Showing Results 1 - 10 of 25
Restricted
Text
During the thousands of years of its history, Judaism has learned and experienced a good deal. In its people the commanding urge to think further, to struggle with ideas, has…
Contributor:
Leo Baeck
Places:
Date:
1922
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
I recognize no eternal verities save those which not only can be comprehended by the human intellect but can also be demonstrated and confirmed by man’s faculties. It is, however, a misconception of…
Contributor:
Moses Mendelssohn
Places:
Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia
(Berlin, Germany)
Date:
1783
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
Text
There are facts of such an overwhelming power that even the most stubborn opinion must yield to them. Such a fact is the origin of Judaism in the midst of rude surroundings, like a vigorous…
Contributor:
Abraham Geiger
Places:
Frankfort, German Confederation
(Frankfurt am Main, Germany)
Breslau, Kingdom of Prussia
(Wrocław, Poland)
Date:
1864
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
This book consists of a descriptive account and twenty stories. The descriptive account speaks of the life of the Hasidim, a Jewish sect of eastern Europe which arose around the middle of…
Contributor:
Martin Buber
Places:
Ravenna, German Empire
(Germany)
Date:
1907
Categories:
Restricted
Text
The mystery of prayer on the days of Rosh Hashanah presents itself with characteristic familiarity: it reveals itself to those who want to fulfill it, and eludes those who want only to know it.
Prayer…
Contributor:
Abraham Joshua Heschel
Places:
Berlin, Nazi Germany
(Berlin, Germany)
Date:
1936
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
Text
In this way, in addition, the statement in the Talmudic chapter Ha-ro’eh (Berakhot 56) can be explicated: “There are three types of peace—a river, a bird and a cooking…
Contributor:
Jacob Ettlinger
Places:
Altona, Kingdom of Denmark
(Altona, Germany)
Date:
1850
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Following the example of Plato, I have Socrates in his last hours relate the arguments for the immortality of the human soul to his students. The dialogue of the Greek author, which has the name Phaed…
Contributor:
Moses Mendelssohn
Places:
Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia
(Berlin, Germany)
Date:
1767
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
Text
Noble-mindedness is a very fine character trait in the soul of man, and it extends in many directions: primarily in three, which are, noble-mindedness in wisdom, noble-mindedness in power, and noble…
Contributor:
Naphtali Herts Wessely
Places:
Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia
(Berlin, Germany)
Date:
ca. 1780s
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
The telos (takhlit) of man’s activities, in the aspect (behinah) of having will and choice, is the ultimate human good (ha’hatslahah ha’enoshi’it). This excellence necessarily comes after the…
Contributor:
Solomon Maimon
Places:
Berlin, Kingdom of Prussia
(Berlin, Germany)
Date:
1792
Subjects:
Categories:
Restricted
Text
Earlier on we have clearly shown that the animal soul does not consist of blood and how much less so the human soul, since the latter is an incorporeal substance, invisible and incorruptible, whereas…
Contributor:
Samuel da Silva
Places:
Hamburg, Holy Roman Empire
(Hamburg, Germany)
Date:
1623