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On the other hand, if he is not allowed to investigate the foundations of his belief, it follows either that all religions alike bring their believer happiness, no matter how contradictory they are, which is absurd; or God would seem unfair if only one religion leads its devotees to happiness and no one is allowed to change his religion for one that seems to him the true one.
The answer of Albo to this interesting question is characteristic. It shows that he armored himself in advance, before he risked such a delicate question. He makes it clear that it really does not expose to any danger the religion of Judaism, the mother of the other two, which they came to supersede. If all religions in the world, Albo tells us, were opposed to one another, and regarded each other as untrue, the above difficulty would be real. But it is not so. All religions agree in respect to one of them that it is divine; but they say that it is superseded. Hence every religionist who is not a Jew must investigate his religion to see if it is justified in opposing the religion which is acknowledged to be divine. Similarly the professor of the admittedly divine religion should investigate to see if his religion is temporary or eternal. In this investigation he must first see if the religion conforms to the principles of divine religion above mentioned. If it does this and in addition endeavors to order human affairs in accordance with justice, and leads its devotees to human perfection, it is divine. It is still, however, possible that it is the work of a wise man of good character. It is therefore necessary to investigate the character of the promulgator, to find out whether he is a genuine divine messenger or not. This test, as was said above (p. 415), must be a direct test and not an indirect.[421]
The other question is whether there can be more than one divine religion. Apparently there can be only one, since the giver is one, and the recipients are of one species. But in reality the receivers vary in temperament according to difference in inheritance and environment. Hence there may be a difference in the law according to the character of the people for whom it is intended. Since, however, the difference is due to the receiver and not to the giver, it must reside in those elements which are dependent upon the receiver, i. e., in particulars and details, not in the principles, fundamental or derived. So the Noachite and the Mosaic laws differ only in details, not in fundamental principles.[422]
We have now completed the exposition of the part of Albo's teaching that may be called distinctly his own. And it seems he was aware that he had nothing further to teach that was new, and would have been content to end his book with the first part, of which we have just given an account. But his friends, he tells us in the concluding remarks to the first part of the "Ikkarim,"[423] urged him to proceed further and discuss in detail the principles, fundamental and derived, the true beliefs and the so-called "branches," which he barely enumerated in the first part. He was persuaded by their advice and added the other three sections, each devoted to one of the three fundamental dogmas and the corollaries following from it. Here Albo has nothing new to teach. He follows the beaten track, reviews the classic views of Maimonides, takes advantage of the criticisms of Gersonides and Crescas, and settles the problems sometimes one way sometimes another, without ever suggesting anything new. Accordingly it will not be worth our while to reproduce his discussions here. It will suffice briefly to indicate his position on the more important problems.
The second section deals with the existence of God and the derived principles and branches growing out from this root. In proving the existence of God he refers to Maimonides's four proofs (cf. p. 257 ff.), and selects the third and fourth as really valid and beyond dispute. The first and second are not conclusive; the one because it is based upon the eternity of motion, which no Jew accepts; the other because the major premise is not true. It does not follow if one of the two elements a, b, of a composite a + b is found separately, that the other must be found existing separately likewise.[424]
We have seen that from the principle of the existence of God follow four derivative dogmas, unity, incorporeality, independence of time, freedom from defects. We are now told that from these secondary roots issue a number of branches. From Unity it follows that no attributes either essential or accidental can be applied to God, such as wisdom, strength, generosity, and so on, for they would cause multiplicity. From incorporeality we infer that God is not subject to corporeal affections like fear, sorrow, joy, grudge, and so on. Independence of time implies infinite power and want of resemblance to other things. Freedom from defect implies absence of such qualities as ignorance, weakness, and so on.[425]
In the discussion of the divine attributes Albo has nothing new to offer, but instead he argues forward and backward, now with Maimonides, now against him, reproducing a good deal of Maimonides's classification, embodying some material of Bahya on unity, and after this rambling and not very consistent discussion, he comes to the conclusion that none but active and negative attributes are applicable to God; and yet some essential attributes too must be his, but these must be understood as implying only the aspect of perfection, and not that other aspect of attribute which is responsible for multiplicity.[426]
He asks the question so often asked before, How can multiplicity come from unity? And after giving Ibn Sina's scheme of the emanation of the Intelligences one after the other, and criticizing it in the manner of Gazali and Maimonides, he gives his own solution that the variety and multiplicity of the world tends to one end, which is the order of the world. And thus are reconciled plurality and unity. (cf. Gersonides above, p. 351).[427]
He discusses the question of angels or Intellects, gives the views of the philosophers concerning their nature and number, each being the effect of the superior and the cause of the inferior, and objects to their idea on the ground that these cannot be the same as the Biblical angels, who are messengers of God to mankind. He then gives his own view that the number of angels is infinite, not as the philosophers say ten or fifty, and that they are not related to each other as cause and effect, but that though they are immaterial Intellects they are individuated and differentiated according to the degree of understanding they have of God.[428]
In discussing the second fundamental principle, Revelation, Albo argues in the good old fashion that man is the noblest creature of the sublunar world, and the most distinctive and noblest part of man—his form and essence—is the theoretical reason. Hence the purpose of man must be the realization of the theoretical intellect. At the same time, and with little consistency, Albo takes the part of Judah Halevi and Crescas, employing their arguments, without naming them, that the philosophers and the philosophizing theologians are wrong who make human immortality, perfection and happiness depend solely upon intellectual activity. He comes to the conclusion, therefore, that spiritual understanding, which gives perfection of soul when in combination with practice, is not acquisition of ideas but the intention of doing the will of God in the performance of good deeds, and not that of pleasure or reward.[429]
This being so, it becomes an important question what are the practices which tend to human perfection, and what are those which tend the other way. In general we may conclude, as like desires and rejoices in like, that those deeds which give the soul pleasure before and after performance are good and helpful, while those which cause subsequent pain, regret and sorrow are bad, and tend away from the soul's perfection.
But the criterion of pleasure and pain just suggested is not sufficient as a guide in conduct, for a great deal depends upon a man's temperament. What a hot-blooded man may commend and find pleasure in, the phlegmatic temperament will object to, and will feel discomfort in doing. Besides, as the good deed is always a mean between two extremes, which it is hard to measure precisely; and as the good deed is that which pleases God, and beyond generalities we cannot tell what does, and what does not please God, since we do not know his essence, it was necessary for man's sake that God should reveal his will to mankind through a prophet. Thus Revelation is proved by reason.[430]
This leads to the problem of prophecy, one of the derivative principles of Revelation. The divine influence from which man gets a knowledge of the things pleasing and displeasing to God, he cannot obtain without the divine will. Instead of magic, divination, and communication with evil spirits and the dead, which the ancient heathen employed in order to learn the future, God sent prophets to Israel, to tell the people of the will of God. Foretelling the future was only secondary with them. Prophecy is a supernatural gift, whether it takes place with the help of the imagination or not. If it were a natural phenomenon dependent upon the intellectual power of the individual and his faculty of imagination, as the philosophers and some Jewish theologians think, there should have been prophets among the philosophers.
Here again we see Albo adopt the view of Halevi and Crescas against the intellectualism of Maimonides and Gersonides. His further classification of the grades of prophecy is based upon Maimonides, though Albo simplifies it. Instead of eleven Albo recognizes four grades in all, including that of Moses. The great majority of mankind, he says, stop with the ability to analyze, such as is exhibited in the analysis of things into matter and form, and so on, though not all of them go so far. But there are some few who go farther and are enabled to speak words of wisdom and to sing praises to God without being able to account for the power. This is the holy spirit ("Ruah ha-Kodesh"). Some go still farther, and through the strength of their reason and imagination they dream true dreams and receive prophecies; though, the imagination having the upper hand, they struggle very hard and tremble and faint, almost losing their soul. This is the first stage of prophecy. The second stage is when the imagination and reason are equal. In that case there is no struggle or fainting. Visions come to the prophet at night in dreams, or in a revery at daytime. The forms that appear are not real, but the meanings they convey are. Such are the figures of women, horses, basket of summer fruit, and so on, in the visions of Zechariah and Amos. The third stage is when the reason gets the better of the imagination and there are no forms or images, but real essences and ideas, like the visions of Ezekiel, which represent real things in the secrets of nature and divinity. The prophet in this stage also hears an angel speaking to him and giving him information of importance to himself or others. In all these cases the will of God is essential. No preparation can replace it. Finally the fourth stage is reached when the imagination does not come into play at all. In this stage there is no angel or form, and the message comes to the prophet at daytime while he is awake. He hears a voice telling him what he desires to know; and whenever he chooses he can summon this power. Moses alone attained to this final stage. Outside of the prophets, the righteous and the pious have various degrees of power according to the degree of their union with God. Some can in this way influence the powers of nature to obey them, as a person can, by thinking of food, make his mouth water. So they can by taking thought cause rain and storm. Others can bring down fire from above and revive the dead.
Through the influence of a prophet the gift of prophecy may sometimes rest upon individuals who are themselves unprepared and unworthy. Witness the revelation on Sinai where the entire people, six hundred thousand in number, were endowed with the spirit of prophecy, and that too of the highest degree, like Moses himself. The prophetic medium reflects the spirit of prophecy on others as a smooth surface reflects the light of the sun upon dark bodies. This is why prophecy is found only in Israel and in Palestine, because the ark and the Tables of Stone, upon which the Shekinah rests, reflect the divine spirit upon those who are worthy and have in them something resembling the contents of the ark, namely, the Torah and the commandments.[431]
Among the true beliefs we have seen (p. 416) that Immutability of the Law is related to the principle of Revelation. Hence this is the place to discuss this question. Can a divine religion change with time or not? It would seem at first sight that it cannot. For the giver expresses his will in the Law, and his will never changes. The receivers are the same, i. e., the same nation, and a nation does not change. Finally the purpose of the Law or religion is to give people true opinions, and these never change.
And yet on further reflection there seems no reason why religion should not change with the change of the recipient, as the physician changes his prescription with the progress of the patient, and as a matter of fact we find that the commandments given to Adam were different from those given to Noah and to Abraham and to Moses. Adam was not allowed to eat meat, Noah was. Abraham was commanded circumcision. High places were at first permitted and later forbidden. Maimonides makes the immutability of the Law a fundamental dogma, relying upon the commandment, "Thou shalt not add thereto, and thou shalt not diminish therefrom" (Deut. 13, 1). But in the first place the verse refers to changes in the mode of observing the laws; and besides, it says nothing about God himself changing the Law.
The phrases "an eternal statute," "throughout your generations," "it is a sign for ever," are no proof of the eternity of the Law; for not all commandments have these expressions attached, and this shows rather that the others are subject to change. Besides, the expressions, "for eternity," and so on, are not to be taken absolutely. They are often used to express finite periods of time.
After the Babylonian Exile two changes were made. They changed the characters in which the Bible was written, and the order and names of the months, beginning with Tishri instead of Nisan. There is no reason, therefore, why other laws might not change, too. We need not, then, regard Immutability of the Law as a fundamental dogma with Maimonides. Hasdai Crescas also classes it with true beliefs and not with fundamental principles.
Albo resolves the problem as follows: A matter that is revealed by God himself cannot be changed by a prophet unless it is changed by God himself. The first two commandments, "I am the Lord thy God, &c.," and "Thou shalt not have other gods, &c.," were heard by the people directly from God without the intervention of Moses, hence they cannot be changed by any prophet. It follows therefore that the three fundamental dogmas, existence of God, Revelation and Reward and Punishment can never be changed by a prophet, for they are implied in the first two commandments, which were heard from God himself. The rest of the commandments, as they were heard from God through the interpretation of Moses, can be changed by a prophet as a temporary measure. The other laws which were given by Moses may be changed by a later prophet even permanently. But the prophet must be greater than Moses, and he must show this by the greatness, number, publicity and permanence of his miracles, which must excel those of Moses. He must likewise show that he was sent by God to change the Law, as clearly as Moses proved that he was sent to give it. But it is unlikely that any such prophet will come, for the Torah says that there never was or will be any prophet like Moses.[432]
Before discussing the third fundamental dogma, Albo finds it desirable to dispose first of a few other problems implied by this dogma, one of which, God's knowledge, was postponed to this place, though it is connected with Revelation, because it cannot well be separated in discussion from the problem of Freedom. Providence is the other related problem, which is derived from the dogma of Reward and Punishment.
There is nothing that is new in Albo's treatment of knowledge and Freedom. He insists like Maimonides that God must be omniscient, and on the other hand the contingent cannot be denied, and neither can freedom. He gives the stock arguments, which it is not necessary to reproduce at this late hour. And his solution is that of Maimonides that in God human freedom and divine Omniscience are reconcilable because God's knowledge is not our knowledge.[433]
Nor is there anything original in Albo's discussion of the problem of Providence. He recognizes with Maimonides and others that a strong argument against special Providence is the observed inequality between the destinies of men and their apparent merits. And he endeavors in the well worn method to give reasons and explanations for this inequality which will not touch unfavorably God's justice or his special Providence. The reasons are such as we met before and we shall not repeat them. Albo also gives a few positive arguments to prove the reality of special Providence for man. He sees in various natural and human phenomena evidence of deviation from the merely "natural" as demanded by the principles of Aristotle's Physics or the laws of uniformity. This shows special Providence. Thus the existence of dry earth, the heaviest element, above water, cannot be accounted for by the laws of Physics. The phenomenon of rain cannot be reduced to law, hence it argues will and purpose and Providence. Admonition in dreams is direct evidence of special Providence, and it is scarcely likely that man, who has special equipment above the other animals in his reason, should not also receive special care above that which the lower animals have. Now they are protected in the species, hence man is provided for as an individual.[434]
Having disposed of the auxiliary dogmas, Albo takes up the fundamental principle of Reward and Punishment. He cites various opinions on the subject, which are dependent upon the idea one entertains concerning the nature of the soul. Thus if one holds that the human soul is not different in kind from the animal soul, it follows that as there is no reward and punishment for the animal, there is none for man. And if one regards the human soul as merely a capacity or possibility of intelligence he must necessarily conclude that the soul perishes with the body and there is no spiritual reward and punishment after death. The only reward there is must therefore be corporeal, during life. On the other hand, our general experience, which brings before us many cases of good men suffering and bad men enjoying prosperity, would seem to argue against corporeal reward and punishment in this world. This taken together with the philosophical opinion that the soul is an immaterial and indestructible substance gives rise to the third view that the only recompense is spiritual after death. None of these views is satisfactory to Albo. The first two because they are based upon an erroneous notion of the soul. All agree, philosophers as well as theologians, that the human soul is different in kind from the soul of the animal; and it is likewise admitted that the human soul is immortal. His criticism of the third view so far as it is based upon the intellectualist idea that the thing of highest value is intellectual effort, and the only reward is immortality which intellectual activity engenders, is similar to that of Halevi and Crescas in its endeavor to refute this notion and to substitute for it the religious view that the soul is an independent substance having a capacity for intelligence in God's service. The degree in which a person realizes this service determines his reward and punishment. The argument from experience Albo does not answer here, but we may suppose he regards it as answered by what he said in his discussion of Providence, where he tries to account for the prosperity of the wicked and the adversity of the righteous.
Albo's own view accordingly is that which he also attributes to the Bible that there is a twofold reward, in this world and in the next. There is still a difference of opinion concerning the nature of the true and ultimate reward, whether it is given to the soul alone, or to body and soul combined in resurrection. He quotes Maimonides's opinion, with whom he agrees, that the real reward is purely spiritual enjoyed by the soul alone. To be sure, after the coming of the Messiah the bodies of the righteous will be resurrected to make known abroad God's wonders, or to give these people bodily pleasure for the pain they suffered during life, or to give them additional opportunity to acquire perfection so that they may have a greater reward later. But this state of resurrected life will last only for a time, and then all will die again, and the souls will enjoy spiritual life forever.
The other opinion, held by Nachmanides, is that the real and ultimate reward is that of body and soul united to everlasting life. Albo is not satisfied with this view, his objections being among others that if only the perfect are resurrected, the rest will remain without any reward at all, not to mention the difficulty that it is not likely that the human body—a perishable thing—will change into a matter that will last forever.
As to the nature of reward and punishment after death, Albo tells us that reward will consist in the soul's realization that its endeavors in this world were correct, and in the next world it will be prepared to join the spiritual beings, which will give it great joy. The erring soul will find itself in a position where it will still desire the corporeal pleasures of this world, but will not be able to have them for want of corporeal organs. At the same time it will also entertain the other more natural desire of a spiritual substance to join the other spiritual beings in the other world. This feeling too it will not be able to satisfy because of its want of perfection. This division of desires unsatisfied will cause the soul excruciating torture, and this is its punishment.[435]
CONCLUSION
Our task is done. We have now reached the limit we have assigned ourselves. We have traced objectively and with greater or less detail the rationalistic movement in medival Jewry from its beginnings in the ninth and tenth centuries in Babylon among the Karaites and Rabbanites to its decline in Spain and south France in the fifteenth century. We have followed its ascending curve from Saadia through Gabirol, Bahya and Ibn Daud to its highest point in Maimonides, and we likewise traced its descent through Gersonides, Crescas and Albo. We took account of its essential nature as being a serious and conscientious attempt to define a Jewish Weltanschauung in the midst of conflicting claims of religions and philosophies. The Jewish sacred writings had to be studied and made consistent with themselves in regard to certain ethical and metaphysical questions which forced themselves upon the minds of thinking men. In this endeavor it was necessary to have regard to the system of doctrine that was growing up among their Mohammedan neighbors and masters—itself inherited from Greece—and adjust its teachings to those of Judaism. The adjustment took various forms according to the temperament of the adjuster. It embraced the extremes of all but sacrificing one of the two systems of doctrine to the other, and it counted among its votaries those who honestly endeavored to give each claim its due. The system of Judaism was the same for all throughout the period of our investigation, excepting only the difference between Karaites and Rabbanites. This was not the case with the system of philosophic doctrine. There we can see a development from Kalam through Neo-Platonism to Aristotelianism, and we accordingly classified the Jewish thinkers as Mutakallimun, Neo-Platonists or Aristotelians, or combinations in varying proportions of any two of the three systems mentioned.
It was not our province to treat of the mystic movement in medival Jewry as it developed in the Kabbalistic works and gained the ground yielded in the course of time by the healthier rationalism. To complete the picture it will suffice to say that as the political and economic conditions of the Jews in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries deteriorated, and freedom and toleration were succeeded by persecution and expulsion, the Jews became more zealous for their own spiritual heritage as distinguished from foreign importations; philosophy and rationalism began to be regarded askance, particularly as experience showed that scientific training was not favorable to Jewish steadfastness and loyalty. In suffering and persecution those who stuck to their posts were as a rule not the so-called enlightened who played with foreign learning, but the simple folk who believed in Torah and tradition in the good old style. The philosophical and the scientific devotees were the first to yield, and many of them abandoned Judaism.[436] Thus it was that mysticism and obscurantism took the place of enlightenment as a measure of self-defence. The material walls of the Ghetto and the spiritual walls of the Talmud and the Kabbala kept the remnant from being overwhelmed and absorbed by the hostile environment of Christian and Mohammedan. The second half of the fourteenth, and the fifteenth century were not favorable to philosophical studies among the Jews, and the few here and there who still show an interest in science and philosophy combine with it a belief in Kabbala and are not of any great influence on the development of Judaism.
Shemtob ben Joseph ibn Shemtob (ab. 1440) author of a work entitled "Emunot,"[437] is a strong opponent of Greek science and philosophy. He is not content with attacking the lesser lights and extremists like Albalag or Gersonides or Abraham ibn Ezra. He goes to the very fountain-head of Jewish Aristotelianism and holds Maimonides responsible for the heresies which invaded the Jewish camp. He takes up one doctrine after another of the great Jewish philosopher and points out how dangerous it is to the true Jewish faith. Judah Halevi and Nachmanides represent to him the true Jewish attitude. The mysteries of the Jewish faith are revealed not in philosophy but in the Kabbala, which Maimonides did not study, and which he would not have understood if he had studied it, for he had no Kabbalistic tradition.
Unlike Shemtob, his son Joseph ben Shemtob (d. 1480)[438] shows great admiration for Aristotle and Maimonides. But he is enabled to do so by lending credence to a legend that Aristotle in his old age recanted his heretical doctrines, in particular that of the eternity of the world. Joseph ben Shemtob made a special study of Aristotle's Ethics, to which he wrote a commentary, and endeavored to show that the Stagirite's ethical doctrines had been misunderstood; that the highest good of man and his ultimate happiness are to be sought according to Aristotle not in this world but in the next. It was likewise a misunderstanding, he thinks, when Maimonides and others make Aristotle deny special Providence. True science is not really opposed to Judaism. At the same time he too like his father realizes the danger of too much scientific study, and hence agrees with Solomon ben Adret that the study of philosophy should be postponed to the age of maturity when the student is already imbued with Jewish learning and religious faith.
The son of Joseph, bearing the name of his grandfather, Shemtob ben Joseph (fl. ab. 1461-89), followed in his father's footsteps,[439] and wrote a commentary on the "Guide of the Perplexed" of Maimonides, whom he defends against the attacks of Crescas.
Isaac ben Moses Arama (1420-1494)[440] is the author of a philosophico-homiletical commentary on the Pentateuch entitled, "Akedat Yizhak," and a small treatise on the relations of philosophy and theology. He was also interested in Kabbala and placed Jewish revelation above philosophy.
Don Isaac Abarbanel (1437-1508),[441] the distinguished Jewish statesman who went with his brethren into exile at the time of the expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492, was a prolific writer on Biblical exegesis and religious philosophy. Though a great admirer of Maimonides, on whose "Guide" he wrote a commentary, and whose thirteen articles of the creed he defended against the strictures of Crescas and Albo, he was nevertheless an outspoken opponent of the rationalistic attitude and has no phrases strong enough for such men as Albalag, Gersonides, Moses of Narbonne and others, whom he denounces as heretics and teachers of dangerous doctrines. He does not even spare Maimonides himself when the latter attempts to identify the traditional "Maase Bereshit" and "Maase Merkaba" with the Aristotelian Physics and Metaphysics (cf. above, p. 303 f.), and adopts Kabbalistic views along with philosophic doctrines. He is neither original nor thoroughly consistent.
His son Judah Leo Abarbanel (1470-1530)[442] is the author of a philosophical work in Italian, "Dialoghi di Amore," (Dialogues of Love), which breathes the spirit of the Renaissance of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries in Italy. It is under the influence of Plato and Plotinus and identifies God with love, which is regarded as the essential principle of all life and activity in the world, including even the inorganic natural processes. There is no attempt made to construct a Jewish philosophy, and though all evidence is against it, some have made it out that Judah Abarbanel was a convert to Christianity.
In the same country, in Italy, Judah ben Yechiel Messer Leon of Mantua[443] (1450-1490) made a name for himself as a student of Cicero and of medival Latin scholasticism. He wrote a rhetoric in Hebrew based upon Cicero and Lactantius, and composed logical works based upon Aristotle's Latin text and Averroes. As an original student of philosophy he is of no importance.
Two members of the Delmedigo family of Crete, Elijah (1460-1498) and Joseph Solomon,[444] are well known as students of philosophy and writers on philosophical and scientific subjects.
Thus the stream of philosophical thought which rose among the Jews in Babylonia and flowed on through the ages, ever widening and deepening its channel, passing into Spain and reaching its high water mark in the latter half of the twelfth century in Maimonides, began to narrow and thin out while spreading into France and Italy, until at last it dried up entirely in that very land which opened up a new world of thought, beauty and feeling in the fifteenth century, the land of the Renaissance. Jewish philosophy never passed beyond the scholastic stage, and the freedom and light which came to the rest of the world in the revival of ancient learning and the inventions and discoveries of the modern era found the Jews incapable of benefiting by the blessings they afforded. Oppression and gloom caused the Jews to retire within their shell and they sought consolation for the freedom denied them without in concentrating their interests, ideals and hopes upon the Rabbinic writings, legal as well as mystical. There have appeared philosophers among the Jews in succeeding centuries, but they either philosophized without regard to Judaism and in opposition to its fundamental dogmas, thus incurring the wrath and exclusion of the synagogue, or they sought to dissociate Judaism from theoretical speculation on the ground that the Jewish religion is not a philosophy but a rule of conduct. In more recent times Jewry has divided itself into sects and under the influence of modern individualism has lost its central authority making every group the arbiter of its own belief and practice and narrowing the religious influence to matters of ceremony and communal activity of a practical character. There are Jews now and there are philosophers, but there are no Jewish philosophers and there is no Jewish philosophy.
BIBLIOGRAPHY[D]
GENERAL WORKS
SOLOMON MUNK, Mlanges de Philosophie Juive et Arabe, Paris 1859, pp. 461-511. A brief historical rsum of philosophical authors and books. German translation by Beer, Philosophie und philosophische Schriftsteller der Juden, Leipzig, 1852. English translation by Isidor Kalisch, Philosophy and Philosophical Authors of the Jews, Cincinnati, 1881.
A. SCHMIEDL, Studien ber jdische, insonders jdisch-arabische Religionsphilosophie, Wien, 1869.
MORITZ EISLER, Vorlesungen ber die jdischen Philosophen des Mittelalters (3 parts), Wien, 1870-84.
DAVID KAUFMANN, Geschichte der Attributenlehre in der jdischen Religionsphilosophie des Mittelalters von Saadia bis Maimuni, Gotha, 1877.
SIMEON BERNFELD, [Hebrew: Da'at Elohim, Toldot Hafilosofiya Hadatit B'yisrael], Warsaw, 1897.
S. HOROVITZ, Die Psychologie bei den jdischen Religions-Philosophen des Mittelalters, von Saadia bis Maimuni, Breslau, 1898-1912 (includes so far Saadia, Gabirol, Ibn Zaddik, Abraham ibn Daud).
J. POLLAK, "Entwicklung der arabischen und jdischen Philosophie im Mittelalter" in Archiv fr Geschichte der Philosophie, vol. XVII (1904), pp. 196-236, 433-459.
UEBERWEG-BAUMGARTNER, Grundriss der Geschichte der Philosophie, vol. II, 10th ed., Berlin, 1915, pp. 385-403.
DAVID NEUMARK, Geschichte der jdischen Philosophie des Mittelalters, nach Problemen dargestellt, vol. I, Berlin, 1907, vol. II, part I, Berlin, 1910.
IGNAZ GOLDZIHER, Die jdische Philosophie in Allgemeine Geschichte der Philosophie, von W. Wundt, etc. (Die Kultur der Gegenwart I, 5), pp. 70-77 (2nd ed., pp. 301-337).
KALAM IN JEWISH PHILOSOPHY
MARTIN SCHREINER, Der Kalam in der jdischen Literatur, Berlin, 1895.
ISAAC ISRAELI
JACOB GUTTMANN, Die philosophischen Lehren des Isaak ben Salomon Israeli, Mnster i. W. 1911.
AL MUKAMMAS
ABRAHAM HARKAVY, in Russian periodical Woskhod, Sept. 1898.
SAADIA
JACOB GUTTMANN, Die Religionsphilosophie des Saadia, Gttingen, 1882.
D.J. ENGELKEMPER, Saadja Gaon's religionsphilosophische Lehre ber die heilige Schrift, bersetzt und erklrt, Mnster, 1903.
JOSEPH AL BASIR
P. F. FRANKL, Ein Mu'tazilitischer Kalam aus dem 10. Jahrhundert, Wien, 1872.
MIKSA KLEIN, Jszuf Al-Baszr, Al-Kitb Al-Muḥtav, Budapest, 1913.
ERN MORGENSTERN, Jszuf Al-Baszr, Al Kitb Al Muḥtav, Budapest, 1913.
JESHUA BEN JUDAH
MARTIN SCHREINER, Studien ber Jeschu'a ben Jehuda, Berlin, 1900.
SOLOMON IBN GABIROL
S. MUNK, Mlanges, etc., Paris, 1859, pp. 151-306.
SEYERLEN, in Zeller's Theologische Jahrbcher, vols. XV and XVI.
JACOB GUTTMANN, Die Philosophie des Salomon ibn Gabirol, Gttingen, 1889.
DAVID KAUFMANN, Studien ber Salomon ibn Gabirol, Budapest, 1899.
BAHYA IBN PAKUDA
DAVID KAUFMANN, "Die Theologie des Bachja Ibn Pakuda," in "Gesammelte Schriften von David Kaufmann" (ed. Brann), vol. II, Frankfurt a. M., 1910, pp. 1-98.
J. H. HERTZ, Bachya, The Jewish Thomas Kempis, New York, 1898 (in Sixth Biennial Report of the Jewish Theological Seminary Association).
PSEUDO-BAHYA
JACOB GUTTMANN, "Eine bisher unbekannte, dem Bachja ibn Pakuda zugeignete Schrift," Monatschrift f. G. u. W. d. J., vol. XLI (1897), p. 241 ff.
ABRAHAM BAR HIYYA
JACOB GUTTMANN, in Monatschrift f. G. u, W. d. J., 1900.
JOSEPH IBN ZADDIK
MAX DOCTOR, Die Philosophie des Joseph Ibn Zaddik, nach ihren Quellen, insbesondere nach ihren Beziehungen zu den Lauteren Brdern und zu Gabirol untersucht, Mnster, 1895.
LEOPOLD WEINSBERG, Der Mikrokosmos, ein angeblich im 12. Jahrhundert von dem Cordubenser Joseph ibn Zaddik verfasstes philosophisches System, nach seiner Echtheit untersucht, Breslau, 1888.
JUDAH HALEVI
AD. FRANKL-GRN, Die Ethik des Juda Halevi, Bilin, s. a.
DAVID KAUFMANN, Jehuda Halewi, Versuch einer Charakteristik, Breslau, 1877; reprinted in "Gesammelte Schriften" (ed. Brann), Frankfurt a. M., 1910, vol. II, pp. 99-151.
DAVID NEUMARK, Jehuda Hallevi's Philosophy in its Principles, Cincinnati, 1908.
JULIUS GUTTMANN, Das Verhltniss von Religion und Philosophie bei Jehuda Halewi, in Israel Lewy's Festschrift (ed. Brann and Elbogen), Breslau, 1911, pp. 327-358.
ABRAHAM IBN EZRA
NACHMAN KROCHMAL, [Hebrew: More Nevochey Hazman], Warsaw, 1894, p. 266 ff.
DAVID ROSIN, Die Religionsphilosophie Abraham ibn Esras, in Monatschrift f. G. u. W. d. J. vols. XLII (1898) and XLIII (1899).
G. ORSCHANSKY, Abraham ibn Esra als Philosoph, Breslau, 1900.
ABRAHAM IBN DAUD
GUGENHEIMER, Die Religionsphilosophie des R. Abraham ben David ha-Levi nach dessen noch ungedruckter Schrift Emuna Rama in ihrem inneren und historischen Zusammenhange entwickelt, Augsburg, 1850.
JACOB GUTTMANN, Die Religionsphilosophie des Abraham ibn Daud aus Toledo, Gttingen, 1879.
MAIMONIDES
M. JOEL, Die Religionsphilosophie des Mose ben Maimon, Breslau, 1876.
SIMON B. SCHEYER, Das Psychologische System des Maimonides, Frankfurt a. M., 1845.
DAVID ROSIN, Die Ethik des Maimonides, Breslau, 1876.
MOSES BEN MAIMON, sein Leben, seine Werke und sein Einfluss, heraus-gegeben von der Gesellschaft zur Frderung der Wissenschaft des Judenthums, Band I, Leipzig, 1908.
LOUIS-GERMAIN LEVY, Mamonide, Paris, 1911 (Les Grands Philosophes).
J. MNZ, Moses ben Maimon, sein Leben und seine Werke, Frankfurt a. M., 1912.
M. JOEL, Verhltniss Albert des Grossen zu Moses Maimonides, Breslau, 1876.
JACOB GUTTMANN, Der Einfluss der Maimonidischen Philosophie auf das christliche Abendland, in Moses ben Maimon (see above), pp. 135-230.
DAVID KAUFMANN, Der "Fhrer" Maimni's in der Weltliteratur, Archiv fr Geschichte der Philosophie, vol. XI (1898), pp. 335-376; reprinted in "Gesammelte Schriften" (ed. Brann), Frankfurt a. M., 1910, vol. II, pp. 152-189.
J. P. WICKERSHAM CRAWFORD, The Vision Delectable of Alfonso de la Torre and Maimonides' Guide of the Perplexed, Publications of the Modern Language Association of America, XXVIII, 2 (1913), pp. 188-212.
ISAAC HUSIK, An Anonymous Medieval Christian Critic of Maimonides, Jewish Quarterly Review, New Series, vol. II, 1911, pp. 159-190.
GERSONIDES
M. JOEL, Lewi ben Gerson als Religionsphilosoph, Breslau, 1862.
Isidore Weil, Philosophie Religieuse de Levi ben Gerson, Paris, 1868.
BENZION KELLERMANN, Die Kmpfe Gottes von Lewi ben Gerson, Uebersetzung und Erklrung des handschriftlich revidierten Textes, Erster Teil, Berlin, 1914. Contains the German translation of the first book of the "Milhamot Adonai." The translation is faulty in many places, as the present writer has shown in an article entitled, "Studies in Gersonides," which will appear in the Jewish Quarterly Review, New Series, in the course of the year 1917.
HASDAI CRESCAS
M. Joel, Don Chasdai Creskas' religionsphilosophische Lehren in ihrem geschichtlichen Einflusse dargestellt, Breslau, 1866.
PHILIPP BLOCH, Die Willensfreiheit von Chasdai Kreskas, Mnchen, 1879.
JULIUS WOLFSOHN, Der Einfluss Gazl's auf Chisdai Crescas, Frankfurt a. M., 1905.
DAVID NEUMARK, "Crescas and Spinoza," in Commemoration of the Fifth Centenary of the Publication of the "Or Adonai"; in Year Book of the Central Conference of American Rabbis, XVIII, 1908, pp. 277-318.
JOSEPH ALBO
SAMUEL BACK, Joseph Albo's Bedeutung in der Geschichte der jdischen Religionsphilosophie, Breslau, 1869.
JAULUS, in Monatschrift f. G. u. W. d. J., 1874, p. 462 ff.
A. TNZER, Die Religionsphilosophie Joseph Albo's nach seinem Werke "Ikkarim" systematisch dargestellt und erlutert, Frankfurt a. M., 1896.
BIBLICAL EXEGESIS
W. BACKER, Die Bibelexegese der jdischen Religionsphilosophen des Mittelalters vor Maimni, Budapest, 1892.
ID., Die Jdische Bibelexegese vom Anfange des zehnten his zum Ende des fnfzehnten Jahrhunderts, Treves, 1892, reprinted from Winter und Wnsche, Die Jdische Literatur seit Abschluss des Kanons, II, 239-339, where a full bibliography is given.
ID., Jewish Encyclopedia, s. v. Bible Exegesis, 14-16.
INFLUENCE OF JEWISH PHILOSOPHY ON SCHOLASTICISM
The works of Joel, Guttmann, Kaufmann, Crawford and Husik mentioned above under Maimonides; and besides
JACOB GUTTMANN, Das Verhltniss des Thomas von Aquino zum Judenthum und zur jdischen Litteratur, Gttingen, 1891.
ID., Die Scholastik des dreizehnten Jahrhunderts in ihren Beziehungen zum Judenthum und zur jdischen Literatur, Breslau, 1902.
For further references see the notes.
[D] This bibliography contains a selection of the more important works of exposition. For original sources see the notes.
NOTES
[Black figures denote the page, the light figures the notes]
xv, 1. See below, p. 395 ff.
xvi, 2. Talm. Bab. Hagiga 11b.
3. Ibid.
4. See Zeller, Die Philosophie der Griechen, III, 2, 3d ed. p. 347; Maimonides, Guide of the Perplexed, I, ch. 71, beginning.
xvii, 5. See Wenrich, De Auctorum Graecorum Versionibus et Commentariis Syriacis, Arabicis, Armeniacis Persicisque, Leipzig, 1842, p. 4 ff; De Boer, Geschichte der Philosophie im Islam, Stuttgart, 1901, p. 17 ff (English translation by Jones, London, 1903, pp. 11-30). Duval, La Littrature Syriaque 2nd ed., Paris, 1900, ch. XIV, 2, p. 253 ff.
xx, 6. See Dieterici, Die Theologie des Aristotles (Arabic text), Leipzig, 1882; German translation by the same, Leipzig, 1883.
7. See Bardenhewer, Die Pseudoaristotelische Schrift ber das reine Gute, bekannt unter dem Namen Liber de causis, Freiburg i. Br., 1882.
8. See Valentinus Rose, Deutsche Literaturzeitung, 1883, p. 843.
9. See Husik, Judah Messer Leon's Commentary upon the "Vetus Logica," Leyden, 1906, p. 11, 97 note.
xxi, 10. For the following sketch of the Kalam see Goldziher, Vorlesungen ber den Islam, Heidelberg, 1910, 100 ff, 127 f.
xxiv, 11. See below, p. 247.
xxv, 12. See Schreiner, Der Kalam in der jdischen Literatur, Berlin, 1895, p. 3; ibid., Studien ber Jeschu'a ben Jehuda, Berlin, 1900, p. 12 ff.
xxvi, 13. See L. Ginzberg, in Jewish Encyclopedia, s. v. "Anthropomorphism."
14. See Talm. Bab. Berakot, 33b. [Hebrew: Modim Modim Mashtikin Oto]
15. See Talm. Bab. Megillah, 25b. [Hebrew: Hakol Beyidei Shamayim Chutz Meyeriat Shamaim]
16. Schreiner, Studien ber Jeschu'a ben Jehudah, p. 15 note 2.
17. See Bab. Talm. Pesakim, 54a, [Hebrew: Shiv'a Dvarim Nivreu Kodem Shenivra Ha'olam Ve'eylu Hen Torah.... Torah Dechtiv (Mishley Khet) Hashem Kanani Reyshit Darko.]
18. Schreiner 1. c. p. 12.
19. Ibid.
20. Schreiner, Der Kalam in der jdischen Literatur, p. 3, 4.
xxvii, 21. Guide of the Perplexed, I, ch. 71.
22. See below, p. 246 ff.
23. See Goldziher, Vorlesungen ber den Islam, p. 155 ff.
xxviii, 24. See Yahuda, Al-Hidāja 'Ilā Farā'id Al-Qulūb des Bachja ibn Joseph Ibn Paquda, Leyden, 1912, p. 53 ff.
xxxvii, 25. Cf. above, note 6.
1, 26. See Steinschneider, Die Hebrischen Uebersetzungen des Mittelalters und die Juden als Dolmetscher, Berlin, 1893, 479 and notes.
1, 27. See Guttmann, Die Scholastik des dreizehnten Jahrhunderts in ihren Beziehungen zum Judenthum und zur jdischen Literatur, Breslau, 1902, P. 55 ff.
28. Omnia Opera Ysaac, Lugduni, (Lyons), 1515.
2, 29. See [Hebrew: Igrot Harambam], ed. Amsterdam, p. 14b.
30. S. Fried, Das Buch ber die Elemente ([Hebrew: Sefer Hayesodot]), Drohobycz, 1900.
31. Published by Hirschfeld in "Festschrift zum achtzigsten Geburtstag Moritz Steinschneiders," Leipzig, 1896, PP. 131-141; cf. also pp. 233-4.
32. See note 28 and the two preceding notes.
5, 33. [Hebrew: Sefer Haruach V'hanefesh] published by Steinschneider in the Hebrew periodical [Hebrew: Hakarmel] I, pp. 401-405. cf. Guttmann, Die philosophischen Lehren des Isaak ben Salomon Israeli, Mnster i. W., 1911, p. 31, note 1.
10, 34. Fried, [Hebrew: Sefer Hayesodot], p. 12f.
17, 35. Berlin, 1885, pp. 65, 77-83, 151-154.
36. See the Russian paper Woskhod, September, 1898.
24, 37. Arabic text edited by S. Landauer, Kitāb al-Amānāt wa'l-I'tiqādāt, Leyden 1880. The Hebrew translation of Judah ibn Tibbon has been published in many editions. The references in the following notes are to the Yozefov edition.
25, 38. Cf. below, p. 249 ff.
39. Pt. I, ch. 1, third argument, p. 58 of Yozefov edition.
40. Ibid., fourth argument, p. 59.
26, 41. Ibid., ch. 3, p. 63 ff.; cf. Guttmann, Die Religionsphilosophie des Saadia, Gttingen, 1882, p. 45 f.
42. Pt. II, chs. 9-12, pp. 95-101.
43. Pt. VI, ch. 1, p. 149.
44. Pt. II, ch. 2, pp. 88-9.
27, 45. Introduction, pp. 38-39.
46. Ibid., p. 40.
28, 47. Ibid., pp. 43-48.
48. Ibid., p. 48.
49. p. 49
50. p. 51.
29, 51. Pt. I. Introduction, p. 54 f.
52. Ibid., ch. 1, p. 56.
30, 53. Ibid., p. 57.
54. Ibid., p. 58.
55. Ibid., p. 59.
31, 56. Ch. 2, p. 60 ff.
57. Ch. 3, third opinion, p. 66 ff.
32, 58. Ch. 4, pp. 80-82.
59. Pt. II, Introduction, p. 86.
60. Ibid., ch. 1, p. 88.
33, 61. Pt. I, ch. 3, fifth opinion, p. 68.
62. Pt. II, ch. 2, p. 89.
34, 63. Ibid., chs. 4-5, pp. 91-93.
64. See Graf, Die Philosophie und Gotteslehre des Jahjā ibn 'Adī und spteren Autoren, Mnster, 1910, p. 32, note, p. 52.
35, 65. III, ch. 10, p. 122; V, ch. 8, p. 147; VII, ch. 2, p. 165.
66. II, chs. 9-12, pp. 95-102.
37, 67. VI, chs. 1-4, pp. 148-156.
38, 68. III chs. 1-3, pp. 104-110.
40, 69. Ibid., chs. 4-5, pp. 110-113.
70. Ch. 6, pp. 113-114.
71. Chs. 7-9, pp. 114-121.
41, 72. IV, pp. 124-136.
42, 73. V, chs. 1-3, pp. 136-140.
43, 74. IX, chs. 1-4, pp. 185-190.
44, 75. VI, ch. 8, pp. 160-162.
45, 76. VII, chs. 1-9, pp. 162-174.
77. VIII, pp. 175-185.
78. IX, chs. 5-11, pp. 190-197.
46, 79. X, pp. 197-215.
48, 80. The following sketch is based upon Frankl, Ein Mu'tazilitischer Kalam aus dem 10ten Jahrhundert, Wien, 1872.
55, 81. The following sketch is based upon Schreiner, Studien ber Jeschu'a ben Jehuda, Berlin, 1900.
60, 82. [Hebrew: Igrot Harambam] (Letters of Maimonides), ed. Amsterdam, p. 14b.
61, 83. See Munk, Mlanges de Philosophie Juive et Arabe, Paris, 1859, p. 291 ff; Guttmann, Die Scholastik des Dreizehnten Jahrhunderts, Breslau, 1902, pp. 60-85. Id., Die Philosophie des Salomon ibn Gabirol, Gttingen, 1889, p. 54 ff. This last work and that of Munk represent the best exposition and criticism of Gabirol's philosophy and of his sources and influences.
62, 84. Cf. Baeumker, Avencebrolis Fons Vit, Mnister, 1892-95, Prolegomena.
63, 85. Jourdain, A., Recherches Critiques sur l'ge et l'origine des traductions Latines d' Aristote, 2 ed. Paris, 1843, p. 197 note.
86. Munk, Mlanges, etc. (see note 83), contains the Hebrew extracts of Falaquera. The Latin translation was published by Clemens Baeumker in the Beitrge zur Geschichte der Philosophie des Mittelalters, vol. I, pts. 2-4 (cf. above note 84). See also Seyerlen in Theologische Jahrbcher, edited by Zeller, XV and XVI.
64, 87. Cf. Munk, Le Guide des gars, II, p. 25, note 1, end.
88. See Kaufmann, Studien ber Salomon ibn Gabirol, Budapest, 1899.
89. Baeumker, Fons Vit, V, p. 313, 6.
65, 90. F. V. V, 333-335, Falaquera in Munk's Mlanges, V, 67-69.
91. F. V. IV, 8 ff., Falaquera IV, 1.
92. F. V. V, 296, 10.
93. F. V. IV, 243, 10.
94. F. V. III, p. 196, 5 ff., Falaq. III, 10.
95. F. V. III, 208, 15; Falaq. III, 44.
67, 96. F. V. III, 175, 10 ff.; Falaq. III 27 ff.
97. F. V. IV, 211, 9 ff., 213, 17 ff., 217, II ff., 218, 18; Falaq. IV, 1-4 and ff.
98. F. V. V, 258, 19; 259, 1; 268, 8, 14, 15; 322, 12; Falaq. V, 55.
68, 99. F. V. V, 306, 7 ff.; Falaq. V, 34 ff.
100. F. V. V, 330, 15 ff.; Falaq. V, 64 ff.
101. F. V. V, 326, 3 ff.; Falaq. V, 60 ff.
70, 102. F. V. III, 204, 13 ff.; Falaq. III, 37.
71, 103. S. Wise, "Improvement of the Moral Qualities," New York, 1901. (Columbia University Oriental Studies, vol. 1.)
72, 104. F. V. I, 4, 24 ff.; Falaq. I, 2.
78, 105. See Munk, Mlanges, 166 ff.
80, 106. Yahuda, Prolegomena zu einer erstmaligen Herausgabe des Kitāb Al-Hidāja 'Ilā Farā'id Al-Qulūb, Frankfurt a. M., 1904, 12 ff.; id., Al-Hidaja 'Ilā Faraid Al-Qulūb des Bachja ibn Joseph ibn Paqūda, Leyden, 1912, 63 f.
107. Neumark, Geschichte der jdischen Philosophie des Mittelalters, I, Berlin, 1907, 485-493.
81, 108. In his commentary on Deut. 32, 39. Cf. Yahuda, Prolegomena, p. 12, note 2, where 35 should be corrected to 39.
109. Yahuda, Al-Hidaja, etc., p. 97.
85, 110. [Hebrew: Chovat Halevavot] (Duties of the Hearts) ed. Warsaw, 1875, Introduction, pp. 9-28.
86, 111. Ibid., Introduction, 28-37.
112. Yahuda, Al-Hidāja, pp. 53-112.
88, 113. Duties of the Hearts, I, chs. 1-6, pp. 41-58.
89, 114. Duties, I, ch. 6, pp. 57-8.
92, 115. Ibid., ch. 7, pp. 58-69.
93, 116. Ch. 8, pp. 69-72.
117. Ch. 9, pp. 72-76.
95, 118. Ch. 10, pp. 76-84.
96, 119. Guide of the Perplexed I, ch. 53.
120. Duties, ch. 1, p. 44.
121. Ibid., ch. 10, end, p. 92 f.
97, 122. Duties, II, pp. 95-137.
99, 123. III, pp. 138-197.
101, 124. IV, pp. 198-256.
125. Duties, 2nd volume, part V, pp. 3-35.
102, 126. VI, pp. 36-58.
103, 127. VII, pp. 58-82.
104, 128. VIII, pp. 82-126.
105, 129. IX, pp. 126-150.
130. X, pp. 151-168.
106, 131. Broyd, Les Reflexions sur l'me par Bahya ben Joseph ibn Pakouda, Paris, 1896; Hebrew title, [Hebrew: Sefer Torot Hanefesh].
132. Goldziher, Kitāb Ma'ānī al-Nafs, Berlin, 1907.
133. See Guttmann in "Monatschrift fr Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judenthums," XLI (1897), 241 ff.
107, 134. Arabic text, p. 41, 12 and 46, 2; Hebrew, p. 55, 1 and 61, 5.
135. Ch. 2, p. 4, 29 (Heb. p. 5, last line).
136. Ibid., p. 6, 1 (Heb. p. 7, 3).
137. Ibid., p. 5, 16 f. (Heb. 6, 16 f.).
138. Ibid., ch. 9, p. 34, 13 ff. (Heb. p. 44, 10).
139. Ch. 2, p. 6, 6 ff. (Heb. p. 7, 8 f.).
140. Ch. 12, p. 42, 23 (Heb. p. 56, 23).
108, 141. Chs. 1-2.
111, 142. Chs. 16-17.
143. Chs. 6 and 11-12.
112, 144. Ch. 2.
145. Ch. 9.
113, 146. Ch. 7.
147. Chs. 19 and 21.
114, 148. [Hebrew: Sefer Higayon Hanefesh], edited by Freimann, Leipzig, 1860. German title, Sefer Hegjon ha-Nefesch.
115, 149. p. 2a.
150. Ibid., also 4b.
151. See, however, below, p. 119.
152. p. 2b.
116, 153. p. 1.
117, 154. pp. 1-2.
118, 155. pp. 4b-5a.
156. pp. 2b-4a.
122, 157. pp. 5b-8a.
158. p. 8b ff.
123 159. p. 11a.
160. pp. 10-12.
124, 161. p. 30b ff.
125,162. See Doctor, Die Philosophie des Joseph ibn Zaddik, Mnster, 1895, pp. 1-3; Horovitz, Der Mikrokosmos des Joseph Ibn Saddik, Breslau, 1903, I-II.
163. Horovitz, Mikrokosmos, XIII, ff.
164. Letters of Maimonides, ed. Amsterdam, 14b.
126, 165. Horovitz, Mikrokosmos, 7, 24-8, 2.
127, 166. Ibid., 44-46; 53-54; cf. below, p. 145.
167. Ibid., p. 37, 2 ff.; cf. below, p. 138.
129, 168. pp. 1-2.
130, 169. pp. 3-6.
133, 170. pp. 7-19.
134, 171. pp. 19-25.
137, 172. pp. 25-33.
141, 173. pp. 33-43.
142, 174. pp. 43-47.
145, 175. pp. 47-57
146, 176. pp. 57-58.
149, 177. pp. 59-79.
150, 178. Al-Chazari, I, 67, ed. Hirschfeld, Leipzig, 1887, p. 29, 24.
179. Ibid., p. 29, 19-20.
180. I, 63; II, 66; pp. 29 and 125.
151, 181. See Kaufmann, Jehuda Halewi in "Gesammelte Schriften," Frankfurt a. M., 1910, vol. 2, pp. 99-151.
152, 182. Al-Chazari IV, 13, 15; p. 253, 18 ff., 257, 6 ff.
153, 183. Kaufmann, Geschichte der Attributenlehre in der jdischen Religionsphilosophie des Mittelalters, Gotha, 1877, pp. 119-140.
157, 184. Al-Chazari I, 1-67, pp. 1-29.
158, 185. Ibid., 70 ff., p. 31 ff.
159, 186. II, 6; p. 75, 22 ff.
187. IX, 13; p. 253, 18 ff.
160, 188. IV, 3; p. 229, 10 ff.
189, Ibid., 15 ff.; p. 257, 6 ff.
161, 190. II, 2-4; pp. 71-75.
163, 191. I, 87 ff.; p. 39 ff.
164, 192. I, 99 ff.; p. 53 ff.
193. II, 10 ff.; p. 77 ff.
194. Ibid., 36 ff.; p. 103 ff.
165, 195. Ibid., 68 f.; p. 125 f.
167, 196. IV, 3 ff.; p. 237, 9 ff.
168, 197. II, 26, p. 95; 48, p. 107 f.
169, 198. Ibid., 50, p. 109, 24 f.; III, 1 ff., p. 141 ff.
170, 199. I, 109 ff.; p. 59 ff.
173, 200. V, 20 ff., p. 337 ff.
201. IV, 25, p. 267 ff.
202. Ibid., 27, p. 283 f.
174, 203. Ibid., 29 ff., p. 285 ff.
175, 204. See above, p. 8.
205. Zeitschrift der deutschen morgenlndischen Gesellschaft, XXIX (1875), pp. 335-418.
177, 206. V, 1 ff., p. 295 ff.
179, 207. IV, 25, p. 281, 24 ff.
181, 208. V, 12, p. 311 ff.
182, 209. Ibid., 14, p. 323 ff.
183, 210. Ibid., 16 ff., p. 331 ff.
211. Ibid., 22 ff., p. 357 ff.
184, 212. Quoted by Bacher in Jewish Encyclopedia, s. v. Ibn Ezra, Abraham.
213. Published by Dukes in "Zion," II, Frankfurt a. M., 1842, pp. 117-123, 134-137, 157-159, 175. Cf. also Literaturblatt des Orients, X, 748, where Dukes publishes a brief passage from the "Arugat Habosem," not found in "Zion." He derived it from a different manuscript.
187, 214. Jesod Mora, published with German translation by M. Creizenach, Frankfurt a. M., and Leipzig, 1840. Hebrew title [Hebrew: Yisod Mora]. Sefer Ha-Schem, ed. Lippmann, 1834. Cf., Bacher, Jewish Encyclopedia, s. v.
189, 215. [Hebrew: More Nevochey Hazman], Warsaw, 1894, ch. 17 ([Hebrew: Chochmat Hamisken]), pp. 266 ff.
216. Die Religionsphilosophie Abraham Ibn Esra's, in "Monatschrift fr Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judenthums," 42 and 43 (1898 and 1899).
192, 217. Ibid., 42 (1898), pp. 454-455.
193, 218. Commentary on Exod. 33, 21, towards the end of the long excursus.
195, 219. Commentary on Exod. 20, 2.
220. Introduction to his commentary on Ecclesiastes.
197, 221. Emunah Ramah (Heb. title [Hebrew: Emunah Ramah]), published with German translation by Simson Weil, Frankfurt a. M., 1852, p. 2 (Heb.).
222. Em. Ram., p. 83.
198, 223. See note 221.
224. Em. Ram., 2-3.
225. See note 221.
199, 226. See Horovitz, Ueber den Einfluss der griechischen Philosophie auf die Entwicklung des Kalam, Breslau, 1909.
200, 227. But see below, p. 354, l. 31.
202, 228. Em. Ram., p. 1 ff.
203, 229. Ibid., 4.
204, 230. Al Gazali. Cf. Guttmann, Die Religionsphilosophie des Abraham ibn Daud aus Toledo, Gttingen, 1879, p. 117, note.
205, 231. Em. Ram., 44-46.
232. Ibid., 4-8.
207, 233. Ibid., 9-13.
208, 234. Ibid., 13-15.
209, 235. Ibid., 15-20.
216, 236. Em. Ram., 20-41.
237. Ibid., 41-43.
220, 238. Em. Ram., 44-51.
221, 239. Ibid., 51-57.
223, 240. Ibid., 57-69.
224, 241. Ibid., 69-70.
226, 242. Ibid., 70-75.
228, 243. Ibid., 75-81.
230, 244. Ibid., 93-98.
232, 245. See Guttmann, Die Religionsphilosophie des Abraham Ibn Daud, p. 220, note 2.
235, 246. Ibid., 98-104.
236, 247. [Hebrew: Be'oor Milot Ha'higayon], Breslau, 1828. For other editions and interesting information concerning this treatise see Steinschneider, Die Hebrischen Uebersetzungen des Mittelalters, Berlin, 1893, 251, and Die Arabische Literatur der Juden, Frankfurt a. M., 1902, p. 208, 5.
248. Introduction to the eleventh chapter (ch. Helek) of the treatise Sanhedrin.
239, 249. Letters of Maimonides, ed. Amsterdam, pp. 13b-14.
250. The Arabic text was published with a French translation and extremely valuable notes by Solomon Munk, under the title, Le Guide des gars, 3 volumes, Paris, 1856-66. English translation by M. Friedlnder in 3 vols., London, 1881-1885, re-issued in one volume, with omission of notes, London, 1910. For other translations, editions and commentaries see Kaufmann, "Der 'Fhrer' Maimnis in der Weltliteratur," Archiv fr Geschichte der Philosophie, XI (1898), pp. 335-376, republished in Kaufmann's Gesammelte Schriften ed. Brann, vol. 2, Frankfurt a. M., 1910, pp. 152-189. See also Friedlnder's translation, London, 1910, p. XXVII ff.
251. The Arabic text was published with a German translation by M. Wolff under the title, Ms Maimni's Acht Kapitel, 2nd edition, Leyden, 1903. Hebrew text with English translation by Joseph I. Gorfinkle, The Eight Chapters of Maimonides on Ethics, New York, 1912 (Columbia University Oriental Studies, vol. VII).
240, 252. Emunah Ramah, p. 81 ff.
241, 253. Guide, I, chs. 1, 3-16, 18-30, 37-45, 64-67, 70.
243, 254. Ibid., ch. 54.
255. III, 28.
256. I, 55.
244, 257. I, 32.
258. Ibid., ch. 33.
245, 259. Ch. 34.
260. Ch. 71.
246, 261. Ibid.
247, 262. Cf., however, above, p. xxv f. (the view that Kalam originated in Judaism).
248, 263. Ch. 71.
249, 264. The following numbers do not correspond to those of Maimonides.
252, 265. Guide, I, 73.
266. Ibid., 74.
253, 267. Ibid., 75.
268. Ibid., 76.
269. See below, p. 257.
270. Below, p. 259.
271. Above, p. 218.
272. Below, p. 258, last line, and 260.
257, 273. Guide II, Introduction.
260, 274. Ibid., ch. 1.
261, 275. Ch. 36.
262, 276. Ch. 46.
264, 277. Ibid., chs. 51-53.
265, 278. Chs. 55-58.
279. Ch. 61.
268, 280. See Munk, Guide des gars II, p. 69, note 1.
281. Guide II, chs. 3-6.
271, 282. Chs. 13-18.
272, 283. Munk understands the preceding sentence differently. See his edition, vol. II, p. 157, note 2.
274, 284. Guide II, chs. 19-25.
281, 285. Ibid., chs. 32-48.
286. III, ch. 8.
282, 287. "Eight Chapters," ch. 1.
285, 288. Ibid., chs. 2-5.
289. Ch. 7.
288, 290. Ch. 8.
289, 291. Guide III, chs. 10-12.
290, 292. Ibid., ch. 16.
292, 293. Ibid., chs. 17-18.
294, 294. Ibid., chs. 19-21.
295. Ibid., chs. 26 and 31.
295, 296. Ibid., ch. 27.
297, Ibid., ch. 50.
298, 298. Ibid., chs. 29-50.
299, 299. Ibid., ch. 54.
304, 300. Ibid., II, ch. 30.
301. Ibid., III, chs. 1-7.
302. See Munk, Le Guide des gars, III, p. 8, note.
303. Ibid.
304. Guide III, chs. 22-23.
305, 305. See Kaufmann, Der Fhrer Maimnis in der Weltliteratur in Archiv fr Geschichte der Philosophie XI (1898) p. 314 f.; reprinted in Kaufmann's Gesammelte Schriften, ed. Brann, Frankfurt a. M., 1910, p. 158 f.
306. See Jourdain, Recherches critiques sur l'ge et l'origine des traductions Latines d'Aristote, 2nd ed., Paris, 1843. German transl. by Stahr, Halle, 1831.
305, 307. Augustine, De Civitate Dei, Book VIII, ch. 5, "Nulli nobis quam isti [sc., Platonici] propius accesserunt"; ch. 9, "Platonem de Deo ista sensisse, quae multum congruere veritati nostrae religionis agnoscunt."
306, 308. See Mandonnet, Siger de Brabant et l'Averrosme Latin au XIII^me Sicle, Louvain, 1911, chs. 1-2; Isaac Husik, An Anonymous Medieval Christian Critic of Maimonides, Jewish Quarterly Review, New Series, vol. II, Phila. 1911, p. 159 ff.
309. See J. Perles, "Die in einer Mnchener Handschrift aufgefundene erste lateinische Uebersetzung des Maimonidischen Fhrers", in Monatschrift fr Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judenthums, XXIV (1875), p. 9 ff.
307, 310. See M. Joel, Verhltniss Albert des Grossen zu Moses Maimonides, Breslau, 1876, in M. Joel, Beitrge zur Geschichte der Philosophie, Breslau, 1876. J. Guttmann, Das Verhltniss des Thomas von Aquino zum Judenthum und zur jdischen Literatur, Gttingen, 1891; id., Die Scholastik des dreizehnten Jahrhunderts in ihren Beziehungen zum Judenthum und zur jdischen Literatur, Breslau, 1902; id., Der Einfluss der Maimonidischen Philosophie auf das christliche Abendland, in "Moses ben Maimon," vol. I, Leipzig, 1908.
308, 311. See Graetz, History of the Jews, index volume, s. v., "Maimunist Controversy."
309, 312. Published by M. L. Bisliches, Pressburg, 1837.
312a. Edited by W. Bacher under the title "Sefer Musar," Berlin, 1910.
313. Published by the "Mekize Nirdamim" Society, Lyck, 1866.
310, 314. Published by Munk in Mlanges de Philosophie Juive et Arabe, Paris, 1859.
315. Published by Bisliches, Pressburg, 1837.
316. See Munk, Mlanges, p. 494, note 1; H. Malter, Shem Tob Palquera, in Jewish Quarterly Review, new series, vol. I, pp. 151-181, 451-501.
317. Published by Werbluner, Josephi Kaspi ... Commentaria hebraica in R. Mosis Maimonides Tractatum Dalalat al Haiirin, Frankfurt a. M., 1848.
318. Edited by Goldenthal, Wien, 1852.
311, 319. The English reader will also find a good deal of material in the pages of the Jewish Encyclopedia under the names of the translators and writers above mentioned.
313, 320. Guide I, ch. 74, 7th proof, end.
314, 321. Published by the "Mekize Nirdamim," Lyck, 1874.
315, 322. Tagm. Hanef. 1.
317, 323. Ibid., 1b-7b. The definition occurs, p. 7b, ll. 28 ff.
318, 324. Ibid., 8a.
319, 325. Ibid., 8a-10a.
322, 326. Ibid., 10a-13b.
323, 327. Ibid., 13b-19b.
324, 328. Ibid., 20a-21b.
326, 329. Ibid., 21b-24b.
330. Ibid., 24.
327, 331. Ibid., 25a-32.
328, 331a. See Heimann Auerbach, Albalag und seine Uebersetzung des Maksid al-Gazzalis, Breslau, 1906, p. vii f.; Guttmann, Die Stellung des Simon ben Zemach Duran in der Geschichte der jdischen Religionsphilosophie in Monatschrift fr Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judenthums, vol. LVII (1913), p. 184 f.
328, 332. See Maywald, Die Lehre von der zweifachen Wahrheit, Berlin, 1871; Mandonnet, Siger de Brabant et l'Averrosme Latin au XIII^me Sicle, Louvain, 1911, vol. 1, p. 148 ff.
329, 333. First edition, Riva di Trento, 1560; modern edition, Leipzig, 1866. The references in the sequel are to the Leipzig edition.
334. See Husik, Judah Messer Leon's Commentary on the "Vetus Logica," Leyden, 1906, p. 11.
335. See Joel, Lewi ben Gerson als Religionsphilosoph, Breslau, 1862, p. 9f. (in M. Joel, Beitrge zur Geschichte der Philosophie, Breslau, 1876).
330, 336. Introduction to Gersonides' commentary on the Pentateuch.
337. Introduction to "Milhamot Adonai," pp. 6-7.
331, 338. Milhamot I, ch. 14, p. 91.
339. Ibid., Introduction, p. 8.
336, 340. I, chs. 1-4, pp. 12-35.
337, 341. Ibid., ch. 5, pp. 35-36.
339, 342. Ch. 6, pp. 36-48.
340, 343. Ibid., chs. 10-12, pp. 61-88.
342, 344. Milhamot II, chs. 1-2, pp. 92-98.
345. Ibid., chs. 3, 5 and 6, pp. 98 f., 104, 111 f.
344, 346. Milhamot III, ch. 3, p. 132.
345, 347. III, chs. 1-6, pp. 120-150.
349, 348. IV, chs. 1-7, pp. 151-187.
350, 349. V, 3, ch. 6, p. 264 f.
351, 350. Ibid., chs. 4-6, pp. 247-264.
352, 351. Ch. 12, pp. 278-285.
354, 352. VI, 1, chs. 1-9, pp. 293-328.
353, Ibid., chs. 10-13, pp. 328-353; ch. 15, p. 356 f.
355, 354. Ch. 16, pp. 359-361.
357, 355. Chs. 17-28, pp. 362-416.
356, VI, 2, ch. 1, p. 419.
358, 357. VI, 2, chs. 1-8, pp. 418-441.
360, 358. Ibid., chs. 9-12, pp. 441-460.
359. Chs. 13-14, pp. 460-463.
363, 360. Published by Delitzsch and Steinschneider, Leipzig, 1841.
364, 361. Ez Hayim, p. 4.
366, 362. E. H., pp. 3-5.
367, 363. p. 15, l. 6 f., also p. 18, l. 10 f.
364. Ch. 4, pp. 12-13, l. 24.
368, 365. Ch. 9, pp. 26-27.
369, 366. p. 17, l. 16.
367. p. 33.
372, 368. Chs. 66-72, pp. 80-89.
369. Ch. 75, pp. 93-96.
373, 370. Chs. 76-78, pp. 96-99.
375, 371. Chs. 79-81, pp. 100-107.
376, 372. Chs. 82-89, pp 107-133.
377, 373. Ch. 89, pp. 133-136.
378, 374. "Guide" III, 24.
379, 375. Ez Hayim, ch. 90, pp. 136-144.
376. "Guide" III, chs. 12, 13, 25 end.
380, 377. Ez Hayim, ch. 94, pp. 149-154.
382, 378. Chs. 96-100, pp. 160-176.
379. Chs. 101-102, pp. 177-181.
380. Ez Hayim, pp. 116-117.
383, 381. Ch. 103, pp. 181-185.
384, 382. Chs. 104-105, pp. 185-187.
385, 383. Ch. 106, p. 187 ff.; ch. 109, p. 194 ff.
384. Chs. 107-108.
387, 385. Chs. 110-112.
389, 386. Ed. Ferara, 1556 (no pagination).
390, 387. "Or Adonai," Introduction, pp. 6-7 (not numbered).
391, 388. Book I, sections 1-2.
389. Ibid., section 3, ch. 2.
390. Ibid., ch. 3.
392, 391. Ibid.
392. Ibid., ch. 4.
393, 393. Book II, section I.
395, 394. Ibid., section 2.
395. Section 3.
396. Section 4.
398, 397. Section 5.
398. See M. Joel, "Don Chasdai Creskas' religionsphilosophische Lehren," Breslau, 1866 (in M. Joel, Beitrge zur Geschichte der Philosophie, Breslau, 1876), p. 54 f.
402, 399. Or Adonai, II, section 6.
400. Ibid., III, introduction.
403, 401. Ibid., section 1.
404, 402. Section 3.
405, 403. Section 4.
406, 403a. Simon ben Zemach Duran (1361-1444). He was a relative of Gersonides, a Rabbinical authority, and the author of a scientific and philosophical work, entitled "Magen Abot." Unlike his more distinguished relative, Simon Duran was opposed to the extreme views adopted by such men as Albalag, Moses of Narbonne or Gersonides himself, and favored a return to the more moderate standpoint of Maimonides. Without laying any claim to originality his work shows wide reading and familiarity with the scientific and philosophic literature of the time. See Guttmann, "Die Stellung des Simon ben Zemach Duran in der Geschichte der jdischen Religionsphilosophie," in Monatschrift fr Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judenthums, vol. 52 (1908), pp. 641-672, vol. 53 (1909), pp. 46-97, 199-228. From Guttmann's investigations it appears that Albo cannot claim any originality even for the reduction of the fundamental dogmas of Judaism to three. The first part of the "Ikkarim" turns out to be a compilation from Crescas and Duran, and is no more original than the rest of the book. When we consider that though he owes the central point of his contribution to Duran, Albo never mentions him, the charge of plagiarism brought against him is not far from justified. See below, p. 407.
407, 404. [Hebrew: Bitul Ikarei Hanotzrim], published by Ephraim Deinard, Carney, N. J., 1904. The work was originally composed in Spanish, and was translated into Hebrew by Joseph Ibn Shemtob.
404a. See also note 403a.
408, 405. [Hebrew: Sefer Ha'ikarim], ed. Warsaw, 1877, pp. 13-14.
406. Ibid., pp. 14-17.
409, 407. pp. 21-25.
408. In the introduction to his commentary on the eleventh chapter of the Mishnic treatise Sanhedrin (chapter Helek).
410, 409. Crescas; cf. above, p. 392.
410. Ikkarim, I, ch. 3, pp. 25-31.
411, 411. Chs. 4-7, pp. 31-39.
412, 412. Ch. 8, pp. 39-46.
413. Ch. 9, pp. 46-48.
413, 414. Chs. 10-11, pp. 48-58.
415. Ch. 12, pp. 58-60.
416. Chs. 13 and 15, pp. 60-61 and 64-68.
414, 417. Ch. 14, pp. 61-64.
415, 418. Ch. 17, pp. 7-76.
419. Ch. 18, pp. 76-78.
416, 420. Ch. 23, pp. 84-86.
418, 421. Ch. 24, pp. 87-90.
422, Ch. 25, pp. 90-92.
419, 423. Ch. 26, p. 93.
424. Book II, chs. 4-5, pp. 107-114.
425. Ibid., ch. 7, pp. 117-118.
420, 426. Chs. 8-10, pp. 118-125.
427. Chs. 11-13, pp. 125-140.
428. Ch. 12, pp. 129-133.
421, 429. Book III, chs. 1-5, pp. 197-214.
430. Chs. 6-7, pp. 214-218.
423, 431. Chs. 8-11, pp. 218-228.
424, 432. Chs. 13-20, pp. 229-246.
433. Book IV, chs. 1-6, pp. 279-294.
425, 434. Chs. 7-15, pp. 294-313.
427, 435. Chs. 29-35, pp. 338-356.
429, 436. See Guttmann "Die Familie Schemtob in ihren Beziehungen zur Philosophie," Monatschrift fr Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judenthums, vol. 57 (1913), p. 177 ff.
437. See Guttmann as in preceding note.
438. See preceding note.
430, 439. See note 436.
440. See Jewish Encyclopedia s. v.
441. J. E. s. v.
431, 442. See Zimmels, "Leo Hebraeus, ein jdischer Philosoph der Renaissance," Leipzig, 1886; Appel, "Leone Medigos Lehre vom Weltall und ihr Verhltniss zu griechischen und zeitgenssischen Anschauungen," in Archiv fr Geschichte der Philosophie, vol. XX, pp. 387-400, 496-520; Munk, Mlanges, pp. 522-528.
443. Husik, "Judah Messer Leon's Commentary on the Vetus Logica," Leyden, 1906.
444. Jewish Encyclopedia, s. v.
LIST OF BIBLICAL AND RABBINIC QUOTATIONS
BIBLE
GENESIS: 1, 1, p. 110; 1, 2, p. 118; 1, 3, p. 120; 1, 6, p. 118; 1, 9, p. 121; 1, 11, p. 121; 1, 21, p. 121; 1, 25, p. 121; 1, 26, pp. 121, 268; 1, 27, pp. 94, 121; 1, 28, p. 121; 2, 7, p. 121, 214; 2, 19, p. 121; 6, 6, p. 227; 8, 21, p. 102; 11, 7, p. 268; 14, 22, p. 369; ch. 15, p. 280; 15, 4, p. 280; 15, 12 ff., p. 225; 18, 10, p. 340; 27, 34-41, p. 74; 28, 13, p. 94; 28, 20, p. 105; 36, 31, p. 295.
EXODUS: 2, 13, p. 232; 2, 17, p. 232; 3, 14, p. 95; 5, 2, p. 160; 7, 3, pp. xiv, 42; 9, 12, p. 74; 15, 26, p. 403; 20, 2, pp. 194, 233; 20, 11-12, p. 233; 20, 17, p. 83; 20, 35, p. 409; 22, 26, p. 74; 23, 21, p. 109; 24, 10, p. 167; 33, 11, p. 381; 33, 13, p. 243; 33, 23, p. 37; 34, 6, p. 233.
LEVITICUS: 19, 17, p. 83; 19, 18, p. 83.
NUMBERS: 10, 8, p. 227; 12, 8, p. 167; 15, 39, p. 83; 23, 10, p. 170.
DEUTERONOMY: 2, 30, p. xiv; 4, 15, pp. 35, 95; 4, 39, pp. 84, 115, 220; 6, 4, p. 74; 13, 1, pp. 382, 423; 15, 7, p. 83; 17, 15, p. 295; 30, 15, p. 286; 30, 19, pp. xiv, 41, 286; 31, 17, p. 348; 33, 4, p. 41; 34, 10, p. 416.
JOSHUA: ch. 10, p. 360.
I. SAMUEL: 2, 6, p. 386; 19, 20, p. 226.
II. SAMUEL: 23, 2, p. 34.
I. KINGS: 22, 20, p. xiv.
ISAIAH: 1, 14, p. 227; 1, 11-17, p. 82; 5, 20, p. 374; 6, 1, 8, p. 280; 11, 1-4, p. 112; 26, 19, p. 386; 40, 12, p. 208; 40, 26, p. 369; 43, 1, p. 122; 43, 7, p. 121; 45, 18, p. 104; 59, 19, p. 109.
JEREMIAH: 7, 22, p. 234; 9, 22-23, pp. 124, 148, 205, 299; 18, 1 ff., p. 207; 31, 33, p. 141.
EZEKIEL: 8, 9, p. 109.
HOSEA: 4, 6, p. 348; 6, 3, p. 141.
AMOS: 3, 2, p. 164; 5, 6, p. 141.
MICAH: 6, 8, p. 168.
ZEPHANIAH: 2, 3, p. 148.
MALACHI: 1, 9, p. 41.
PSALMS: 19, p. 216; 19, 2, p. 193; 19, 7, p. 193; 19, 8, p. 411; 19, 9-10, p. 412; 73, 11-13, p. 293; 94, 9, p. 293; 136, 6, p. 176; 139, p. 205; 145, 9, p. 376.
PROVERBS: 8, 22, p. 109; 25, 16, p. 244; 30, 4, p. 208.
JOB: 10, 10, p. 378; 19, 26, p. 116; 23, 13, p. xxvi; ch. 32, p. 349; 38, 36-37, p. 208.
ECCLESIASTES: 1, 14, p. 47; 2, 3, p. 47.
DANIEL: 7, 1, p. 225; 10, 8, p. 278; 10, 17, p. 381; 12, 2, p. 404.
NEHEMIAH: 9, 5, p. 95.
MISHNA AND TALMUD
BERAKOT (Bab. Tal.): 17 a, p. 44; 33 b, p. xxvi, note 14, p. 41.
BERAKOT (Jer. Tal.): I, p. 83.
PESAKIM: 54 a, p. xxvi, note 17.
MEGILLAH: 25 b, p. xxvi, note 15.
HAGIGAH: ch. 2, p. 244; 11 b, p. xvi, notes 2 and 3.
SANHEDRIN: 38 b, p. 268; 99 a, p. 408; 106 b, p. 83.
MAKKOT: 23 b, p. 416.
ABOT: ch. 4, p. 44.
INDEX
Aaron ben Elijah, xli, 362-387; relation to Maimonides, 363 f.; to the Mu'tazila, 364; reason and faith, 364 f.; physics, 366 ff.; defends atomic theory, 367 f.; creation, ibid.; existence of God, 368 f.; unity, ibid.; incorporeality, ibid.; attributes, 369 f.; will of God, 372; problem of evil, 373 f., 376 f.; Providence, 375 f.; reward and punishment, 379, 383; purpose of the world and of man, 379 f.; prophecy, 380 f.; immutability of the Law, 382; reason of the commandments, ibid.; immortality, 384; resurrection, 385 f.
Aaron ben Joseph, 363
Abarbanel, Don Isaac, 304, 312, 328, 430
Abarbanel, Judah Leo, 431
Abd Al Rahman III, 59
Ablard, 305
Abraham bar Hiyya, xlvi, 114-124; standpoint, 115; physics, 116 f.; matter, ibid.; form, 117 ff.; intellect, soul and nature, 119; ethics, 119, 122 f.; reward and punishment, 119, 122 ff.; immortality, 120 f.; problem of evil, 123 f., 128, 139, 175, 309, 435
sculapius, 155
Afer, Constantinus, 1
Aher, 197
Akiba, Rabbi, xxvi
Al-Ashari, xxiii
Albalag, Isaac, 328, 429, 430, 447, note 403a
Albalia, Baruh, 151
Al Basir, Joseph, xxv, xlvii, 48-55; priority of reason, 48; atomic theory, 49; existence of God, 49 f.; creation, ibid.; attributes, 50; divine will, ibid.; eternity, 51; incorporeality, unity, simplicity, ibid, f.; God's word, 52; ethics, ibid, f.; problem of evil, 54; freedom, 54 f.; and foreknowledge, ibid.; reward and punishment, 55, 56, 57, 81, 126, 127, 128, 141, 146, 200, 246, 363, 434
Albertus Magnus, 1, 200, 306, 312, 313, 323
Albo, Joseph, I, 406-427; standpoint, 406 ff.; purpose of his work, 408; principles of religion, ibid.; criticism of Maimonides's 13 articles, 409 ff.; Albo's own view, 410 f.; divine law distinguished from natural and conventional, 408 ff.; freedom, a principle, 412; creation, 413, 415; existence of God, 419 f.; attributes, 420; angels, ibid.; revelation, 420 f.; prophecy, 421; immutability of the Law, 423; God's knowledge, 424; and human freedom, ibid.; Providence, 425; reward and punishment, 425 f.; 428, 430, 436, 447, note 403a
Alexander of Aphrodisias, xviii, 7, 60, 290, 313, 321, 332, 334, 335, 336
Alexander the Great, xvii
Alexander of Hales, 306
Alfadhil, 239
Alfarabi, xx, xxi, xxxix, xlvi, 2, 26, 60, 177, 178, 198, 199, 218, 223, 252, 253, 276, 281, 302, 312, 313, 362, 391, 392
Alfasi, 151
Algazali, xxxix, 80, 152, 153, 389, 392, 420, 443, note 230
Ali, 86
Al-Kirkisani, Joseph Ha-Maor, 363
Almohades, 238
Alphonso VI, 151
Al-Mansur, 1
Almoravid, 151
Anatoli, Jacob, 302, 309
Angels, xlvi; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 190 f.; in Ibn Daud, 221 f.; in Maimonides, 266 f.; in Albo, 420
Anthropomorphism, xxii, xxvi, xlv, 35, 95, 186, 260 f.
Appel, 448, note 442
Aquinas, Thomas, 1, 61, 63, 200, 207, 306, 307, 312, 313, 323, 331, 332, 406
Arama, Isaac, 430
Archimedes, xviii
Aristotelians, xl, 150, 165, 246, 364, 365, 366, 368, 428
Aristotle, xvi, xviii, xix, xx, xxi, xxix ff., xxxvii, xxxix, xl, xli, xlii, xlv, xlvi, 7, 8, 9, 13, 20, 26, 60, 62, 64, 72, 89, 92, 107, 111, 126, 132, 138, 139, 155, 157, 173, 175, 177, 178, 179, 181, 182, 184, 185, 199, 200, 206, 207, 210, 213, 216, 217, 218, 236, 240, 247, 252, 253, 254, 256, 258, 266, 267, 268, 269, 270, 271, 273, 274, 275, 276, 290, 291, 299, 300, 303, 305, 306, 307, 309, 312, 313, 315, 316, 321, 329, 331, 332, 333, 334, 338, 346, 347, 350, 352, 353, 354, 366, 367, 375, 378, 388, 389, 390, 395, 402, 408, 412, 425, 429, 430, 431
"Arugat Habosem," 184
Ashariya, xxiii, xxvii, xlvii, 23, 246, 251, 291, 362, 365, 372, 378, 379
Atomic theory, in the Kalam, xxii, 249 f.; in Saadia, 25; in Al Basir, 49; in Jeshua ben Judah, 56; in Aaron ben Elijah, 367 f.
Attributes, doctrine of, in the Kalam, xxiii, xxvii, xl, xliv; in Saadia, xliv, 33 f.; in Mukammas, 18 ff.; in Al Basir, 50; in Bahya, 93 f.; in Ibn Zaddik, 145 f.; in Judah Halevi, 161 ff.; in Ibn Daud, 220 f.; in Maimonides, xlv, 262 ff.; in Levi ben Gerson, xlv, 344 f., 351 f.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 369 f.; in Crescas, 391 f.; in Albo, 420
Auerbach, Heimann, 445, note 331a
Augustine, xli, 51, 305, 445, note 307
Averroes (Ibn Roshd), xx, xxi, xxxix, xli, xlvi, xlvii, 7, 60, 62, 125, 177, 199, 306, 309, 310, 312, 313, 318, 321, 322, 323, 329, 332, 334, 335, 336, 362, 392, 431
Avicebron, see Gabirol, Solomon Ibn
Avicenna (Ibn Sina), xx, xxi, xxxix, xlvi, 2, 26, 60, 62, 107, 108, 175, 177, 178, 179, 198, 199, 207, 210, 211, 213, 218, 223, 224, 253, 276, 281, 302, 312, 313, 362, 391, 392, 420
Bacher, W., 437, 443, notes 212 and 214; 445, note 312a
Back, Samuel, 436
Baeumker, Clemens, 440, note 84; 441, notes 86 and 89
Bahya, Ibn Pakuda, xix, xxviii, xxxix, xlii, 1, 80-105; duties of the limbs and duties of the heart, 82 f.; sources of knowledge, 83; creation, 86 ff.; unity, 89 f.; attributes, 93 f.; study of nature, 96 f.; gratitude to God, 97 f.; submission to God, 98; freedom, ibid.; the laws, 98 f.; trust in God, 99 f.; "unity of conduct," 101 f.; humility, ibid.; repentance, 102; self-examination, 103; temperance, 104; asceticism, ibid.; love of God, 105; 106, 126, 128, 146, 147, 162, 167, 168, 195, 200, 201, 217, 241, 246, 252, 309, 362, 428, 434
Baradus, Jacob, 34
Bardenhewer, 439, note 7
Bardesanes, 375
Becker, C. H., xxvi, xxvii
Beer, 433
Bernfeld, Simon, viii, 433
Bisliches, M. L., 445, notes 312 and 315
Bloch, Philipp, 436
Brahmins, 380
Brethren of Purity, xxxix, 60, 107, 125, 126, 128, 139, 187, 199
Broyd, Isaac, 106, 441, note 131
Cicero, 431
Clement VI, Pope, 329
Clement of Alexandria, 302
Chazars, 153
Crawford, J. P. W., 436
Creation, in Kalam, xxii, xlii, 24, 247, 252; in Saadia, xlii, 24; in Israeli, 5 ff.; in Al Basir, 49 f.; in Jeshua ben Judah, 56; in Gabirol, 68; in Bahya, xlii, 86 ff.; in Pseudo Bahya, 110; in Abraham bar Hiyya, 116 ff.; in Ibn Zaddik, xlii, 143; in Judah Halevi, 157; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 190; in Maimonides, 269 ff.; in Levi ben Gerson, 352 f.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 367 f.; in Albo, 413, 415
Creed, articles of, l; in Maimonides, 409 f.; in Crescas, 392 ff.; in Albo, 410 f.
Creizenach, M., 443, note 214
Crescas, Hasdai, xv, xix, xxvii, xxxix, xl, xlii, xlix, l, 173, 200, 312, 388-405; standpoint, 389; existence of God, 389 f.; unity, 391 f.; attributes, ibid.; fundamental dogmas of Judaism, 392 ff.; God's knowledge, 392 f.; Providence, 393 f.; problem of evil, 394; prophecy, 395; freedom, 396 f.; influence on Spinoza, 398 f.; purpose of the Law, 399 f.; immortality, 400; creation, 402; criticism of Maimonides's 13 articles of the creed, 402, 404; reward and punishment, 403 f.; resurrection, 404 f., 406, 407, 408, 409, 414, 416, 419, 420, 421, 424, 426, 428, 430, 436, 447, notes 403a and 409
"Cusari," see "Kusari"
Daud, Abraham Ibn, xix, xx, xxvii, xxxix, xlii, xliii, xlv, xlvi, xlvii, xlviii, xlix, 61, 62, 63, 71, 79, 125, 166, 197-235; standpoint, 197 f.; Ibn Daud neglected, 201; purpose of his book, 201 f.; duty to study philosophy, 202; relative value of the sciences, 203 f.; categories, 205; physics, 205 ff.; matter and form, ibid.; motion, 207; infinity, 208; psychology, 209 ff.; rational soul, 212 ff.; the three kinds of intellect, 214; immortality, 215; metempsychosis, 215 f.; the heavenly spheres, 216; existence of God, 217 ff.; incorporeality, 217; unity, 219 f.; attributes, 220 f.; angels, 221 f.; active intellect, 222; emanation of Intelligences, 223; tradition, 223 f.; prophecy, 224 f.; abrogation of the Law, 226 f.; freedom, 201 f., 229 ff.; problem of evil, 228 f.; and foreknowledge, 229 f.; ethics, 231 ff.; virtues, 232; reason of commandments, 233 f., 237, 240, 241, 246, 248, 253, 254, 257, 266, 267, 276, 281, 302, 307, 309, 317, 332, 350, 362, 366, 388, 428, 435
De Boer, 439, note 5
"Definitions, Book of," 2, 4, 60
Deinard, E., 447, note 404
Delitzsch, 446, note 360
Delmedigo, Elijah, 431
Delmedigo, Joseph Solomon, 431
Democritus, xxii, 3
Dieterici, 439, note 6
Doctor, Max, 435, 442, note 162
Dominicus Gundissalinus, 61, 63
Dukes, 443, note 213
Dunash ben Labrat, 59
Duns Scotus, 61, 63, 200, 307
Duran, Simon, 406, 447, note 403a
"Duties of the Hearts," 80, 81
Duval, 439, note 5
"Eight Chapters," 239
Eisler, Moritz, 433
"Elements, Book of," 2, 3, 4, 10, 60
Elias of Nisibis, 34
Elisha ben Abuya, 197
Empedocles, 60, 61, 64, 126, 127, 145, 179, 184
"Emunah Ramah," 198
"Emunot ve-Deot," 24
Engelkemper, D. J., 434
Entelechy, xxxv, 209
Ephodi, 328
Epicurus, 290, 367
Eriugena, 200
Ethics, in Jewish Philosophy, xlvii f.; in Saadia, 46 f.; in Al Basir, 52 f.; in Jeshua ben Judah, 57; in Gabirol, 71 ff.; in Abraham bar Hiyya, 119 ff.; in Ibn Zaddik, 148; in Judah Halevi, 168; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 195; in Ibn Daud, 228 ff., 231 ff.; in Maimonides, 281 ff.; in Hillel ben Samuel, 325. See also "Virtue."
Euclid, xviii, 90
Evil, Problem of, in Al Basir, 54; in Abraham bar Hiyya, 123 f.; in Ibn Zaddik, 148; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 195; in Ibn Daud, 228 f.; in Maimonides, 288 f.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 373 f.; in Crescas, 394
Exegesis, Biblical, xvi, xxxvii; in Saadia, 35; in Gabirol, 78 f.; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 187 f.; in Maimonides, 302 ff.; in Levi ben Gerson, 357 f., 437
"Ez Hayim," 363
Ezekiel, Vision of divine chariot, xvii, 303
Falaquera, Shem Tob, 61, 63, 64, 309, 328, 441, note 86
"Fons Vit," 60, 61, 72, 80, etc.
"Fountain of Life," see "Fons Vit"
Frankl, P. F., 434, 440, note 80
Frankl-Grn, Ad., 435
Freedom of the Will, xiv, xlvii; in Saadia, 41 f.; in Al Basir, 54 f.; in Bahya, 98; in Judah Halevi, xlviii, 171 ff.; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 193; in Ibn Daud, xlviii, 229 f.; in Maimonides, xlviii, 285 ff.; in Crescas, xlviii, 396 ff.; in Albo, 412, 424
Freimann, 442, note 148
Fried, S., 439, note 30; 440, note 34
Friedlnder, M., 444, note 250
Gabirol, Solomon Ibn, xix, xxxix, xlvi, 59-79; fate of G. in Jewish Literature, 60 f.; tendency of his work, 63 f.; G. a Neo-Platonist, 64; his doctrine, 64 ff.; emanation, 65; matter in spiritual substances, 65, 67; man typical of the universe, 65; Intelligence, Soul, Nature, 66; matter, 66 f.; creation, 68; will, 68 f., 70; mystic knowledge, 69 f.; ethics, 71 ff.; the virtues, 72 f.; the "Royal Crown" (Keter Malkut), 75 f.; Biblical exegesis, 78 f.; influence on Jewish Philosophy, 79; on Kabbala, ibid., 80, 81, 89, 91, 107, 126, 127, 131, 151, 184, 185, 187, 188, 198, 200, 206, 237, 246, 307, 309, 328, 428, 434
Galen, xviii, 2, 3, 72, 209, 252
Genesis, creation story, xvii, xxix, 303
Gersonides, see Levi ben Gerson
Ginzberg, L., 439, note 13
God, in Aristotle, xxxiii; existence of G. in Kalam, xlii, 24, 247; in Saadia, xlii, 28 ff.; in Al Basir, 49 f.; in Jeshua ben Judah, 57; in Bahya, xlii, 86 ff.; in Ibn Zaddik, xlii, 143; in Ibn Daud, xlii f., 217 ff.; in Maimonides, xliii, 248, 257 ff.; in Levi ben Gerson, 350 f.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 368 f.; in Crescas, 389 ff.; in Albo, 419 f.
Goldenthal, 445, note 318
Goldziher, Ignaz, 106, 433, 439, notes 10 and 23; 442, note 132
Gorfinkle, Joseph I., 444, note 251
Graetz, H., 445, note 311
Graf, 440, note 64
Gugenheimer, 435
"Guide of the Perplexed," 239
Guttmann, Jacob, 434, 435, 436, 439, note 27; 440, notes 33, 41 and 83; 442, note 133; 443, notes 230 and 245; 445, notes 310 and 331a; 447, notes 403a, 436 and 437
Guttmann, Julius, 435
Halevi, Judah, xix, xxxix, xl, xlv, xlvi, xlviii, xlix, 125, 150-183; his standpoint, 150, 152, 157 f.; his life, 151 f.; philosophy and religion, 152; influence of Algazali, 152 f.; the "Kusari," 153 ff.; the "philosopher's" creed, 154 f.; the Christian's, 155 f.; the Mohammedan's, 156; the Jew's, 156 ff.; creation, 157; existence of God, 158; will, 159; motives of philosopher and believer, 159 f.; meaning of the name of "Jhvh," 159 f., 165; of "Elohim," 160, 165; mysticism in H., 160; attributes, 161 ff.; incorporeality, 162; superiority of Israel, 162 f.; need of revelation, 163; superiority of Palestine, 164; Israel the heart among the nations, 164; superiority of the Hebrew language, 164 f.; prophecy, 165 f.; the active Intellect, 165 f.; the ceremonial law, 167 f.; ethics, 168 f.; immortality, 169 f., 181 f.; future world and reward and punishment, 170; freedom, 171 ff.; and foreknowledge, 172 f.; interpretation of "Sefer Yezirah," 173 f.; the Rabbis knew the sciences, 174; exposition of the current philosophy, 174 ff.; H. understands Aristotle's definition of the soul, 175; physics, 175 ff.; matter, 175; criticism, 176 f.; emanation of Intelligences, 178; criticism, 178 f.; psychology, 179 f.; criticism, 181 f., 197, 198, 200, 201, 210, 211, 216, 223, 224, 226, 230, 231, 246, 248, 281, 309, 332, 362, 389, 392, 396, 414, 420, 421, 426, 429, 435
Harizi, Judah, 125, 184
Harkavy, Abraham, 17, 433
Hasdai Ibn Shaprut, 59, 153, 308
Hayyuj, 187, 309
Hefez ben Yazliah, 84
"Hegyon ha-Nefesh," 114
Hermes, 60, 155, 184
Hertz, J. H., 434
Hillel ben Samuel, xlvi, 312-327; standpoint, 314; the soul, 314 ff.; definition of soul, 317; active intellect, 317 ff.; reward and punishment, 323 ff.; prophecy, 325; ethics, ibid.; resurrection, 326; interpretation of Rabbinic writings, 326 f., 332
Hippocrates, xviii, 2, 3, 72, 209
Hirschfeld, 440, note 31; 442, note 178
"Hobot ha-Lebabot," see "Duties of the Hearts"
Homonym, 240, 351, 371
Horovitz, S., 433, 442, notes 162, 163 and 165; 443, note 226
Husik, Isaac, 436, 439, note 9; 445, note 308; 446, note 334; 448, note 443
Hypostasis, xxxviii, 6, 91, 115
Ibn Aknin, Joseph, 302
Ibn Badja, 60
Ibn Caspi, Joseph, 302, 310, 329
Ibn Daud (Aven Death), 61
Ibn Daud, Abraham, see Daud, Abraham Ibn
Ibn Ezra, Abraham, xxxix, 79, 80, 81, 114, 184, 187-196; Biblical exegesis, 187 f.; unity of God, 189; incorporeality, ibid.; creation, 190; matter, ibid.; the universe, 190 f.; Intelligences, ibid.; angels, ibid.; soul, 191 f.; reward and punishment, 192; transmigration, 192; freedom, 193; and foreknowledge, ibid.; knowledge of God, 193 f.; prophecy, 194; classification of the laws, 194; problem of evil, 195; ethics, ibid., 200, 246, 309, 310, 429, 435
Ibn Ezra, Moses, xxxix, xlvi, 79, 125, 184-187; man a microcosm, 185; definition of philosophy, 185; unity of God, ibid.; active intellect, 186, 200, 246
Ibn Migash, Joseph, 151
Ibn Janah, 84, 309
Ibn Roshd, see Averroes
Ibn Sina, see Avicenna
Ibn Zaddik, Joseph, xix, xxxix, xlii, xlv, xlvi, xlix, 60, 79, 125-149; standpoint, 125 f.; division of his book, 128; purpose, 129; definition of philosophy, 129; process and sources of knowledge, 129 f.; physics, 130 ff.; matter and form, ibid.; substance, 131; the sphere, 131 f.; the four elements, 132 f.; the human body, 133 f.; the soul, 134 f.; the three souls, ibid.; the emotions, ibid.; life, 136; death, ibid.; sleep and waking, ibid.; the rational soul, 137; definition of soul, 138; intellect, 139; world soul, 140; duty to use the reason, ibid.; criticism of the Kalam, 141 f.; creation, 143; existence of God, ibid.; unity, ibid.; self-sufficiency, 144; will of God, ibid.; attributes, 145 f.; commandments, 147; rational and traditional, ibid.; the virtues, 148; reward and punishment, 148; evil, 148 f.; Messiah, 149, 162, 175, 184, 200, 206, 209; 211, 237, 246, 309, 317, 362, 435
"Ikkarim," 406
Immortality, in Pseudo-Bahya, 112 f.; in Abraham bar Hiyya, 120 f.; in Judah Halevi, 169 f., 181 f,; in Ibn Daud, 215; in Levi ben Gerson, 339 ff.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 384; in Crescas, 400
Incorporeality, in Kalam, xliv, 253; in Saadia, 32; in Al Basir, 51; in Jeshua ben Judah, 57; in Judah Halevi, 162; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 189 f.; in Ibn Daud, 217; in Maimonides, xliv, 257 ff., 260 ff.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 368 f.
Infinity, in Kalam, 251 f.; in Saadia, 25, 30; in Bahya, 86, 87; in Ibn Daud, 208; in Maimonides, 251 f., 254, 256 f.; in Crescas, 390
Intellect, active, xli; in Jewish Philosophy, xlvi f.; acquired i., xlvii; active i. in prophecy, xlix, 109; in Ibn Zaddik, 139; in Judah Halevi, 155, 162, 165, 181; in Moses ibn Ezra, 186; in Ibn Daud, 222; in Maimonides, 268, 277; in Hillel ben Samuel, 317 ff.; in Levi ben Gerson, 337 ff. See also "Intelligence," "Soul"
Intelligence, xlvi; in Israeli, 6 f.; in Gabirol, 65, 66; in Pseudo-Bahya, 109; in Abraham bar Hiyya, 119; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 190 f.; in Maimonides, 266 f.
Israeli, Isaac, xix, xlvi, xlix, 1-16; Maimonides on I., 1 f.; his works, 2; his sources, ibid.; theory of the elements, 3, 12; definition of philosophy, 4; creation, 5 ff.; Intelligence, 6 f.; Soul, 8 ff.; three kinds of soul, 10 ff.; element and principle, 12 f.; prophecy, 15, 17, 24, 31, 60, 72, 91, 127, 175, 224, 434
Jabariya, xxi, xlvii
Jacob ben Machir, 309, 310
Jacobites, xviii, 34
Jaulus, 437
Jeshua ben Judah, xxv, xlvii, 55-58; priority of reason, 56; atomic theory, ibid.; creation, ibid.; existence of God, 57; incorporeality, ibid.; good and evil, ibid.; 200, 246, 363, 434
Jesus, xxvii, 86, 91
Job, xv, xxvi, 304, 346, 377 f.
Joel, M., 398, 435, 436, 445, note 310; 446, notes 335 and 398; 447, note 398 end
Johannes Hispanus, 61
Joseph ben Shemtob, 429, 430, 447, note 404
Joseph ibn Zaddik, see Ibn Zaddik, Joseph
Jourdain, A., 63, 441, note 85; 445, note 306
Judah ben Barzilai, 17
Judah Hadassi, 363
Judah Halevi, see Halevi, Judah
Judah Messer Leon, 431
Justinian, xvii
Kabbala, 79, 429, 430
Kadariya, xxi, xxii, xxiii, 23
Kalam, xxiv, xxvii, 16, 17, 48, 50, 52, 55, 86, 106, 125, 128, 141 f., 146, 154, 171, 183, 200, 245, 246 ff., 362, 366, 428, 433, 439, note 10
Kalisch, Isidor, 433
Karaites, xiii, xxiv, xxv, xli, xlvii, 23, 24, 48, 55, 59, 108, 125, 126, 146, 154, 174, 183, 200, 245, 246, 362, 363, 364, 365, 370, 373, 377, 378, 428
Kaufmann, David, 152, 153, 433, 434, 435, 436, 441, note 88; 442, note 181; 444, notes 250 and 305
Kellermann, Benzion, 436
"Keter Malkut," see "Royal Crown"
Kindi, Al, xxxix
Klein, Miksa, 434
Knowledge, sources of, xl; in Saadia, 27 f.; in Bahya, 83; in Ibn Zaddik, 129 f.
Koran, xxi, xxii, xxiii, xxvi, xxvii, xxix, xliv, 34, 156
Krochmal, Nahman, 189, 435
"Kusari," 153
Lactantius, 431
Landauer, S., 175, 440, note 37
Laws, rational and traditional, 1; in Saadia, 38 f.; in Ibn Zaddik, 147; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 194; in Ibn Daud, 233 f.; in Maimonides, 294 ff.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 382
Lebid-ibn Al-A'sam, xxvi
Leibnitz, 307
Leverrier, 275
Levi ben Gerson, xix, xx, xxxix, xli, xliii, xlvii, xlix, 7, 16, 166, 217, 235, 302, 312, 313, 328-361; standpoint, 329 f.; reason and authority, 330 f.; his style and method, 331; the passive intellect, 332 ff.; active intellect, 337 ff.; problem of knowledge, 338; of definition, 339; immortality, 339 f.; prognostication and prophecy, 340 ff.; and the contingent, ibid.; God's knowledge, 342 ff.; attributes, 344 f., 351 f.; Providence, 346 ff.; existence of God, 350 f.; origin of the world, 352 f.; eternal matter, 355 f.; interpretation of creation story in Genesis, 357; miracles, 358 f., 362, 363, 369, 384, 388, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 398, 399, 401, 402, 406, 419, 420, 421, 428, 429, 430, 436, 447, note 403a
Levy, Louis-Germain, 436
"Liber de Causis," xx, 2, 64, 317
Lippmann, 443, note 214
Logos, xxvii, xli, 52, 71, 91
"Ma'amar Yikkawu ha-Mayim," 309
"Maase Bereshit," xvi, 242, 303, 430
"Maase Merkaba," xvi, 242, 303, 430
Maimonides, Moses, xvi, xix, xx, xxiv, xxv, xxvii, xxxix, xli, xlii, xliii, xlv, xlvi, xlvii, xlix, l, 1, 2, 16, 25, 60, 62, 63, 79, 88, 95, 96, 114, 125, 126, 146, 153, 158, 166, 167, 198, 199, 200, 201, 207, 218, 221, 235, 236-311; his life, 238 f.; his chef d'oeuvre, 239 f.; his method, 240; his standpoint, 240 ff.; importance of science, 243 f.; difficulty of metaphysics, 244 f.; sketch of Jewish Philosophy, 245 f.; exposition of the Kalam, 246 ff.; propositions of the "philosophers," 254 ff.; existence of God, 257 ff.; unity, ibid.; incorporeality, ibid., 260 ff.; attributes, 262 ff.; meaning of "Jhvh," 265; angels, 266 f.; origin of the world, 269 ff.; emanation of Intelligences, 272 f.; criticism of Aristotle, 271 ff.; psychology, 281 ff.; virtue, 282 ff.; freedom, 285 ff.; and foreknowledge, 287 f.; problem of evil, 288 ff.; God's knowledge, 289 ff.; reason of the commandments, 294 ff.; Bible exegesis, 302 ff.; influence of M., 305 ff.; on Scholasticism, 305-307; on Judaism, 307-311, 312, 313, 314, 317, 323, 325, 329, 332, 342, 343, 344, 345, 346, 350, 352, 353, 357, 358, 362, 363, 364, 365, 366, 368, 369, 370, 371, 372, 374, 375, 376, 377, 378, 379, 380, 382, 383, 384, 388, 389, 390, 391, 392, 393, 394, 395, 396, 398, 399, 400, 402, 403, 406, 407, 408, 409, 410, 412, 416, 417, 419, 420, 421, 423, 424, 425, 426, 428, 429, 430, 431, 435, 447, note 403a
"Malmad Hatalmidim," 309
Malter, H., vii, 445, note 316
Mandonnet, P., 445, note 308; 446, note 332
Manicheans, 375
Matter, rejected by Mutakallimun, xxii; doctrine of, in Aristotle, xxix ff.; in Plotinus, xxxviii; as source of evil, 38; in Gabirol, 66 f.; in Pseudo-Bahya, 109; in Abraham bar Hiyya, 117; in Ibn Zaddik, 130 ff.; in Judah Halevi, 175; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 190; in Ibn Daud, 205 f.; in Maimonides, 256, 270; in Levi ben Gerson, 355 f.
Maywald, 446, note 332
"Mekize Nirdamim," 445, notes 313 and 321
"Mekor Hayim," see "Fons Vit"
Menahem ben Saruk, 59
Messiah, in Saadia, 45; in Ibn Zaddik, 149; in Crescas, 402, 404; in Albo, 408
Metempsychosis, see Transmigration
"Microcosmus," 60, 125
"Milhamot Adonai," 329
Miracles, in Levi ben Gerson, 358 f.
Mohammed, xxv, 86
Monophysites, xviii, 34
"More Ha-moreh," 310
"More Nebukim," 238
Morgenstern, Ern, 434
Moses ben Enoch, 59
Moses ben Maimon, see Maimonides
Moses of Narbonne, 309, 310, 328, 430, 447, note 403a
Motion, in Aristotle, xxvi; in Ibn Daud, 207; in Maimonides, 254, 269
Mukammas, David Al, 2, 17-22; definition of science and philosophy, 17 f.; attributes, 18 ff.; unity, 18; reward and punishment, 21 f., 34, 52, 81, 84, 95, 200, 246, 434
Munk, Solomon, 63, 304, 328, 433, 434, 440, note 83; 441, notes 86, 87 and 105; 444, notes 250, 280 and 302; 445, notes 314 and 316; 448, note 442
Mnz, J., 436
Mutakallimun, xxi f., xl, xli, xlvii, 9, 11, 24, 25, 26, 48, 81, 88, 96, 106, 125, 126, 127, 128, 139, 142, 145, 149, 158, 182, 183, 199, 240, 246-253, 256, 275, 352, 353, 362, 366 f., 369, 372, 382, 406, 428
Mu'tazila, xxii ff., xxvii, xlvii, 3, 17, 21, 23, 24, 26, 48, 108, 171, 246, 251, 291, 292, 362, 365, 366, 375, 377
Nachmanides, 426, 429
Nature, in Plotinus, xxxviii; in Gabirol, 65, 66; in Pseudo-Bahya, 109; in Abraham bar Hiyya, 119
Neo-Platonic, xx, xxviii, xxxix, xlvi, 2, 6, 13, 24, 38, 64, 79, 81, 86, 89, 90, 92, 106, 107, 114, 115, 125, 126, 127, 129, 138, 139, 177, 178, 199, 200, 266, 305, 317, 319
Neo-Platonism, xxix, 17, 64, 70, 79, 91, 114, 150, 187, 200, 266, 288, 317, 428
Neo-Platonists, xl, 31, 64, 91, 106, 184, 199
Neo-Pythagoreans, 188
Nestorians, xviii, 34
Neumark, David, viii, 433, 435, 436, 441, note 107
"Nous," xxxviii, 7, 91
"Olam Katon," see "Microcosmus"
"Or Adonai," 389
Origen, 288, 302
Orschansky, G., 435
Perles, J., 445, note 309
Philo, xvi, xxvii, xxxviii, xli, 23, 91, 95, 188, 240, 266, 268, 288, 302
Philoponus, 247, 353
Philosophy, and religion, xiii; content of Jewish P., xl-l; defined by Israeli, 4; by Ibn Zaddik, 129; by Moses Ibn Ezra, 185
Physics, in Kalam, xxii, xli; in Aristotle, xxx; in Israeli, 3, 5, 12; in Saadia, xli; in Ibn Zaddik, xlii, 130 ff.; in Judah Halevi, 175 ff.; in Ibn Daud, xlii, 205 ff.; in Maimonides, xlii, 254 ff., 269 ff.; in Levi ben Gerson, 352 f., 355 f.; in Aaron ben Elijah, xli, 366 ff.; in Crescas, xlii, 389
Plato, xxix, xli, xlv, 5, 7, 8, 37, 47, 90, 91, 122, 138, 155, 179, 181, 182, 184, 195, 231, 268, 269, 288, 304, 305, 353, 413, 431
Plato of Tivoli, 114
Plotinus, xx, xxxvii f., xxxix, 6, 64, 65, 91, 107, 115, 126, 139, 178, 431
Pollak, J., 433
Porphyry, 60
Proclus, xx, 3
Prophecy, xlvi, xlix f.; in Israeli, xlix, 15; in Saadia, 40; in Judah Halevi, xlix, 165; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 194; in Ibn Daud, xlix, 224 ff.; in Maimonides, xlix, 276 ff.; in Hillel ben Samuel, 325; in Levi ben Gerson, xlix, 340 ff.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 380 f.; in Crescas, 395; in Albo, 421
Providence, xl; in Maimonides, 290 ff.; in Levi ben Gerson, 346 ff.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 375 f.; in Crescas, 393 f.; in Albo, 425
Pseudo-Bahya, xlvi, xlix, 106-113; standpoint, 106 f.; the soul, 108 ff., 111 ff.; Intelligence, Soul, Nature, 108 f., 110; matter, 109; creation, 110; virtue, 112; immortality, 112 f.; reward and punishment, 113, 122, 126, 139, 148, 317, 434
Ptolemy, xviii, 273, 309
Pythagoras, 60, 179, 184, 185
Pythagoreans, 9
Rashi, 187
Raymond, Bishop of Toledo, 61
Reason, and authority, xiii; r. in Aristotle, xxxvi; active and passive, xxxvi f.; in Plotinus, xxxviii; r. as a source of knowledge, xl; r. and authority in Levi ben Gerson, 330 f. See also "Intellect," "Soul"
Resurrection, l; in Saadia, 44 f.; in Hillel ben Samuel, 326; in Aaron ben Elijah, 385 f.; in Crescas, 404
Reward and Punishment, xlvii, xlviii, l; in Mukammas, 21 f.; in Saadia, 42 f.; in Al Basir, 55; in Pseudo-Bahya, 113; in Abraham bar Hiyya, 119 ff.; in Ibn Zaddik, 148; in Judah Halevi, 170; in Abraham Ibn Ezra, 192; in Hillel ben Samuel, 323 ff.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 379, 383; in Crescas, 403 f.; in Albo, 425 f.
Roscellinus of Compigne, 305
Rose, Valentinus, 439, note 8
Rosin, David, 189, 192, 435
"Royal Crown," the, 75 f.
Saadia, xix, xxv, xli, xlii, xlv, xlvi, xlix, 1, 17, 23-47; his "Emunot ve-Deot," 24 f.; modelled on the Kalam, ibid.; atomic theory, 25; reason for writing, 26 f.; sources of truth, 27 f.; speculation not forbidden, 28; necessity of revelation, ibid.; existence of God, 28 ff.; incorporeality, 32; unity, 32 f.; attributes, 33 f.; categories inapplicable to God, 35 f.; theophanies, 36; soul, 37 f.; laws and commandments, 38 f.; rational and traditional, ibid.; prophecy, 40; written and oral law, 40; abrogation of Law, 40 f.; freedom, 41 f.; and foreknowledge, ibid.; reward and punishment, 42 f., 46; future world, 43 f.; resurrection, 44 f.; ethics, 46 f., 48, 50, 52, 59, 81, 82, 83, 84, 87, 88, 89, 92, 94, 95, 96, 126, 127, 128, 146, 147, 167, 175, 186, 195, 200, 237, 241, 246, 252, 253, 302, 309, 362, 363, 388, 428, 434
Sabeans, 296
Saladin, 239
Samuel, 197
Scaliger, 307
Scheyer, Simon B., 435
Schmiedl, A., 433
Schreiner, M., xxv, xxvii, 433, 434, 439, notes 12, 16, 18 and 20; 440, note 81
"Sefer Ha-Kabbala," 198
Seyerlen, 63, 434, 441, note 86
Shemtob ben Joseph, 430
Shemtob ben Joseph ibn Shemtob, 429
Socrates, xxix, 155, 184, 185
Solomon ben Adret, 430
Solomon ben Yeroham, 363
Sophists, xxix
Soul, in Aristotle, xxxv; world soul in Plotinus, xxxviii; s. in Jewish philosophy, xlv f.; world-soul in Jewish Neo-Platonists, xlvi; s. in Israeli, 5, 8 ff.; in Saadia, 37 f.; in Gabirol, 65, 66; in Pseudo-Bahya, 108 ff.; in Abraham bar Hiyya, 119; in Ibn Zaddik, 134 f., 137 f.; world-soul in Ibn Zaddik, 140; s. in Judah Halevi, 179 ff.; in Abraham Ibn Ezra, 191 f.; in Ibn Daud, 209 ff.; in Maimonides, 281 ff.; in Hillel ben Samuel, 314 ff.; in Crescas, 400. See also "Intellect," "Reason"
Spinoza, 398 f.
"Spirit and Soul, Book of," 5
Steinschneider, Moritz, 311, 439, note 26; 440, notes 31 and 33; 443, note 247; 446, note 360
St. Ephrem of Nisibis, xviii
Sufis, xxvii f., 86, 153
Syrians, xvii ff., 199, 246
"Tagmule ha-Nefesh," 314
Tnzer, A., 437
Themistius, 7, 60, 313, 321, 332, 333, 334, 335
"Theology of Aristotle," xx, xxxix, 64, 266
Theophrastus, xviii
Tibbon, Judah Ibn, 71, 309, 310
Tibbon, Moses Ibn, 309, 440, note 37
Tibbon, Samuel Ibn, 2, 60, 125, 239, 302, 309
"Tikkun Midot ha-Nefesh," 71
"Torot ha-Nefesh," 106
Tradition, xiii, xli, 28, 223 f.
Transmigration, in Saadia, 44; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 192; in Ibn Daud, 215 f.
Trinity, xliv, 33, 34, 71, 91
Truth, twofold, 328
"Twenty Chapters," 17
Ueberweg-Baumgartner, 433
Unity of God, in Kalam, xxii, xliii f., 252; in Mukammas, 18; in Saadia, 32 f.; in Al Basir, 51; in Bahya, 89 f.; in Ibn Zaddik, 143; in Moses ibn Ezra, 185; in Abraham ibn Ezra, 189; in Ibn Daud, 219 f.; in Maimonides, xliv, 257 ff.; in Aaron ben Elijah, 368 f.; in Crescas, 391 f.
Vincent of Beauvais, 1
Virtue, xlix; in Gabirol, 72 f.; in Pseudo-Bahya, 112; in Ibn Zaddik, 148; in Ibn Daud, 232; in Maimonides, 282 ff.
Weil, Isidore, 436
Weil, Simson, 198, 443, note 221
Weinsberg, Leopold, 435
Wenrich, 439, note 5
Werbluner, 445, note 317
Will of God, in Al Basir, 50; in Gabirol, 68 f.; in Bahya, 90; in Ibn Zaddik, 144; in Aaron ben Elijah, 372
William of Auvergne, 71, 306
William of Occam, 200
Wise, Stephen S., 71, 441, note 103
Wolff, M., 444, note 251
Wolfsohn, Julius, 436
Yahuda, 80, 86, 439, note 24; 441, notes 106, 108, 109 and 112
Yahya ben Adi, 247
Yefet Ha-Levi, 363
"Yezirah, Sefer" 17, 94, 173, 179
Yohanan ben Zakkai, 197
Zeller, 439, note 4; 441, note 86
Zeno, 25
Zimmels, 448, note 442
Zunz, Leopold, 184
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