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Religion and law

In S. D. Goitein (ed.), Religion in a Religious Age. Cambridge: Mass., Association for Jewish Studies. pp. 69--82 (1974)

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  1. Kabbalah, philosophy, and the jewish-Christian debate: Reconsidering the early works of Joseph gikatilla.Hartley Lachter - 2008 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 16 (1):1-58.
    Joseph Gikatilla's early works, composed during the 1270s, have been understood by many scholars as a fusion of Kabbalah and philosophy—an approach that he abandoned in his later compositions. This paper argues that Gikatilla's early works are in fact consistent with his later works, and that the differences between the two can be explained by the polemical engagement during his early period with Jewish philosophy and Christian missionizing. By subtly drawing Jewish students of philosophy away from Aristotelian speculation and towards (...)
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  • Thought, Kabbalah, and Religious Polemics in Medieval Hispanic-Hebrew Judaism. A Bibliographical Approach.Carlos N. Sainz de la Maza & Amparo Alba Cecilia - 2007 - 'Ilu. Revista de Ciencias de Las Religiones 12:279-326.
    Night: The presence of the absence, the dissolution of the person in the night, the horror of being, the reality of the unreal, it takes us more to the absence of God than to God, to the absence of every entity. Dawn: Not being conscious of the existence of that unchangeable supposed centre of the person within time does not mean that we cannot be able to explain the not static changeable and relational personal identity in other ways. Day: It (...)
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