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Devotional Intelligence and Jewish Religious Thinking: A Philosophical Essay

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Devotional Intelligence and Jewish Religious Thinking: A Philosophical Essay

Contributors:

By (Author) Phillip Stambovsky

ISBN:

9781498590617

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Lexington Books

Publication Date:

5th July 2019

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Professional and Scholarly

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Judaism

Dewey:

181.06

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

298

Dimensions:

Width 160mm, Height 228mm, Spine 29mm

Weight:

617g

Description

This groundbreaking neo-Maimonidean work establishes, on independently philosophical grounds, the intellectual warrant of Jewish religious thinking as devotional intelligence. It demonstrates the purchase and intellectual authority of such thinking by appeal to two dialectically interrelated principles: on the one hand, the metaphysical principle that knowing is of being; and, on the other, sacral attunement, a normative principle. Part I distinguishes this study from leading work in contemporary philosophy of Judaism. It introduces the game-changing bid to privilege intelligence in the onto-epistemological Aristotelian sense, over epistemologically orchestrated, post-Enlightenment reason when it comes to assessing the intellectual soundness of religious thinking. Part II distills contemporary elements of Aristotles onto-epistemological psychology of intelligence that Maimonides incorporated in his philosophy of Jewish religious thinking. Further, it finds in Hegel a bridge between Maimonides account of devotional intelligence and a modern Maimonidean science of knowing dedicated to religious thinking. Part III turns to sacral attunement, foregrounding the normative devotional aspect of devotional intelligence. It probes the intentionality of both onto-epistemological attunement and the sacred relative to the factor of the transcendent. In the process it identifies and applies elements of an existential phenomenology of fundamental attunement that thematize defining realities of the sacral attunement unique to normative Jewish covenantal praxis. A related analysis of the sacred in religious thinking follows, which segues to a chapter on the factor of the transcendent as a seminal constituent of meaning in both the sciences and religion. Part IV applies and amplifies key findings in light of a signature Jewish devotional theme: the divine names, approached from a signally Maimonidean, apophatic position indexed to the factor of the transcendent as the unconditioned condition (Kant) of intelligible meaning as such. Distinguishing what the divine names indicate from what they refer to, the essay concludes by substantiating the intellectual warrant of Jewish religious thinking as a devotional intelligence of the relationof identity-in-differencebetween the attributive names and the Tetragrammaton.

Reviews

Phillip Stambovskys neo-Maimonidean book is an intriguing and original attempt to rethink the notions of intelligence and the intelligible within the context of continental philosophy of religion. -- Yitzhak Y. Melamed, Professor of Philosophy, Charlotte Bloomberg Chair in the Humanities, Johns Hopkins University

Author Bio

Phillip Stambovsky teaches philosophy at Fairfield University and is author of Inference and the Metaphysic of Reason (2009).

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