The Book of Beliefs and Opinions

Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel, to whom the truth is known with absolute certainty; who confirmeth to men the certainty of the truths which their souls experience—finding as they do through their souls their sense perceptions to be trustworthy; and knowing as they do through their souls their rational knowledge to be correct; thereby…

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The Book of Beliefs and Opinions (Kitāb al-amānāt wa-’l-i‘tiqādāt) is one of the earliest and most influential statements of medieval Jewish theology. In both style of argument and the issues addressed, it is firmly in the tradition of Islamic dialectical theology known as kalām. Writing toward the end of his life, Se‘adya considers the place of reason in religious thought, the nature of divine commandments, the resurrection of the dead, and many other topics. He seems to have written some parts of this work as separate treatises before collecting them into one book. This Judeo-Arabic text engaged generations of Jews; translations and reworkings in Hebrew circulated widely. (It was translated into Hebrew by Judah Ibn Tibbon [ca. 1120–after 1190] in 1186.) These passages, drawn from the beginning of this work, deal with religious epistemology and are informed by Islamic thought.

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