Jewish Intellectual Historyth to thÎntury (Ruderman TTC 02)

Jewish Intellectual History 16th to 20th Century


Audio CD Format: mp3 128kbps, stereo 44.1 KHz

Author: David B. Ruderman, University of Pennsylvania

Ph.D., Hebrew University, Jerusalem


Publisher: The Teaching Company (2002) The Great Courses Series 4647

http://www.amazon.com/dp/1565855213/

ISBN-10: 1565855213

ISBN-13: 978-1565855212


Also published by: The Great Courses, 4645, 4646

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000WU7UXS/


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Description: 24 lectures (30 minutes per lecture) by

Professor Rudman as 12 CDs and two Course Guidebooks.


Course Lecture Titles


1. On Studying Jewish History

2. Defining Modern Jewish History and Thought

3. Cultural Transformation in the Italian Ghetto

4. Seventeenth-Century Marranism and Messianism

5. The Challenge of Baruch Spinoza

6. Moses Mendelssohn and His Generation

7. The Science of Judaism

8. Heinrich Graetz_Jewish Historian

9. Abraham Geiger_The Shaping of Reform Judaism

10. The Neo-Orthodoxy of Samson Raphael Hirsch

11. Zecharias Frankel and Conservative Judaism

12. Samuel David Luzzatto_Judaism and Atticism

13. Zionism's Answer to the Jewish Problem

14. Three Zionist Visions

15. The Jewish Adventure with Socialism

16. Hermann Cohen's Religion of Reason

17. Leo Baeck's Mystery and Commandment

18. Martin Buber's Religious Existentialism

19. Jewish Law_Martin Buber vs. Franz Rosenzweig

20. Mordecai Kaplan and American Judaism

21. Abraham Heschel_Mystic and Social Activist

22. Theological Responses to the Nazi Holocaust

23. Feminist Jewish Theology

24. Current Trends in Jewish Thought


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Professor David B. Ruderman presents Judaism's thoughtful approach to change, challenge, and the modern world.

God. Torah. Israel.

These three concepts—incorporated in personal belief, the meaning of Jewish ritual acts, and the purpose of continued Jewish existence—have been the focus of Jewish thought throughout history.

But the last four centuries have presented Jewish thinkers with difficult challenges:

These lectures present the varying ways in which a small group of thinkers has attempted to answer these challenges.

These men and, in recent years, women, have reflected deeply on the relevance of Jewish texts and traditions to modern Jews.

Different Routes to a Common Goal

Though their approaches and solutions differed, most shared a common goal: provide a continuing sense of faith, meaning, and identity for their fellow Jews.

Through these lectures, you will observe the time-honored intellectual tradition through which Judaism analyzes, rethinks, and reformulates itself.

This process of preserving its essential character while still trying to accommodate itself to the modern world has kept Judaism a vital and vibrant, rather than static, religion.

This course may serve to introduce you to a new and rich body of thinkers and thinking, for until recently, Jewish intellectual history, though an integral part of Western intellectual history, has been less heralded.

But one of the contributions of the young field of Jewish Studies has been to bring the thinkers featured in this series to a wider audience.

Spinoza's Devastating Challenge

The central figure in the course is well known: the prominent philosopher Benedict (Baruch) Spinoza (1632–1677).

Spinoza's impact was so significant, Professor Ruderman notes, that much of the course might be viewed as a series of responses to his thinking.

Spinoza received a traditional rabbinical education, but he broke with Judaism after his father died. He was raised in Amsterdam, a city in which both Jews and Christians lived in an increasingly tolerant and secular atmosphere.

In his Theological–Political Treatise, published anonymously in 1670, Spinoza became the first Jew to break with the medieval Jewish tradition espoused by Moses Maimonides (1132–1204).

Breaking with Four Centuries of Tradition

Spinoza disputed Maimonides's belief that reason and faith could be reconciled. Because biblical texts were believed to have been inspired by God, he asserted, they were supernatural. They could be interpreted through faith or reason, but not both.

If one chose reason, then the Bible was not divinely inspired but a document created by Man.

This argument was devastating to the question of Jewish identity.

Essentially, it negated God, Torah, and Israel, denying any rationale for Jews to think of themselves as the chosen people, observe ceremonial laws, or accept the authority of the rabbis.

Spinoza's critique laid bare the contradiction between Jewish communal values and secular liberal ones. He was the first to pose a fundamental question that remains relevant to this day: Is it possible to be a true liberal and a traditional Jew?

Three Responses: Insiders, Outsiders, and Rejectionists

This course considers modern Jewish thought largely in terms of two issues:

With the weakening of the Jewish community, the need to provide a rationale for being Jewish in a non-Jewish world became pressing and more problematic.

Given these two issues, Professor Ruderman presents the various thinkers according to three approaches:

Reconciling Problems for a Modern World

Most thinkers represented in these lectures are insiders who struggled to create a better fit between Judaism and the contemporary world.

Each had to deal with problems related to cherished notions of God, Torah, and Israel, including:

This lecture series places historical theories and religious practices in a fresh light. You will encounter thinkers who embodied lifestyles and philosophies difficult to categorize but often original and thought provoking.

A Wait before Considering the Holocaust

The final lectures examine the impact of the Holocaust, as well as newer contributions being made by women thinkers.

Jewish thinkers, in fact, did not write extensively about the Holocaust until 1960.

"The shock was so great that the most appropriate response for a while was silence," Professor Ruderman notes.

Women Jewish intellectuals in the last 40 years have challenged the patriarchal nature of Judaism by arguing for full participation of women in ritual services and creation of gender-sensitive prayer books:

Professor Ruderman completes the lectures with an evaluation of current Jewish thought and the argument that has been raised that it may no longer be relevant.

In his estimation, however, Jewish thinking is not something that only intellectuals do. It is a widespread and necessary part of Jewish life—an effort to find meaning and hope in an uncertain world.



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