Results for ' Kabbalah'

236 found
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  1.  26
    Kabbalah, education, and prayer: Jewish learning in the seventeenth century.Gerold Necker - 2018 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 50 (6-7):621-630.
    In the seventeenth century, the Jewish mystical tradition which is known as Kabbalah was integrated into the curriculum of studying the Hebrew Bible and the Talmud. Kabbalah became popular in these times in the wake of the dissemination of Isaac Luria’s teachings, in particular within the Jewish communities in Prague and Amsterdam, where members of the Horowitz family took a leading role. Kabbalistic psychology was applied to the whole Jewish lifestyle then, and to the understanding of Jewish tradition. (...)
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  2.  2
    Confronting Kabbalah: Studies in the Christian Hebraist Library of Johann Albrecht Widmanstetter.Maximilian de Molière - 2024 - BRILL.
    _Confronting Kabbalah_ offers a captivating look into the little-known library of Johann Albrecht Widmanstetter. This study paints a vivid picture of a man with a unique perspective on Kabbalah and it explores how Christian Hebraists in the sixteenth century collected Jewish books.
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  3.  92
    Kabbalah and the building of a new civilization: The task of disseminating the knowledge of change.Anthony Kosinec - 2006 - World Futures 62 (4):343 – 347.
    At a time of transformation, a threshold of a new civilization based on fundamentally new principles, the wisdom of Kabbalah serves as a means to arrive at a new era of individual and collective consciousness. These will be discussed in relation to the way by which Kabbalah, as a method of internal change, can be disseminated, and the implications of its worldwide spreading. While work in Kabbalah is toward personal change, the significance of coming to know this (...)
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  4.  4
    Kabbalah and Ecology: God's Image in the More-Than-Human World.David Mevorach Seidenberg - 2015 - Cambridge University Press.
    Kabbalah and Ecology is a groundbreaking book that resets the conversation about ecology and the Abrahamic traditions. David Mevorach Seidenberg challenges the anthropocentric reading of the Torah, showing that a radically different orientation to the more-than-human world of nature is not only possible, but that such an orientation also leads to a more accurate interpretation of scripture, rabbinic texts, Maimonides and Kabbalah. Deeply grounded in traditional texts and fluent with the physical sciences, this book proposes not only a (...)
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  5.  3
    Kabbalah and Psychoanalysis.Michael Eigen - 2012 - Karnac Books.
    Wilfred Bion once said, "I use the Kabbalah as a framework for psychoanalysis." Both are preoccupied with catastrophe and faith, infinity and intensity of experience, shatter and growth of being that supports dimensions which sensitivity opens. Both are preoccupied with ontological implications of the Unknown and the importance of emotional life. This work is a psychospiritual adventure touching the places Kabbalah and psychoanalysis give something to each other. Michael Eigen uses aspects of Bion, Winnicott, Akivah, Luria and Nachman (...)
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  6. The Kabbalah and Spinoza's philosophy as a basis for an idea of universal history.Harry Waton & Spinoza Institute of America - 1931 - New York,: Spinoza Institute of America.
    v. 1. The philosophy of the Kabbalah.--v. 2. The philosophy of Spinoza.
     
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  7.  13
    Kabbalah and Philosophy in the Early Works of Salomon Maimon.Uri Gershowitz - 2020 - RUDN Journal of Philosophy 24 (3):342-361.
    Until recent times, the collection of Salomon Maimons early works written in Hebrew, Hesheq Shelomo, was not included into the scientific circulation. An article of professor Gideon Freudenthal on the formation of the young Maimon, filled this lacuna, proving the importance of the analysis of philosophers early works for the comprehension of his literary heritage in general. Freudenthal had studied and published Maimons introduction to Hesheq Shelomo, and then one of the collections treatises, Maаse Livnat ha-Sаppir, consecrated to the ideas (...)
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  8.  70
    Kabbalah, philosophy, and the jewish-Christian debate: Reconsidering the early works of Joseph gikatilla.Hartley Lachter - 2008 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 16 (1):1-58.
    Joseph Gikatilla's early works, composed during the 1270s, have been understood by many scholars as a fusion of Kabbalah and philosophy—an approach that he abandoned in his later compositions. This paper argues that Gikatilla's early works are in fact consistent with his later works, and that the differences between the two can be explained by the polemical engagement during his early period with Jewish philosophy and Christian missionizing. By subtly drawing Jewish students of philosophy away from Aristotelian speculation and (...)
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  9.  23
    Three texts on the Kabbalah: More, Wachter, Leibniz, and the philosophy of the Hebrews.Mogens Lærke - 2017 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 25 (5):1011-1030.
    The article reconstructs a brief controversy between H. More, G. W. Leibniz and J. G. Wachter about the Kabbalah, or what they called ‘the philosophy of the Hebrews’. I study in particular the status of the proposition ‘nothing comes out of nothing’ in their exchanges - a proposition they all agreed was a fundamental kabbalist axiom while having differing views as to the prospects of reconciling that position with Christianity. I show how Wachter’s curious Kabbalistico-Spinozism provided the stage for (...)
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  10.  44
    Kabbalah versus Philosophy: Rabbi Avraham Itzhak Kook’s Critique of the Spiritual World of Franz Rosenzweig.Uriel Barak - 2015 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 23 (1):27-59.
  11.  8
    Kabbalah.Ira Chernus - 1977 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 15 (2):221-225.
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  12.  5
    The Kabbalah, Science, and the Enlightenment: the Doctrines of Gilgul and Tikkun as Factors in the Anthropological Revolution of the Eighteenth Century.Monika Neugebauer-Wölk - 2008 - In Aufklärung Und Esoterikenlightenment and Esotericism. Reception – Integration – Confrontation: Rezeption - Integration - Konfrontation. Walter de Gruyter – Max Niemeyer Verlag.
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  13.  18
    Kabbalah in a Literary Key: Mystical Motifs in Zechariah Aldāhirī's Sefer hamusar.Adena Tanenbaum - 2009 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 17 (1):47-99.
    Zechariah Aldāhirī's maqāma collection, Sefer hamusar , is a literary work modeled on the Arabic Maqāmāt of al-Harīrī and the Hebrew Tahkemoni of Alharizi. Although largely fictional in nature, the work offers intriguing evidence of the transmission of kabbalistic thought to Yemen in the sixteenth century. This paper argues that Aldāhirī exploited the text's lighthearted belletristic framework to bring kabbalistic theosophy, literature, and liturgical customs to the attention of a largely uninitiated public in Yemen. But Aldāhirī also conveys an ambivalence (...)
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  14.  73
    Disclosure of Kabbalah.Michael Laitman - 2006 - World Futures 62 (4):264-281.
    This article presents a thorough analysis of the enormous popularity of Kabbalah in recent years, its roots, and its purpose. The greatest Kabbalist of the 20th century, Rabbi Yehuda Ashlag, author of The Sulamcommentary on The Zohar, predicted the breakout of the present-day world crisis and explained that almost two thousand years ago, The Zohar had already predicted that the end of the 20th century would present a crossroads where humanity would have to choose its direction. Now, at the (...)
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  15.  95
    Thought, Kabbalah, and Religious Polemics in Medieval Hispanic-Hebrew Judaism. A Bibliographical Approach.Carlos N. Sainz de la Maza & Amparo Alba Cecilia - 2007 - 'Ilu. Revista de Ciencias de Las Religiones 12:279-326.
    Night: The presence of the absence, the dissolution of the person in the night, the horror of being, the reality of the unreal, it takes us more to the absence of God than to God, to the absence of every entity. Dawn: Not being conscious of the existence of that unchangeable supposed centre of the person within time does not mean that we cannot be able to explain the not static changeable and relational personal identity in other ways. Day: It (...)
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  16.  56
    Worlds within Worlds: Kabbalah and the New Scientific Paradigm.Kerry Gordon - 2002 - Zygon 37 (4):963-983.
    Beginning with relativity and quantum theory, the deterministic view that has dominated and shaped Western culture for more than 2,500 years has begun to unravel, leading to the emergence of a new paradigm. This new paradigm effectively reformulates the project of science, conceiving of existence as an interpenetrating web of coevolving, cocreative relationships. By exploring Kabbalah and the new scientific paradigm within the context of shared evolutionary principles, I seek to demonstrate a viable alternative to the prevailing deterministic worldview. (...)
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  17.  10
    The Kabbalah of money: insights on livelihood, business, and all forms of economic behavior.Nilton Bonder - 1996 - Boston: Distributed in the United States by Random House.
    _____This book challenges us to take a broad and ethical view of economic behavior, which includes all forms of exchange and human interaction, from how we spend our money to how we fulfill our role as responsible human beings in a global ecological framework. Drawing on Jewish ethical teachings, mystical lore, and tales of the Hasidic masters, the author examines a wide range of subjects, including competition, partnerships, and contracts, loans and interest, the laws of fair exchange, and tips and (...)
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  18.  10
    Kabbalah, Magic, and Science: The Cultural Universe of a Sixteenth-Century Jewish PhysicianDavid B. Ruderman.Ronald C. Sawyer - 1990 - Isis 81 (2):343-344.
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  19.  55
    The science of kabbalah: An overview.Avihu Sofer & Rachel Sonia Laitman - 2006 - World Futures 62 (4):291 – 299.
    This article establishes that our perception of reality is subjective and undeliverable. It is an upshot of the intention by which we use our desires. The article states that we have two paths by which to advance, that of pain (our current) and that of pleasant, and quicker progress, called "the Path of Light." The article also asserts that in Kabbalah, spirituality means altruism, and corporeality means egoism. Although both pertain to reception, the difference is determined by the objective (...)
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  20.  7
    Heidegger and Kabbalah: hidden gnosis and the path of poiesis.Elliot R. Wolfson - 2019 - Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press, Office of Scholarly Publishing, Herman B Wells Library.
    Belonging together of the foreign -- Hermeneutic circularity: tradition as genuine repetition of futural past -- Inceptual thinking and nonsystematic atonality -- Heidegger's Seyn/Nichts and Kabbalistic Ein Sof -- Simsum, Lichtung, and bestowing refusal -- Autogenesis, nihilating leap, and otherness of the not-other -- Temporalizing and granting time-space -- Disclosive language: poiesis and apophatic occlusion of occlusion -- Ethnolinguistic enrootedness and invocation of historical destiny.
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  21.  22
    Mystical techniques, mental processes, and states of consciousness in Abraham Abulafia’s Kabbalah: A reassessment.Vadim Putzu - 2019 - Archive for the Psychology of Religion 41 (2):89-104.
    This article reevaluates the mystical techniques and experiences peculiar to Abraham Abulafia’s Kabbalah and attempts to offer an alternative approach to their dominant understanding, which largely depends on Moshe Idel’s work. Current scholars of Jewish mysticism have a habit of highlighting the “unique character” of Abulafia’s mystical practices while asserting that they cannot be compared with the induction techniques and the psychophysical phenomena typical of hypnosis. While generally agreeing with the scholars discussed that the hyperactivation of the mind found (...)
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  22.  32
    Giordano Bruno and the Kabbalah: Prophets, Magicians, and Rabbis (review).Matt Goldish - 1999 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 37 (4):675-677.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:Giordano Bruno and the Kabbalah: Prophets, Magicians, and Rabbis by Karen Silvia de León-JonesMatt GoldishKaren Silvia de León-Jones. Giordano Bruno and the Kabbalah: Prophets, Magicians, and Rabbis (Yale Studies in Hermeneutics). New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997. Pp. ix + 272. Cloth, $40.00.Frances Yates’ Giordano Bruno and the Hermetic Tradition has become a standard work for the study of Renaissance thought, and it is through her (...)
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  23. Spinoza and the Kabbalah: From the Gate of Heaven to the ‘Field of Holy Apples’.Yitzhak Melamed - forthcoming - In Cristina Cisiu (ed.), Early Modern Philosophy & the Kabbalah.
    In the first part of this paper we will consider the likely extent of Spinoza’s exposure to Kabbalistic literature as he was growing up in Amsterdam. In the second part we will closely study several texts in which Spinoza seems to engage with Kabbalistic doctrines. In the third and final part we will study the role of the two crucial doctrines of emanation and pantheism (or panentheism), in Spinoza’s system and in the Kabbalistic literature.
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  24.  27
    Marx and the Kabbalah: Aaron Shemuel Lieberman’s Materialist Interpretation of Jewish History.Eliyahu Stern - 2018 - Journal of the History of Ideas 79 (2):285-307.
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  25.  11
    11 Philosophy and kabbalah: 1200-1600.Hava Tirosh-Samuelson - 2003 - In Daniel H. Frank & Oliver Leaman (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Medieval Jewish Philosophy. Cambridge University Press.
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  26.  17
    Moshe Idel, Kabbalah - New Perspectives.Petru Moldovan - 2002 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 1 (2):212-215.
    Moshe Idel, Kabbalah - New Perspectives, Nemira Publishing House, Bucuresti, 2000.
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  27.  57
    Science and kabbalah evolution.Oded Maimon - 2006 - World Futures 62 (4):309 – 337.
    This article describes how Science and Kabbalah complement each other and reveals modern ways of presenting the original concepts of the Kabbalah wisdom. This article also presents a scheme of personal growth through creation of freedom of choice, and provides a Kabbalist's road map. Kabbalah studies the evolution of the universe, our life purpose, and the ascension to higher planes of existence through knowledge attained and presented by great Kabbalists over centuries. Their presentation took different forms at (...)
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  28.  87
    Leibniz and the Kabbalah.Christia Mercer - 1995 - The Leibniz Review 5:27-28.
    Anyone interested in Leibniz, the Kabbalah, the Cambridge Platonists, Gnosticism, Platonism, or seventeenth-century metaphysics will want to read Allison P. Coudert’s Leibniz and the Kabbalah. Coudert argues that core features of Leibniz’s mature philosophy were directly influenced by the Kabbalah in general and Francis Mercury van Helmont’s Lurianic Kabbalah in particular. This is a provocative thesis to which Coudert brings an impressive amount of scholarly detective work. Her argument in brief goes as follows: there are important (...)
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  29. Introduction to "Giving: The Essential Teaching of the Kabbalah".Aryeh Siegel - 2020 - In Yehuda Lev Ashlag (ed.), Giving: The Essential Teaching of the Kabbalah.
    THE PURPOSE OF OUR LIVES is to undergo a gradual transformation. We are born with a self-centered nature, but we can acquire a nature in which the focus is on the other. Through spiritual work, we can slowly learn to overcome our innate desire to find some form of self-gratification in all we do. Union with God is the result of desiring to give to others with no interest in reward of any kind. This is the essential teaching of the (...)
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  30.  68
    Ramon Lull and ecstatic kabbalah: A preliminary observation.Moshe Idel - 1988 - Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 51 (1):170-174.
  31.  29
    Borges and the Kabbalah and Other Essays on His Fiction and Poetry (review).Edna Aizenberg - 1989 - Philosophy and Literature 13 (2):400-402.
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  32.  13
    Leibniz and Kabbalah.Sergiy Seсundant & Ruslan Melamed - 2010 - Sententiae 22 (1):86-101.
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  33.  11
    Accounting for the commandments in medieval Judaism: studies in law, philosophy, pietism, and kabbalah.Jeremy P. Brown & Marc Herman (eds.) - 2021 - Leiden ; Boston: Brill.
    Accounting for the Commandments in Medieval Judaism explores the discursive formation of the commandments as a generative matrix of Jewish thought and life in the posttalmudic period. Each study sheds light on how medieval Jews crafted the commandments out of theretofore underdetermined material. By systematizing, representing, or interrogating the amorphous category of commandment, medieval Jewish authors across both the Islamic and Christian spheres of influence sought to explain, justify, and characterize Israel's legal system, divine revelation, the cosmos, and even the (...)
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  34.  4
    Leibniz and the Kabbalah. Allison P. Coudert.Marjorie Grene - 1997 - Isis 88 (2):339-340.
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  35. Franz Rosenzweig and the Kabbalah.Moshe Idel - 1988 - In Paul R. Mendes-Flohr (ed.), The Philosophy of Franz Rosenzweig. Published for Brandeis University Press by University Press of New England. pp. 162--171.
     
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  36.  64
    Perceptions of Kabbalah in the second half of the 18th century.Moshe Idel - 1992 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 1 (1):55-114.
  37.  56
    Hayyim Vital's “Practical Kabbalah and Alchemy”: a 17th Century Book of Secrets.Gerrit Bos - 1995 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 4 (1):55-112.
  38. Vital, hayyim'practical kabbalah and alchemy'+ lurianic cabala as the dominant system of jewish mystical thought-a 17th-century book-of-secrets.G. Bos - 1995 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 4 (1):55-112.
     
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  39.  59
    The Role of Lurianic Kabbalah in the Early Philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas.Jacob Meskin - 2007 - Levinas Studies 2:49-77.
    In 1982 the American philosopher and Levinas scholar Edith Wyschogrod conducted an interview with Emmanuel Levinas, the transcript of which she published seven years later. Early in the interview, Wyschogrod proposed to Levinas that his philosophy constituted a radical break with western theological tradition because it started not with a Parmenidean ontological plenitude, but rather with the God of the Hebrew Bible. The God Levinas began with, according to Wyschogrod, wasan indigent God, a hidden God who commands that there be (...)
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  40.  7
    The Role of Lurianic Kabbalah in the Early Philosophy of Emmanuel Levinas.Jacob Meskin - 2007 - Levinas Studies 2:49-77.
    In 1982 the American philosopher and Levinas scholar Edith Wyschogrod conducted an interview with Emmanuel Levinas, the transcript of which she published seven years later. Early in the interview, Wyschogrod proposed to Levinas that his philosophy constituted a radical break with western theological tradition because it started not with a Parmenidean ontological plenitude, but rather with the God of the Hebrew Bible. The God Levinas began with, according to Wyschogrod, wasan indigent God, a hidden God who commands that there be (...)
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  41.  27
    Speaking With Ones Self: Autoscopic Phenomena in Writings from the Ecstatic Kabbalah.Shahar Arzy - 2005 - Journal of Consciousness Studies 12 (11):4-29.
    Immediate experience localizes the self within the limits of the physical body. This spatial unity has been challenged by philosophical and mystical traditions aimed to isolate concepts of mind and body. A more direct challenge of the spatial unity comes from a well-defined group of experiences called 'autoscopic phenomena' , in which the subject has the impression of seeing a second own body in an extrapersonal space. AP are known to occur in many human cultures and have been described in (...)
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  42.  29
    On “thomistic kabbalah”.John Milbank - 2011 - Modern Theology 27 (1):147-185.
    The Christian Bible was from the outset a dogmatic and Christological conception, which entailed a mystical reading of signs and events, a practise of speculation at once narratological and phenomenological. The trilogy of Olivier‐Thomas Venard OP – Thomas d'Aquin, poète théologien – is proposed as crucial to understanding how Thomas Aquinas preserves the authentic biblical character of Christian theology, proceeding along the diagonal axis of the mystagogical, an axis neither purely vertical nor purely horizontal but a blending of both at (...)
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  43.  43
    A Critical Return to Moshe Idel's Kabbalah: New Perspectives: An Appreciation.Daniel Abrams - 2007 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 6 (18):30-40.
    The publication of Moshe Idel’s book, Kabbalah: New Perspectives marks a turning point in the field of Jewish mysticism. In this volume, Moshe Idel offered phenomenology as an alternative key to appreciating the history and ideas of Jewish mystical traditions. This study returns to this book in order to assess and critique the meaning and function of phenomenology in his early scholarship, as a prelude to the developing and possibly changing methodologies that he has employed in numerous studies published (...)
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  44.  45
    On Discerning the Realm of God in the Thought of Kabbalah and Tantra.Paul C. Martin - manuscript
    This paper explores the way in which God as the infinite ground of existence is discerned by the imagination and understanding. The representation of the apophatic divine is facilitated by the working of the human mind, which means that the manifold nature of thinking establishes the presence of God. In the metaphysical speculations of kabbalah and tantra the singular light of Ein Sof and Paramashiva intersects with the human imagination, and is refracted into a multiple display of understanding. So (...)
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  45.  48
    The Place of Speculation in Kabbalah and Tantra.Paul C. Martin - manuscript
    In this paper I consider the apparently distinctive outlooks indicated by the mystical thought of Jewish kabbalah and Hindu tantra as they aim at realizing the scope of divine awareness. It is a profound horizon of light that beckons to them, which shows them to be on the verge of touching God. For both traditions there is a demonstrative reflective consciousness by the practitioner in realizing and recognizing the place of God’s being, as a supernal and mundane reality. It (...)
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  46.  1
    Evreĭskai︠a︡ filosofii︠a︡ i kabbala: Istorii︠a︡, problemy, vlii︠a︡nii︠a︡ = Jewish philosophy and kabbalah history, concepts, and influences.K. I︠U︡ Burmistrov - 2013 - Moskva: Institut filosofii RAN.
  47.  8
    On the Possibility of and Justification for a Philosophical Interpretation of Kabbalah: The Scholem-Gordin Correspondence.Ori Werdiger - 2020 - Naharaim 14 (2):297-312.
    This article introduces and discusses a short correspondence that took place in November 1931 between Gershom Scholem and Jacob Gordin. Gordin was a Russian-Jewish philosopher of religion, an expert on Hermann Cohen, and a founding figure of the postwar Paris School of Jewish Thought. The initial motivation for the correspondence was Scholem’s wish to produce a critical edition of the 17th century kabbalistic work, Shaar Hashamayim by Abraham Cohen Herrera, for which he asked for Gordin’s help. A close reading of (...)
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  48.  30
    "Our place in al-Andalus": Kabbalah, philosophy, literature in Arab Jewish letters.Gil Anidjar - 2002 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    The year 1492 is only the last in a series of “ends” that inform the representation of medieval Spain in modern Jewish historical and literary discourses. These ends simultaneously mirror the traumas of history and shed light on the discursive process by which hermetic boundaries are set between periods, communities, and texts. This book addresses the representation of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries as the end of al-Andalus (Islamic Spain). Here, the end works to locate and separate Muslim from Christian (...)
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  49. Giving: The Essential Teaching of the Kabbalah.Yehuda Lev Ashlag & Aryeh Siegel (eds.) - 2020 - Urim Publications.
    The purpose of our lives is to grow step by step toward a fundamental transformation. Instead of always seeking some form of gratification, we can learn to give to others with no self-interest at all. The is the essential teaching of the Kabbalah portrayed in these essays by Baal Hasulam – the greatest modern explicator of Kabbalah. Rabbi Gottlieb provides an illuminating commentary as a living Chassidic rebbe devoted to the practice and teaching of Baal Hasulam’s spiritual path.
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  50.  8
    The Reverse of the Numinous. Ahistoricism and Time in the Kabbalah of the Sefer Ha-Zohar.José Antonio Fernández López - 2018 - Revista Española de Filosofía Medieval 25:125-141.
    In this hermeneutical approach to Kabbalah and the Zohar, from the double perspective of the history of ideas and the reading of texts that emerged in a given time and context, this article investigates the historical and temporal components of cabalistic mysticism. The medieval Kabbalah, itself an experience of the numinous marked by the ahistorical, is not completely alien to historical experiences. This is the search for a compression of the bonds that unite the emergence of the mystic (...)
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1 — 50 / 236