 674 |
Index of names | 804 |
Index of terms | 838 |