The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Jewish Philosophy

Portada
Daniel H. Frank, Oliver Leaman
Cambridge University Press, 11 de set. 2003
From the ninth to the fifteenth centuries Jewish thinkers living in Islamic and Christian lands philosophized about Judaism. Influenced first by Islamic theological speculation and the great philosophers of classical antiquity, and then in the late medieval period by Christian Scholasticism, Jewish philosophers and scientists reflected on the nature of language about God, the scope and limits of human understanding, the eternity or createdness of the world, prophecy and divine providence, the possibility of human freedom, and the relationship between divine and human law. Though many viewed philosophy as a dangerous threat, others incorporated it into their understanding of what it is to be a Jew. This Companion presents all the major Jewish thinkers of the period, the philosophical and non-philosophical contexts of their thought, and the interactions between Jewish and non-Jewish philosophers. It is a comprehensive introduction to a vital period of Jewish intellectual history.
 

Continguts

List of contributors
Note on transliteration
Introduction to the study of medieval Jewish philosophy
The biblical and rabbinic background to medieval
The Islamic context of medieval Jewish philosophy
Saadya and Jewish kalam
Being above Being and divine
Judah Halevi and his use of philosophy in the Kuzari
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The Hebrew translation movement
Controversy over
Conservative tendencies in Gersonides religious
The impact of Scholasticism upon Jewish philosophy
Jewish philosophy and the JewishChristian
Hasdai Crescas and antiAristotelianism
The end and aftereffects of medieval Jewish

Maimonides and medieval Jewish Aristotelianism
Maimonides and the sciences
Medieval Jewish political thought
Judaism and Sufism
Guide to further reading in English
Index
Copyright

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Sobre l'autor (2003)

Daniel H. Frank is Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Judaic Studies Program at the University of Kentucky. Among recent publications are History of Jewish Philosophy (edited with Oliver Leaman, 1997), The Jewish Philosophy Reader (edited with Oliver Leaman and Charles Manekin, 2000), and revised editions of two Jewish philosophical classics, Maimonides' Guide of the Perplexed (1995) and Saadya Gaon's Book of Doctrines and Beliefs (2002).

Oliver Leaman is Professor of Philosophy and Zantker Professor of Judaic Studies at the University of Kentucky. He is the author of An Introduction to Classical Islamic Philosophy (2001), Evil and Suffering in Jewish Philosophy (1995), and is editor of Encyclopedia of Asian Philosophy ( 2001) and Companion Encyclopedia of Middle Eastern and North African Film (2001). He is co-editor, with Glennys Howarth, of Encyclopedia of Death and Dying (2001).

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