Jewish and Islamic Philosophy
248 pages, 6 1/4 x 9 1/2
Hardcover
Release Date:01 Aug 1999
ISBN:9780813527604
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Jewish and Islamic Philosophy

Crosspollinations in the Classic Age

Rutgers University Press

 

Lenn E. Goodman, one of the world's most elegant and prolific students of medieval Jewish and Islamic philosophy, argues convincingly that the reason that Jewish authors found so much of Islamic philosophy, pietism, mysticism, jurisprudence and grammar congenial was that Islamic ideas in these fields were rooted in Biblical categories . . . sharpened by Greek analysis [and] rendered vivid by Greek imagery. . . . At its best Goodman's work remains one of that of the Tosafists: an attempt to derive from painstaking textual analysis a glimpse of the broader principles informing these texts. Goodman is a master of rising from details to ever higher levels of abstraction and it is at the highest levels of abstraction that Greek, Muslim, and Jewish thought meet. Jewish History
Goodman's nearly poetic writing is vivid and accessible beyond narrow professional confines. . . . This work argues forcefully that cross-pollination not only afforded freshness and strengths to the giants of Islamic and Jewish philosophy in 11th and 12th-century Spain, but that it offers the same to us today. Recommended. Choice
Professor Lenn E. Goodman is a philosopher and scholar of world-class stature, whose writings have enhanced the intellectual lives of all who work in his field. Ian Netton, Department of Arabic and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Leeds
He is without doubt one of the outstanding authors in his field. Oliver Leaman, Department of Philosophy, Liverpool John Moores University
Lenn E. Goodman is an American philosopher. His philosophy, particularly his constructive work, draws from classical and medieval sources as well as religious texts. Goodman is also an academic, scholar, and a historian with research interest in metaphysics, ethics, and Jewish philosophy.
Preface
Abbreviations and short titles

1. Crosspollinations
1. Hearing God's voice in words
2. "He who knows himself knows his Lord"
3. God's act in history
2. Razi and Epicurus
1. Perception and sensation
2. Pleasure and pain
3. Desire, motivation, and free will
4. Razi's Ethics and the ethical transparency of hedonism
3. Bahya and Kant
1. The antinomy
2. Bahya's response
3. The philosphical impact of Bahya's approach
4. Maimonides and the Philosophers of Islam
1. Creation
2. Theophany
5. Friendship
1. Friendship as reciprocated virtue
2. Biblical, Rabbinic, Maimonidean and Qur'anic fellowship
3. Miskawayh on friendship
4. Friendship in al-Ghazali
6. Determinism and freedom in Spinoza, Maimoonides and Aristotle
1. Aristotle's determinism
2. Maimonides' determinism
3. Spinoza's determinism
4. Spinoza's defence of human freedom
5. Maimonides on character and freedom
6. Freedom and akrasia
7. Conclusion
7. Ibn Khaldun and Thucydides
1. A science of history and civilisation
2. Governance in history

Bibliography
Index
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