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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... doctrine of attributes, Guide 3.20), the problem of evil is not dismissed with the glib assertion that “good” as applied to God does not mean the same as “good” when applied to humans. If such a History of Jewish philosophy 16.
... the friends, who have not understood Gersonides, mistakenly attribute to him. Rabbi Meir Leibush Malbim, the nineteenth-century exegete, adopts the more conventional teaching on foreknowledge. On his reading History of Jewish philosophy 18.
... attribute, the term used repeatedly by pseudo-Aristeas is not eleemon (which occurs only in 208; cf. LXX Exodus 34:6), but epieikes (192, 207, 211), which means “equitable” or “fair,” thus avoiding (at least from the vantage point of ...
... attribute to him mystical happenings involving union with the deity as such must remain uncertain in view of the absence of anything more than vague descriptions of psychic states that at most represent only a mystical experience of the ...
... attribute metriopatheia to the sage Abraham (Abraham 257; cf., however, Questions on Genesis 4.73, Greek fragment, Marcus 2.220, where he says that Abraham experienced on the death of his wife Sarah not a pathos but a propatheia. See ...
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9 | |
64 | |
III Modern Jewish philosophy | 514 |
IV Contemporary Jewish philosophy | 674 |
Index of names | 804 |
Index of terms | 838 |