November sale
>The Myth of the Jewish Origins of Science and Philosophy
More details
Publisher:
Collaborators:
  • University of Haifa
Year:
2010
Catalog number :
45-131106
ISBN:
978-965-493-422-0
Pages:
552
Language:
Weight:
1100 gr.
Cover:
Paperback

The Myth of the Jewish Origins of Science and Philosophy

Synopsis

The history of the myth of the Jewish sources of philosophy and science from their inception in Hellenistic culture, until present day, is laid out inthis book, the first comprehensive history of this fascinating subject. The Author follows the emergence and development of the myth, in Hellenistic-Pagan culture and in ancient Jewish culture, through the writings of the Church fathers, in Medieval Christian, Muslim and Jewish thought, throughout the Renaissance, the Early Modern period, the Enlightenment Era in both the general and Jewish cultures and up to present day.
The book lays out the stories and traditions regarding the myth of the Jewish origins of philosophy and science, and explores their chain of transmission and acceptance throughout the generations in four different cultures: The Hellenistic-Pagan, Jewish, Christian and Muslim. The motives for the creation of these stories and traditions of this myth, as well as the reasons behind it, are all thoroughly discussed. Amongst them is the justification to study foreign wisdoms by Jewish scholars. Once it had been "proven" that the source of all philosophical and scientific knowledge lies in the Torah, their study became an inherent part of the study of the Torah, a re-appropriation of the knowledge that has been lost in the tribulations of time and exile. The myth also served Islam and Christianity as similar apologetic theological reasoning. Although various aspects of the myth have been criticized since the Renaissance, a phenomenon which reached its apex during the Jewish Enlightenment, it has never lost its power and is still expressed in a variety of ways in Jewish and Israeli Culture today.

Reviews
"Melamed offers a detailed genealogy of an idea that was widely accepted for centuries and that legitimized the appropriation of “foreign” bodies of knowledge by Judaism. His book will be helpful to students of many aspects of the history of science or philosophy in Jewish cultures." - Aleph, January 2011