Results for 'German- Jewish philosophy'

952 found
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  1.  28
    The Significance of Spinoza and His Philosophy for the Life and Poetry of the German-Jewish Poetess Rose Ausländer [Spinoza und Seine Philosophie im Schaffen der Deutschsprachigen Dichterin Rose Ausländer].Maria Kłańska - 2011 - Forum Philosophicum: International Journal for Philosophy 16 (2):111-119.
    The German-Jewish writer and poetess, Rose Ausländer, who came from Chernivtsi, capital of Bukovina, one of the former provinces of the Hapsburg Empire, is one of the most highly acclaimed lyric poets to have written in German in the 20th century. Throughout her whole life she was an adherent of the philosophy of Spinoza, first becoming acquainted with it in the so-called “ethics seminar” of the secondary-school teacher Friedrich Kettner. In the wake of the First World (...)
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  2.  43
    The Heteronomy of Modern Jewish Philosophy.Michael Zank - 2012 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 20 (1):99-134.
    Abstract Proceeding from Jewish philosophy's origins in the convergence and divergence of Greek and Jewish thought and the resulting possibilities of construing Judaism and philosophy as heterogeneous or homogeneous, and ranging across the three major “ages“ or linguistic matrices of Jewish philosophizing (Hellenistic, Judeo-Arabic, and Germanic), the essay describes Jewish philosophy as an unresolvable entanglement in a dialectic of heteronomy and autonomy.
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  3.  17
    Jewish philosophy as a Direction of the World philosophy of Modern and Contemporary Times.I. Dvorkin - 2019 - RUDN Journal of Philosophy 23 (4):430-442.
    This article represents an analysis of the Jewish philosophy of the Modern and Contemporary as the holistic phenomenon. In contrast to antiquity and the Middle Ages, when philosophy was a rather marginal part of Jewish thought, in Modern Times Jewish philosophy is formed as a distinct part of the World philosophy. Despite the fact that representatives of Jewish philosophy wrote in different languages and actively participated in the different national schools of (...)
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  4.  16
    An introduction to modern Jewish philosophy.Claire Elise Katz - 2014 - New York, NY: I.B. Tauris.
    "How Jewish is modern Jewish philosophy? The question at first appears nonsensical, until we consider that the chief issues with which Jewish philosophers have engaged, from the Enlightenment through to the late 20th century, are the standard preoccupations of general philosophical inquiry. Questions about God, reality, language, and knowledge have been as much concern to Jewish thinkers as they have been to others. In this textbook, which surveys the most prominent thinkers of the last three (...)
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  5. Chapter 6. "Jewish philosophy" and the politics of German-Jewish thought between the world wars.Philipp von Wussow - 2023 - In Julie Cooper & Samuel Hayim Brody, The king is in the field: essays in modern Jewish political thought. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
     
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  6.  81
    German Idealism and the Jew: The Inner Anti-Semitism of Philosophy and German Jewish Responses.Michael Mack - 2003 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    In _German Idealism and the Jew_, Michael Mack uncovers the deep roots of anti-Semitism in the German philosophical tradition. While many have read German anti-Semitism as a reaction against Enlightenment philosophy, Mack instead contends that the redefinition of the Jews as irrational, oriental Others forms the very cornerstone of German idealism, including Kant's conception of universal reason. Offering the first analytical account of the connection between anti-Semitism and philosophy, Mack begins his exploration by showing how (...)
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  7. Michael Mack, German Idealism and the Jew: The Inner Anti-Semitism of Philosophy and German Jewish Responses Reviewed by.Wendy Hamblet - 2004 - Philosophy in Review 24 (1):39-41.
     
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  8.  2
    Homo temporalis: German Jewish thinkers on time.Nitzan Itzhak Lebovic - 2024 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    A group of modern Jewish intellectuals grappled with concepts of time and temporality. Martin Buber, Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, and Paul Celan stand at the center of our contemporary understanding of religion, critical theory, politics, and literature. All four rejected notions of borders, territory, or national origin. Their path teaches us about three 'temporal turns'-in 1900, in 1945, and in 2000.
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  9.  10
    Fackenheim: German Philosophy and Jewish Thought.Louis I. Greenspan & Graeme Nicholson - 1992 - Toronto Studies in Philosophy.
    Emil Fackenheim, now retired from the University of Toronto, is one of Canada's most influential and internationally recognized philosophers. Bringing together philosophy and Jewish studies, his writings are relevant to a number of philosophical inquiries, including the philosophy of history, metaphysics, and the philosophy of religion. In this book an international group of publishers presents an overview of Fackenheim's thought. The volume includes an introduction, ten papers, and response from Fackenheim himself. Among the topics discussed are (...)
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  10.  11
    Michael Mack. German Idealism and the Jew: The Inner Anti-Semitism of Philosophy and German Jewish Responses. Reviewed by. [REVIEW]Sheldon Richmond - 2016 - Philosophy in Review 36 (6):267-269.
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  11.  18
    Beyond the Babylonian Trauma: Theories of Language and Modern Culture in the German-Jewish Context.Gerald Hartung - 2018 - Berlin: De Gruyter. Edited by Aengus Daly.
    Hartung works out both the linguistic and philosophy of language setting as well as socio-political and cultural implications of the radical critique of language developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries by philosophers as diverse as Steinthal, Cohen, Simmel or Cassirer. He argues that the theories pleaded for a plurality of linguistic and cultural forms as well as for a new logic beyond the traditional nature/culture partition"--Page 4 of cover.
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  12.  23
    Chapter 6. German-Jewish Religious Thinkers as Jews and Germans.Ephraim Meir - 2015 - In Interreligious Theology: Its Value and Mooring in Modern Jewish Philosophy. Jerusalem: De Gruyter. pp. 117-128.
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  13.  9
    Philosophie im Schatten von Auschwitz: Edith Stein, Theodor Lessing, Walter Benjamin, Paul Ludwig Landsberg.Karl Albert - 1994 - Dettelbach: J.H. Röll.
    The introduction (pp. 7-29) discusses Nazi denigration of "Jewish philosophy, " from Spinoza to Bergson and Husserl, and the elevation of "German" philosophers, particularly Eckhart and Nietzsche, to the role of forerunners of Nazism. The chapters on the work of the four Jewish philosophers mention briefly their murder by the Nazis (in the case of Benjamin, his death while fleeing the Nazis).
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  14. ""The" Jewish question" by Marx and the origins of historical materialism in the literary culture and German philosophy of the early 19th century part 2.Renato Pallavidini - 2005 - Filosofia 56 (2-3):A1 - A30.
     
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  15.  8
    Resisting History: Historicism and its Discontents in German-Jewish Thought.David N. Myers - 2009 - Princeton University Press.
    Nineteenth-century European thought, especially in Germany, was increasingly dominated by a new historicist impulse to situate every event, person, or text in its particular context. At odds with the transcendent claims of philosophy and--more significantly--theology, historicism came to be attacked by its critics for reducing human experience to a series of disconnected moments, each of which was the product of decidedly mundane, rather than sacred, origins. By the late nineteenth century and into the Weimar period, historicism was seen by (...)
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  16.  16
    Jews and German philosophy: the polemics of emancipation.Nathan Rotenstreich - 1984 - New York: Schocken Books.
    Discusses the encounter between German philosophy and Judaism in the 18th-19th centuries, focusing on the Hegelian and Kantian systems, and analyzes their negative evaluation of Judaism. Explores also the views of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, and Jewish responses.
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  17.  26
    Greatness and Doom of German-Jewish Co-existence. Documents of a Tragic Encounter. [REVIEW]Otto Böcher - 1976 - Philosophy and History 9 (1):99-100.
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  18.  21
    No Spiritual Investment in the World: Gnosticism and Postwar German Philosophy.Willem Styfhals - 2019 - Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
    Throughout the twentieth century, German writers, philosophers, theologians, and historians turned to Gnosticism to make sense of the modern condition. While some saw this ancient Christian heresy as a way to rethink modernity, most German intellectuals questioned Gnosticism's return in a contemporary setting. In No Spiritual Investment in the World, Willem Styfhals explores the Gnostic worldview's enigmatic place in these discourses on modernity, presenting a comprehensive intellectual history of Gnosticism's role in postwar German thought. Establishing the (...)-Jewish philosopher Jacob Taubes at the nexus of the debate, Styfhals traces how such figures as Hans Blumenberg, Hans Jonas, Eric Voegelin, Odo Marquard, and Gershom Scholem contended with Gnosticism and its tenets on evil and divine absence as metaphorical detours to address issues of cultural crisis, nihilism, and the legitimacy of the modern world. These concerns, he argues, centered on the difficulty of spiritual engagement in a world from which the divine has withdrawn. Reading Gnosticism against the backdrop of postwar German debates about secularization, political theology, and post-secularism, No Spiritual Investment in the World sheds new light on the historical contours of postwar German philosophy. (shrink)
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  19.  37
    At the Mind’s Limits and German-Jewish Symbiosis: Or, Améry on Guilt and the Possibility of Redemption.Robert Erlewine - 2016 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 24 (3):140-156.
    At the 50 th anniversary of the Jean Améry’s Jenseits von Schuld und Sühne: Bewältigungsversuche eines Überwältigten, published in English as At the Mind’s Limits: Contemplations By a Survivor on Auschwitz and its Realities, this work is garnering increased attention in the Anglophone world. Perhaps it should not be surprising that there is increased interest in this book at this moment when our attention is repeatedly drawn to the plight of immigrants and exiles, state sanctioned use of torture, and police (...)
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  20.  38
    Fackenheim: German Philosophy and Jewish Thought Louis Greenspan and Graeme Nicholson, editors Toronto, Buffalo, London: University of Toronto Press, 1992. vi + 300 pp., $50.00. [REVIEW]Neil Gillman - 1995 - Dialogue 34 (1):181-.
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  21. ""The" Jewish question" by Marx and the origins of historical materialism in the literary culture and German philosophy of the early 19th century part 1. [REVIEW]Renato Pallavidini - 2005 - Filosofia 56 (2-3).
     
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  22.  26
    Rosenzweig and Heidegger: Between Judaism and German Philosophy.Peter Eli Gordon - 2003 - University of California Press.
    Franz Rosenzweig is widely regarded today as one of the most original and intellectually challenging figures within the so-called renaissance of German-Jewish thought in the Weimar period. The architect of a unique kind of existential theology, and an important influence upon such philosophers as Walter Benjamin, Martin Buber, Leo Strauss, and Emmanuel Levinas, Rosenzweig is remembered chiefly as a "Jewish thinker," often to the neglect of his broader philosophical concerns. Cutting across the artificial divide that the traumatic (...)
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  23. The double wave of German and Jewish nationalism: Martin Buber’s intellectual conversion.Peter Šajda - 2020 - Human Affairs 30 (2):269-280.
    The paper provides an analysis of Martin Buber’s intellectual conversion and shows how it facilitates a deeper understanding of the phenomenon of nationalism. Buber, who is today known mainly as a key representative of dialogical philosophy, was in the 1910s part of the double wave of German and Jewish nationalism which strongly affected the German-speaking Jewish public. Buber provided intellectual support for this wave of nationalism and interpreted World War I as a unique chance for (...)
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  24.  68
    “Die Zauberjuden”: Walter Benjamin, Gershom Scholem, and Other German-Jewish Esoterics between the World Wars.Gary Smith - 1995 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 4 (2):227-243.
  25.  38
    German Question/Jewish Question: Revolutionary Antisemitism from Kant to Wagner.Paul Lawrence Rose - 1990
    In this compelling narrative of antisemitism in German thought, Paul Rose proposes a fresh view of the topic. Beginning with an examination of the attitudes of Martin Luther, he challenges distinctions between theologically derived (medieval) and secular, "racial" (modern) antisemitism, arguing that there is an unbroken chain of antisemitic feeling between the two periods. Originally published in 1992. The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology to again make available previously out-of-print books from the distinguished backlist of Princeton (...)
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  26.  22
    The philonic distinction: German enlightenment historiography of jewish thought.Dirk Westerkamp - 2008 - History and Theory 47 (4):533-559.
    Leon Roth’s famous question “Is there a Jewish philosophy?” has been the subject of an ongoing controversial debate. This paper argues that the concept of a Jewish philosophy—in the sense of an allegedly continuous philosophical tradition stretching from antiquity to early modernity—was created by German Enlightenment historians of philosophy. Under competing models of historiography, Enlightenment philosophy construed a continuous tradition of Jewish thought, a philosophia haebraeorum perennis, establishing a controversially discussed order of (...)
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  27.  18
    Jewish Nietzscheanism.Robert C. Holub - 2021 - Nietzsche Studien 50 (1):396-409.
    Jewish Nietzscheans have traditionally shied away from any detailed examination of Nietzsche’s comments on contemporary Jewry or the Jewish religion. Scholars who have examined Jewish Nietzscheans have therefore sought to connect Nietzsche with some dimension of Jewish thought through similarities in views between Nietzsche and the Jewish intellectuals who were purportedly influenced by him. The two books under consideration in this essay strain to find solid connections between Nietzsche’s philosophy and the writings of eminent (...)
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  28.  33
    Modern Gnosis and Zionism: The Crisis of Culture, Life Philosophy and Jewish National Thought.Yotam Hotam - 2012 - Routledge.
    Germany, the crisis of culture and secular theology -- Life philosophy or modern gnosis -- Modern Jewish gnosis -- Modern gnosis and Zionist thought.
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  29.  63
    Emil L. Fackenheim: A Jewish Philosopher’s Response to the Holocaust.David Patterson - 2008 - Syracuse University Press.
    Introduction : the last of the German Jewish philosophers -- The philosophical roots of the Holocaust -- The Jewish encounter with modern philosophy -- The matter of singularity -- From Auschwitz to Jerusalem -- Tikkun haolam -- Closing reflections.
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  30.  11
    Dynamic repetition: history and messianism in modern Jewish thought.Gilad Sharvit - 2022 - Waltham, Massachusetts: Brandeis University Press.
    Dynamic Repetition proposes a new understanding of modern Jewish theories of messianism across the disciplines of history, theology, and philosophy. This book explores how ideals of repetition, return, and the cyclical occasioned a new messianic impulse across an important swath of late nineteenth and early twentieth century German Jewish thought.
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  31.  32
    Rosenzweig and Heidegger: Between Judaism and German Philosophy (review).Claire Elise Katz - 2005 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 43 (1):124-125.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Rosenzweig and Heidegger: Between Judaism and German PhilosophyClaire Elise KatzPeter Eli Gordon. Rosenzweig and Heidegger: Between Judaism and German Philosophy. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003. Pp. xxix + 328. Cloth, $65.00.Peter Gordon's recent book brings together two seemingly disparate authors—Franz Rosenzweig and Martin Heidegger. Gordon intends to demonstrate that although Franz Rosenzweig is most frequently viewed as a Jewish thinker, this perspective obfuscates (...)
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  32.  51
    Idolatry and Representation: The Philosophy of Franz Rosenzweig Reconsidered.Leora Batnitzky - 2009 - Princeton University Press.
    Although Franz Rosenzweig is arguably the most important Jewish philosopher of the twentieth century, his thought remains little understood. Here, Leora Batnitzky argues that Rosenzweig's redirection of German-Jewish ethical monotheism anticipates and challenges contemporary trends in religious studies, ethics, philosophy, anthropology, theology, and biblical studies.This text, which captures the hermeneutical movement of Rosenzweig's corpus, is the first to consider the full import of the cultural criticism articulated in his writings on the modern meanings of art, language, (...)
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  33.  12
    Dialectic of separation: Judaism and philosophy in the work of Salomon Munk.Chiara Adorisio - 2017 - Boston: Academic Studies Press.
    Salomon Munk (1803-1867) belonged to a group of German-Jewish scholars who pioneered the systematic study of Arabic, Judeo-Arabic and Islamic philosophy in Western Europe in the nineteenth century, as part of a movement that came to be known as the Science of Judaism. The Science of Judaism applied the tools of modern science (in particular philology) to the study of Judaism, seeking to shed light on its manifold aspects and historical contexts--an undertaking which eventually led to the (...)
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  34.  14
    Die Philosophie Salomon Maimons zwischen Spinoza und Kant: Akosmismus und Intellektkonzeption.Daniel Elon - 2021 - Hamburg: Felix Meiner Verlag.
    Salomon Maimon, philosophischer Autodidakt und wichtiger zeitgenössischer Kritiker Kants, schreibt in einem Kommentar, dass er angesichts des Spinozismus 'vor dem Nichts zurück schaudert'. An anderer Stelle heisst es, jene Philosophie sei 'das akosmische System'. Die schwerwiegende inhärente Problematik dieser Äusserungen wird in dem vorliegenden Band ausführlich diskutiert. Es wird der Frage nachgegangen, was es mit Maimons komplexer Beziehung zur Philosophie Spinozas auf sich hat. Dabei wird gezeigt, dass es dort zu erheblichen Kollisionen verschiedenartiger Vorstellungen vom Intellekt kommt, vom menschlichen wie (...)
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  35.  10
    Jewish philosophical politics in Germany, 1789-1848.Sven-Erik Rose - 2014 - Waltham, Massachusetts: Brandeis University Press.
    Fresh look at how Jewish intellectuals thought about Judaism within a German philosophical tradition.
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  36.  10
    Jewish Exiles and European Thought in the Shadow of the Third Reich: Baron, Popper, Strauss, Auerbach.David Weinstein & Avihu Zakai - 2017 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Avihu Zakai.
    Hans Baron, Karl Popper, Leo Strauss and Erich Auerbach were among the many German-speaking Jewish intellectuals who fled Continental Europe with the rise of Nazism in the 1930s. Their scholarship, though not normally considered together, is studied here to demonstrate how, despite their different disciplines and distinctive modes of working, they responded polemically in the guise of traditional scholarship to their shared trauma. For each, the political calamity of European fascism was a profound intellectual crisis, requiring an intellectual (...)
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  37.  14
    Jüdische Philosophie.Karl E. Grözinger - 2017 - Zeitschrift für Kulturphilosophie 2017 (2):31-55.
    The beginning of a universal culture of rationality in Judaism did not begin in the so called »Medieval Jewish philosophy« but had its precedents in the Biblical Wisdom Literature and in Rabbinic legal rationality. The Medieval Jewish authors, therefore, did not regard the medieval Philosophy propounded by Jewish authors as »Jewish philosophy« but as a participation of Jews in just another specific phase of universal rationalism. The reason why Jewish authors in the (...)
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  38.  3
    Jewish exiles and European thought during the Third Reich.D. Weinstein - 2017 - New York: Cambridge University Press. Edited by Avihu Zakai.
    Hans Baron, Karl Popper, Leo Strauss and Erich Auerbach were among the many German-speaking Jewish intellectuals who fled continental Europe with the rise of Nazism in the 1930s. Their scholarship, though not normally considered together, is studied here to demonstrate how, despite their different disciplines and distinctive modes of working, they responded polemically in the guise of traditional scholarship to their shared trauma. For each, the political calamity of European fascism was a profound intellectual crisis, requiring an intellectual (...)
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  39.  15
    The Jewish Tradition.Robert Gibbs - 1997 - In Charles Taliaferro & Philip L. Quinn, A Companion to Philosophy of Religion. Cambridge, Mass.: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 210–216.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Epistemology Converted to Ethics Dialogues and Others God Reading Jewish Texts Works cited.
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  40.  57
    Ernst Cassirer's moment: Philosophy and politics: Udi Greenberg.Udi Greenberg - 2013 - Modern Intellectual History 10 (1):221-231.
    The emergence of the German Jewish philosopher Ernst Cassirer as the object of scholarly attention has been both surprising and rapid. In the decades since his early death while in exile in the United States, Cassirer never fell into complete oblivion. His works remained known to specialists in German intellectual history; his participation in a famous 1929 debate with Martin Heidegger in Davos, Switzerland, one of the most iconic moments in modern Continental thought, made his name familiar (...)
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  41.  12
    Moses Hess and Modern Jewish Identity.Ken Koltun-Fromm - 2001 - Indiana University Press.
    "Koltun-Fromm’s reading of Hess is of crucial import for those who study the construction of self in the modern world as well as for those who are concerned with Hess and his contributions to modern thought.... a reading of Hess that is subtle, judicious, insightful, and well supported." —David Ellenson Moses Hess, a fascinating 19th-century German Jewish intellectual figure, was at times religious and secular, traditional and modern, practical and theoretical, socialist and nationalist. Ken Koltun-Fromm’s radical reinterpretation of (...)
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  42.  14
    Living law: Jewish political theology from Hermann Cohen to Hannah Arendt.Miguel E. Vatter - 2021 - New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
    In his 1935 treatise on divine sovereignty, the Jewish philosopher Martin Buber introduced the idea of an 'anarchic soul of theocracy.' A decade before, the German jurist Carl Schmitt had coined the term 'political theology' in order to designate the Christian theological foundations of modern sovereignty and legal order. In a specular and opposite gesture, Buber argued that the covenant at Sinai established YHWH as the King of the Israelites and simultaneously promulgated the principle that no human being (...)
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  43.  11
    The crisis of German historicism: the early political thought of Hannah Arendt and Leo Strauss.Liisi Keedus - 2015 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    The Crisis of German Historicism Hannah Arendt and Leo Strauss - two major political thinkers of the twentieth century, both of German- Jewish background and forced into exile in America - were never friends or intellectual interlocutors. Yet they shared a radical critique of contemporary idioms of politically oriented discourses and a lifelong effort to modify reflective approaches to political experience. Liisi Keedus reveals how Arendt's and Strauss's thinking about political modernity was the product of a common (...)
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  44.  43
    Mythology, essence, and form: Schelling’s Jewish reception in the nineteenth century.Paul Franks - 2019 - International Journal of Philosophy and Theology 80 (1-2):71-89.
    Habermas explained the attraction of German Idealism to twentieth century Jewish philosophers by appealing to the impact of kabbalah on the German Idealists. Schelling was his principal example. In this article, I trace two lines of Jewish reception of Schelling in the nineteenth century. Among German-Jewish thinkers, Schelling was attractive because of his philosophy of mythology, not because of his relation to kabbalah. Among Galician-Jewish thinkers, Schelling was attractive because of what they (...)
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  45.  17
    No Religion Without Idolatry: Mendelssohn's Jewish Enlightenment.Gideon Freudenthal - 2012 - Notre Dame, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Press.
    Moses Mendelssohn is considered the foremost representative of Jewish Enlightenment. In _No Religion without Idolatry_, Gideon Freudenthal offers a novel interpretation of Mendelssohn’s general philosophy and discusses for the first time Mendelssohn’s semiotic interpretation of idolatry in his _Jerusalem _and in his Hebrew biblical commentary. Mendelssohn emerges from this study as an original philosopher, not a shallow popularizer of rationalist metaphysics, as he is sometimes portrayed. Of special and lasting value is his semiotic theory of idolatry. From a (...)
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  46. The Return to Nothingness: Hassidism and Philosophy.Yitzhak Y. Melamed - forthcoming - In Tyron Goldschmidt & Daniel Rynolds, The Routledge Companion to Jewish Philosophy. Routledge.
    A proper and comprehensive study of the relationship between Hassidism and philosophy would require a volume of its own. In the limited space of this chapter, I shall focus on two crucial issues within the broader topic of Hassidism and philosophy. In the first part, I will study the Hassidic reception of Maimonides’ Guide of the Perplexed, widely perceived as the greatest work of Jewish philosophy, a work that was equally admired and derided as heretical from (...)
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  47.  49
    Exemplarity and Chosenness: Rosenzweig and Derrida on the Nation of Philosophy.Dana Hollander - 2008 - Stanford University Press.
    " Taking as its cue Derrida's readings of German-Jewish authors and his ongoing interest in questions of Jewishness, this book pairs his philosophy with that of Franz Rosenzweig, who developed a theory of Judaism for which election is ...
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  48. Radical enlightenment: philosophy and the making of modernity, 1650-1750.Jonathan Irvine Israel - 2001 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    In the wake of the Scientific Revolution, the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries saw the complete demolition of traditional structures of authority, scientific thought, and belief by the new philosophy and the philosophes, including Voltaire, Diderot, and Rousseau. The Radical Enlightenment played a part in this revolutionary process, which effectively overthrew all justification for monarchy, aristocracy, and ecclesiastical power, as well as man's dominance over woman, theological dominance of education, and slavery. Despite the present day interest in the revolutions (...)
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  49.  75
    (1 other version)The Philosophy of ‘as If’.Hans Vaihinger - 1924 - London,: Routledge. Edited by C. K. Ogden.
    Hans Vaihinger was an important and fascinating figure in German philosophy in the early twentieth century, founding the well-known journal Kant-studien. Yet he was overshadowed by the burgeoning movements of phenomenology and analytical philosophy, as well as hostility towards his work because of his defense of Jewish scholars in a Germany controlled by Nazism. However, it is widely acknowledged today that The Philosophy of 'As If' is a philosophical masterwork. Vaihinger argues that in the face (...)
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  50.  16
    The Charm of F. Rosenzweig’s Philosophy.Hanoch Ben Pazi - 2022 - RUDN Journal of Philosophy 26 (3):485-492.
    The philosophical works of F. Rosenzweig have particular meaning for both academic and existential inquiries and interests, as he deeply re-observes the religious life of Judaism and Christianity through the reflection of human existence. Fear of death, observation of Plato’s understanding of Eros, overcoming of atheism of Goethe in the experience of faith - these key motives form a challenging discourse of Rosenzweig’s theological and philosophical thought, which invites reader into a truly charming spiritual journey. The article provides an intriguing (...)
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