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Gershom Scholem

Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2008)

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  1. The Symbolic Plane and its Secularization in the Spiritual World of Gershom Scholem.Avraham Shapira - 1994 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 3 (2):331-352.
  • J.L. Talmon, Gershom Scholem and the price of Messianism.David Ohana - 2008 - History of European Ideas 34 (2):169-188.
    Gershom Scholem wrote his famous article, “Redemption through sin”, in 1937, and J.L. Talmon gained the inspiration for his first book, The Origins of Totalitarian Democracy, in the years 1937–1938 at the time when the Moscow trials revealed to the world the bitter reality of what was happening in the Soviet Union. Scholem and Talmon were contemporaries and witnesses of the transformation of communism in the Soviet Union from a vision of egalitarian and universal redemption into a bureaucratic and nationalistic (...)
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  • “Gershom Scholem's Ambivalence Toward Mystical Experience and His Critique of Martin Buber in Light of Hans Jonas and Martin Heidegger”.Shaul Magid - 1995 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 4 (2):245-269.
  • Defining Modern Academic Scholarship: Gershom Scholem and the Establishment of a New (?) Discipline.Daniel Abrams - 2000 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 9 (2):267-302.
  • Fragments of Redemption: Jewish Thought and Literary Theory in Benjamin, Scholem, and Levinas.Susan A. Handelman - 1991 - Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  • Metaphysics of the Profane: The Political Theology of Walter Benjamin and Gershom Scholem.Eric Jacobson - 2003 - New York: Columbia University Press.
    Drawing from Benjamin's and Scholem's ideas on messianism, language, and divine justice, this book traces the intellectual exchange through the early decades of the twentieth century—from Berlin, Bern, and Munich in the throws of war and revolution to Scholem's departure for Palestine in 1923. It begins with a close reading of Benjamin's early writings and a study of Scholem's theological politics, followed by an examination of Benjamin's proposals on language and the influence these ideas had on Scholem's scholarship on Jewish (...)
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  • Religion After Religion: Gershom Scholem, Mircea Eliade, and Henry Corbin at Eranos.Steven M. Wasserstrom - 1999 - Princeton University Press.
    By the end of World War II, religion appeared to be on the decline throughout the United States and Europe. Recent world events had cast doubt on the relevance of religious belief, and modernizing trends made religious rituals look out of place. It was in this atmosphere that the careers of Scholem, Eliade, and Corbin--the twentieth century's legendary scholars in the respective fields of Judaism, History of Religions, and Islam--converged and ultimately revolutionized how people thought about religion. Between 1949 and (...)
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  • Symbolism and Transcendence: On Some Philosophical Aspects of Gershom Scholem’s Opus.Nathan Rotenstreich - 1978 - Review of Metaphysics 31 (4):604 - 614.
    Let us start our analysis with a reference to a thesis formulated by Scholem under the general heading "Ten Unhistorical Propositions about Kabbalah." The ninth thesis reads as follows: "Totalities can only be conveyed [tradierbar] in an occult manner. God’s name is capable of being addressed in language but not of being uttered in language. For only its fragmentariness renders language utterable. The ‘true’ language cannot be uttered, just as the absolutely concrete cannot be realized." In the third thesis he (...)
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