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. |
この書籍内から
検索結果1-5 / 76
... rational morality, is what made the Aqedah difficult. Other readers had identified the challenge to Abraham as that of keeping faith that “through Isaac you will have seed,” despite what God commanded. Some have rejected the very ...
... rational, i.e. that actions should invariably produce appropriate consequences.” The injustices that God allows to ... rationality constitutes the heart of the mainstream tradition in Greek philosophy. For a philosopher like Nietzsche ...
... rational, and the term logismos, reasoning, as Redditt has noted, occurs characteristically seventy-three times, for the most part in the context of the author's recurring theme that human reason is sovereign over the emotions.22 Gutman ...
... rational soul full of clearness and distinctness” making unmediated contact with the inspired mind that “makes the first advance,” one can readily discern a reference to the activation of the human intellect (Decalogue 33–5). In Philo's ...
... rational inquiry that characterized philosophy as a meditation on the first things of nature in its original Greek habitat? Can there be a science of revelation as there is a science of nature? Some students of either philosophy or ...
目次
1 | |
9 | |
64 | |
III Modern Jewish philosophy | 514 |
IV Contemporary Jewish philosophy | 674 |
Index of names | 804 |
Index of terms | 838 |