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Full Description
The Horizontal Society is an exposition of rabbinic thought as
exemplified by Maimonides. The thought streams of Greece, Rome, and
Christendom serve as a contrast. This work is in the Hebrew rhetorical
tradition of melisa. The main text in five sections--The God of Israel,
The Books of Israel, The Governance of Israel, The Memory of Israel,
and The Folly of Israel-focuses on these core matters. It includes
numerous references to orient the reader. The mode is similar to the
author's previous work, such as Golden Doves with Silver Dots:
Semiotics and Textuality in Rabbinic Tradition, interacting with the
latest thought from today's academy.
This book illustrates the
horizontal organization of the Jewish people. Other social organization
is based on hierarchy. Two principles made this difference possible for
Israel. First, the Hebrew Scriptures alone propose that every human
being is created in the image of God. This necessitates the absolute
equality of every human being. Second, the Sinai covenant establishes
the Law as the supreme authority. Whereas in other societies, might is
the source of authority, in Judaism authority is limited by the Law.
These principles were summarized by the last Prophet of Israel: "Had
not one God created us? Why do we deal treacherously., profaning the
covenant of our fathers?" (Mal 2:10).
There is a subdivided
bibliography of forty pages, including both Jewish and "Western"
sources. The scholarly apparatus includes indices of terms, names, and
subjects. There are also seventy appendices of interest to a rabbinic
readership.
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