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Emil Fackenheim's Post-Holocaust Thought and Its Philosophical Sources [Kietas viršelis]

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Emil Fackenheim’s Post-Holocaust Thought and Its Philosophical Sources engages with the philosophers who made the greatest impact on the thought of Emil Fackenheim.



Recognized as one of the leading philosophers and Jewish thinkers of the twentieth century, Emil Ludwig Fackenheim has been widely praised for his boldness, originality, and profundity. As is well-known, a striking feature of Fackenheim’s thought is his unwavering contention that the Holocaust brought about a radical shift in human history, so monumental and unprecedented that nothing can ever be the same again. Fackenheim regarded it as the specific duty of thinkers and scholars to assume responsibility to probe this historical event for its impact on the human future and to make its immense ramifications evident.

In Emil Fackenheim’s Post-Holocaust Thought and Its Philosophical Sources, scholars consider important figures in the history of philosophy – including Kant, Hegel, Heidegger, and Strauss – and trace how Fackenheim's philosophical confrontations with each of them shaped his overall thought. This collection details which philosophers exercised the greatest influence on Fackenheim and how he diverged from them.

Incorporating widely varying approaches, the contributors in the volume wrestle with this challenge historically, politically, and philosophically in order to illuminate the depths of Fackenheim’s thought. 

Introduction 3(16)
Kenneth Hart Green
Martin D. Yaffe
1 Emil Fackenheim on Moses Maimonides and the "One Great Difference between the Medievals and the Moderns"
19(13)
Benjamin Lorch
2 Emil Fackenheim's Jewish Correction of Kant's Quasi-Christian Eschatology
32(19)
Martin D. Yaffe
3 The Meaning of History: Knowledge of Good and Evil in Hegel and Fackenheim
51(67)
Paul T. Wilford
4 Strategies of Jewish Hegelianism: Emil Fackenheim and Samuel Hirsch
118(27)
Martin Kavka
5 Can Philosophy Be Positive? The Place of Schelling in the Thought of Emil Fackenheim
145(14)
Jeffrey A. Bernstein
6 Emil Fackenheim's Way from Presence to History: Its Grounding in a Critique of Rosenzweig on Revelation
159(25)
Kenneth Hart Green
7 Fackenheim and Buber on Revelation: Re-evaluating the Existential and Historical Turn Away from Philosophy
184(19)
Steven Kepnes
8 To Captivate the Jewish Thinker: Fackenheim's Ontological Encounter with Heidegger
203(29)
Waller R. Newell
9 Philosophy in the Age of Auschwitz: Emil Fackenheim and Leo Strauss
232(24)
Kenneth C. Blanchard Jr.
10 Wiesel and Fackenheim: Theology, Philosophy and the Problem of Jewish Persecution
256(33)
Sharon Portnoff
Contributors 289(4)
Index 293
Kenneth Hart Green is a professor in the Department for the Study of Religion at the University of Toronto. Martin D. Yaffe is a professor in the Department of Philosophy and Religion at the University of North Texas.