The Kabbalah (literally, âreceivedâ or âtraditionâ) is a mystical, esoteric form of Judaism which flourished especially in Spain and southern France in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Like so many forms of Judaism, it has also been influential on Christianity, and was studied by, among others, the Renaissance philosopher Pico della Mirandola (1463â1494) and the German humanist Johannes Reuchlin (1455â1522). The Kabbalah contains speculations about the nature of God and the relationship between God and the universe. Both its view of creation (resulting not from the overflowing of Godâs goodness, but from an act of divine self-limitation that permits the world to emerge) and of redemption (âthe Kabbalah . . . made the salvation of God b...
The Italian Renaissance was to many of its contemporaries a golden age. It was unarguably a phenomen...
From its inception in twelfth-century Provence, the Kabbalistic tradition contends that the performa...
Kabbalah: path of language mysticismFor Judaism, the Hebrew language is not simply a communicative m...
The Kabbalah (literally, âreceivedâ or âtraditionâ) is a mystical, esoteric form of Judaism which fl...
Kabbalah, the culmination of mystical and esoteric traditions that stretch back thousands of years, ...
This study intends to introduce the Kabbalah, a Jewish mystical tradition, in relation to the fallen...
The Kabbalah of Forgiveness is a translation of the first chapter of Rabbi Moshe Cordovero’s classic...
The article is concerned with the perception of exile of the Jews who experienced it for two thousan...
“Sabbatianism” is a movement named after Sabbatai Tzvi (1626-1676), a Jew of the Ottoman Empire. Thi...
The present paper establishes a dialog between Paul Celan’s poetry and Slavoj Žižek contemporary tho...
The discussion about demarcation of objects of research between theology and other humanities right...
Most discussions about notions of authority and dissent in early modem Europe usually imply those em...
By tracing the total history of a single text, Ari Nohem (Heb. A Roaring Lion), composed in Venice b...
The theology of redemption in the light of Judaism is a fundamental concern of Franz Kafka. In his n...
This paper explores the way in which God as the infinite ground of existence is discerned by the ima...
The Italian Renaissance was to many of its contemporaries a golden age. It was unarguably a phenomen...
From its inception in twelfth-century Provence, the Kabbalistic tradition contends that the performa...
Kabbalah: path of language mysticismFor Judaism, the Hebrew language is not simply a communicative m...
The Kabbalah (literally, âreceivedâ or âtraditionâ) is a mystical, esoteric form of Judaism which fl...
Kabbalah, the culmination of mystical and esoteric traditions that stretch back thousands of years, ...
This study intends to introduce the Kabbalah, a Jewish mystical tradition, in relation to the fallen...
The Kabbalah of Forgiveness is a translation of the first chapter of Rabbi Moshe Cordovero’s classic...
The article is concerned with the perception of exile of the Jews who experienced it for two thousan...
“Sabbatianism” is a movement named after Sabbatai Tzvi (1626-1676), a Jew of the Ottoman Empire. Thi...
The present paper establishes a dialog between Paul Celan’s poetry and Slavoj Žižek contemporary tho...
The discussion about demarcation of objects of research between theology and other humanities right...
Most discussions about notions of authority and dissent in early modem Europe usually imply those em...
By tracing the total history of a single text, Ari Nohem (Heb. A Roaring Lion), composed in Venice b...
The theology of redemption in the light of Judaism is a fundamental concern of Franz Kafka. In his n...
This paper explores the way in which God as the infinite ground of existence is discerned by the ima...
The Italian Renaissance was to many of its contemporaries a golden age. It was unarguably a phenomen...
From its inception in twelfth-century Provence, the Kabbalistic tradition contends that the performa...
Kabbalah: path of language mysticismFor Judaism, the Hebrew language is not simply a communicative m...