Why Shop at Eichlers?
About Eichlers
Directions
Contact Us
        
Your Shopping Cart
You have 0 items in your cart
 
Home Books Music Gifts Gift Certificates New Releases All Departments
        
 
Search by Category or enter a search term:
 
 Books
 Chanukah Store
 Children's Section
 Entertainment
 Garments
 Gift Certificates
 Gifts Selection
 Holiday Store
 Kippot - Yarmulkas
 Mezuza Scrolls and Tefilin
 Religious Items
 School seforim
 Seforim
 Shtenders
 Silver Collection at Eichlers
 Software
 Synagogue Section
 Tallis Wizard
 Tefillin
 Tzitzis Wizard
 Wedding Center
 
 

 
 
 
  The Legacy of Maimonides: Religion, Reason and Community (Hardcover)

   
  The Legacy of Maimonides: Religion, Reason and Community (Hardcover)  
  Rabbi Moses Maimonides (1135-1204), known as Rambam, is widely known as a profound philosopher and authoritative legal scholar. However, Rambam's contributions are not merely remnants of medieval scholarship but a vibrant legacy that gives...
Read Full Description
 
     
 
 
SKU: yb391-4--20032
List Price: $25.95
Our Price: $23.95
Savings: 8%
 
 
     
 
Quantity:
 
     
 
Send this item to multiple recipients!
Our new checkout allows you to ship your selected items to multiple recipients. Simply add the total number of items you wish to send to your shopping cart. Choose "Multiple Recipients" during checkout and follow the easy steps.
 
     
     
     
  Full Description
Rabbi Moses Maimonides (1135-1204), known as Rambam, is widely known as a profound philosopher and authoritative legal scholar. However, Rambam's contributions are not merely remnants of medieval scholarship but a vibrant legacy that gives compelling guidance in modern man's spiritual search. In this book, leading scholars present surveys of Rambam's thinking and his impact on Judaism, and apply Rambam's approach to various issues of critical contemporary importance.

The opening essay in the book is by the late Professor Isadore Twersky, dean of intellectual historians working on Rambam, and himself a role model for the combination of Torah and academic scholarship. His subject is the growth of Rambam's reputation and his impact on later Torah scholarship. Rabbi Norman Lamm, for so many years a productive scholar and leader of American Orthodoxy, discusses a question central to religious life—the love of God—drawing on Rambam's halakhic works and the Guide. Professor Arthur Hyman, who occupies a prominent place among contemporary interpreters of Maimonides' philosophy, surveys, with his customary concision and clarity, the broad options in the academic scholarship of the 20th century.

Contributions by Shalom Carmy and David Berger focus on critical questions regarding the ongoing implications of certain Maimonidean doctrines. Rabbi Carmy's article offers a defense of Rambam's robust approach to dogma. Dr. Berger explores present day utilizations of Rambam's naturalistic teachings about the messianic age. The late educator and scholar Rabbi Norman Frimer depicts Rambam's influence as a role model for intellectual searchers. His son, the legal scholar Dov Frimer, turns to the details of Rambam's jurisprudence, and produces some unexpected conclusions regarding the halakhic status of non-Jews. Roslyn Weiss devotes her paper to a detailed examination of one text in the introduction to the Guide, communicating the exhilaration of such microscopic study and its more systematic pertinence.

Yamin Levy's essay looks at the general relationship between Rambam's championing of rational thought and the kind of community it fosters. Hayyim Angel surveys many of Rambam's discussions pertinent to Biblical exegesis and their abiding importance for our own study of Tanakh. Elimelekh Polinsky deals with a specific area, honor and respect for parents. His essay, too, exemplifies the integrated study of Rambam's Halakhah and his philosophy. The essays by Moshe Sokolow and Gerald Blidstein expand the scope of the book. Sokolow demonstrates the significant issues tackled by Rambam in his epistles. Blidstein, much admired for his three analytic and historical monographs on specific topics in Maimonides' jurisprudence, discusses the idea of Oral Law in Rambam. David Shatz aptly closes the volume with an analysis of the last chapters in the Guide, casting new light on Rambam's view of human nature, the role of the mitzvot and the goal of human existence, while demonstrating yet again the necessity of painstaking microscopic analysis of the text and its literary organization.

 
     
 
  You may also like...  
Mishneh Torah Vol. 21: Sefer Zeraim
Mishneh Torah Vol. 21: Sefer Zeraim
Our Price: $31.95
 More in Maimonides - Rambam
Mishneh Torah Vol. 01: Hilchot Yesodei HaTorah
Mishneh Torah Vol. 01: Hilchot Yesodei HaTorah
List Price: $19.95
Our Price: $18.95
Savings: 5%
 More in Maimonides - Rambam
Maimonides' Medical Writings - Vol 2
Maimonides' Medical Writings - Vol 2
List Price: $19.95
Our Price: $17.96
Savings: 10%
 More in Maimonides - Rambam
MAIMONIDES' PRINCIPLES
MAIMONIDES' PRINCIPLES
Our Price: $7.99
 More in Maimonides - Rambam
Medical Legacy of Moses Maimonides
Medical Legacy of Moses Maimonides
List Price: $33.95
Our Price: $32.95
Savings: 3%
 More in Maimonides - Rambam
Mishneh Torah Vol. 20: Sefer Hafla'ah
Mishneh Torah Vol. 20: Sefer Hafla'ah
Our Price: $31.95
 More in Maimonides - Rambam
     
     
 
 
Home | Books | Music | Gifts | Gift Certificates | New Releases | About Us | Contact Us