Prophecy:
The History of an Idea in Medieval
Jewish Philosophy
Doredrecht: Kluwer Academic
Publishers 2001
(Amsterdam Studies in
Jewish Thought, 8)
More than any other topic,
prophecy represents the point at which the Divine meets the human, the
Absolute meets the relative. How can a human being attain the Word of
God? In what manner does God, when conceived as eternal and
transcendent, address corporeal, transitory creatures? What happens to
God's divine Truth when it is beheld by minds limited in their power to
apprehend, and influenced by the intellectual currents of their time and
place? How were these issues viewed by the great Jewish philosophers of
the past, who took the divine communication and all it entails
seriously, while at the same time desired to understand it as much as
humanly possible in the course of dealing with a myriad of other issues
that occupied their attention? This book offers an in-depth study of
prophecy in the thought of seven of the leading medieval Jewish
philosophers: R. Saadiah Gaon, R. Judah Halevi, Maimonides, Gersonides,
R. Hasdai Crescas, R. Joseph Albo and Baruch Spinoza. It attempts to
capture the "original voice" of these thinkers by looking at the
intellectual milieus in which they developed their philosophies, and by
carefully analyzing their views in their textual contexts. It also deals
with the relation between the earlier approaches and the later ones.
Overall, this book presents a significant model for narrating the
history of an idea.
669 pages, including bibliography and general index.
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