"The Routledge Companion to Jewish Philosophy is a deep and broad reference that brings diverse perspectives to bear on the key topics, problems, and debates in Jewish philosophy and philosophical theology. The 37 chapters were written by an international team of experts from different traditions in philosophy and beyond and appear in print for the first time in this Companion. The chapters are divided into ten major sections: I. God II. Humanity III. From God to Us IV. From Us to God V. Jewish MysticismVI. Faith and Reason VII. Judaism and Normativity VIII. Judaism and Politics IX. Judaism and Other Faiths X. Times and Trends A list of Related Topics at the end of each chapter and a comprehensive index at the back of the volume help readers navigate the Companion, and Further Reading sections at the end of each chapter identify the best avenues for future research. The volume is essential reading for students and scholars interested in Jewish philosophy, theology, religious studies and related subjects"--
This book is a deep and broad reference that brings diverse perspectives to bear on the key topics, problems, and debates in Jewish philosophy and philosophical theology. Written by an international team of experts from different traditions in philosophy and beyond and appear in print for the first time in this Companion.
The Routledge Companion to Jewish Philosophy is a deep and broad reference that brings diverse perspectives to bear on the key topics, problems, and debates in Jewish philosophy and philosophical theology. The 37 chapters were written by an international team of experts from different traditions in philosophy and beyond and appear in print for the first time in this Companion. The chapters are divided into ten major sections:
- God
- Humanity
- From God to Us
- From Us to God
- Jewish Mysticism
- Faith and Reason
- Judaism and Normativity
- Judaism and Politics
- Judaism and Other Faiths
- Times and Trends
A list of Related Topics at the end of each chapter and a comprehensive index at the back of the volume help readers navigate the Companion, and Further Reading sections at the end of each chapter identify the best avenues for future research. The volume is essential reading for students and scholars interested in Jewish philosophy, theology, religious studies and related subjects.
Editors Introduction Part I: God
1. The Existence of God | Joshua
Rasmussen
2. Negative Theology: On Apophaticism, Analytic Jewish Philosophy,
and Wittgensteinian Themes | Filippo Casati
3. God and Infinity | Gary
Rosenkrantz Part II: Humanity
4. Body and Soul | Aaron Segal
5. Afterlife and
Eschatology | Cole Aronson Part III: From God to Us 6.The Problem of Evil |
Michael Harris
7. Free Will and Providence| Kenneth Boyce
8. Revelation | Sam
Fleischacker
9. Prophecy | Benjamin Pollock Part IV: From Us to God
10.
Sacrifices | Shlomo Zuckier
11. Repentance | Daniel Rynhold
12. Liturgy:
Liturgical Truth: Proclamation, Confirmation, Testimony | Steven Kepnes Part
V: Jewish Mysticism
13. Mysticism and Rationalism | Jonathan Dauber
14.
Tzimtzum | Olla Solomyak
15. Sefirot and Philosophy | James Diamond
16.
Hassidism & Philosophy: The Return to Nothingness | Yitzhak Melamed Part VI:
Faith and Reason
17. Miracles | Alexander Green
18. Doctrines and Dogmas |
Seth Kadish
19. Judaism and Science | Shoaib Mailk
20. Reasons for
Commandments | David Shatz Part VII: Judaism and Normativity
21. Character
and Musar | Geoffrey D. Claussen and Christian B. Miller
22. God and Morality
| Alex Ozar
23. Halakhah and Morality | Yonatan Brafman
24. The Metaphysics
of Halakhah: Halakhic Naturalism vs. Halakhic Non-Naturalism| Israel Cohen
Part VIII: Judaism and Politics
25. Antisemitism, Philosophy, and Jewish
Philosophy| Sol Goldberg
26. The Philosophy of Antisemitism: Metaphysics,
Epistemology, and Theology | Samuel Lebens
27. Philosophy of Zionism | Daniel
Statman and Yitzhak Benbaji Part IX: Judaism and Other Faiths
28. Pluralism
and Exclusivism | Barry Kleinberg
29. Jews, non-Jews, Converts | Mordechai
Miller & Menachem Kellner Part X: Times and Trends
30. Philosophical Themes
in the Tanakh: The Idea of Encounter | Miriam Feldmann Kaye
31. Jewish
Philosophy in Antiquity: Philo of Alexandria among his Philosophical Peers |
Sharon Weisser
32. Medieval Jewish Philosophy | Peter Adamson & Sarah Pessin
33. Early Modern Jewish Philosophy | Dan Frank
34. Continental Jewish
Philosophy | Tamra Wright
35. Analytic Jewish Philosophy | Dustin Crummett
36. Post-Holocaust Theology and its Critical Reception | Michael Morgan
37.
Feminist Jewish Philosophy: Universal Reasoning in a Doubly Parochial mode |
Tamar Ross
Daniel Rynhold is currently Dean of the Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies, Yeshiva University, where he has been professor of Jewish philosophy since 2007. Prior to this, he spent six years at the department of theology and religious studies, Kings College, London. He has published many articles and books in Jewish philosophy, including Nietzsche, Soloveitchik, and Contemporary Jewish Philosophy (2018) (co-authored with Michael J. Harris) and An Introduction to Medieval Jewish Philosophy (2009).
Tyron Goldschmidt is a lecturer at the University of Lucerne, and was previously a Philosophy Professor at the University of Rochester and Wake Forest University. He has published many academic articles and books in metaphysics, philosophy of religion, ethics and the history of philosophy, including Berkeley's Principles: Expanded and Explained (Routledge, 2017, with Scott Stapleford). He has a more practical day job as a software engineer, and most of his work is in TypeScript, Python, oil and acrylic.