Results for 'War (Jewish law) '

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  1.  4
    Religious Zionism, Jewish law, and the morality of war: how five rabbis confronted one of modern Judaism's greatest challenges.Robert Eisen - 2017 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    This study is a pioneering exploration of how rabbis in the religious Zionist community in Israel constructed a body of Jewish law on war. It focuses on five leading rabbis in this camp and how they dealt with a number of key moral issues that the waging of modern war raised.
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  2.  6
    War and peace in Jewish tradition: from the biblical world to the present: the Third Annual Conference of the Israel Heritage Department Ariel, Israel.Yigal Levin & Amnon Shapira (eds.) - 2012 - New York: Routledge.
    War and peace in the Bible -- Theoretical aspects of war in rabbinic thought -- War and peace in modern Jewish thought and practice -- Israel, war, ethics and the media.
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  3. War and peace in Jewish tradition: from the biblical world to the present: the Third Annual Conference of the Israel Heritage Department Ariel, Israel.Yigal Levin & Amnon Shapira (eds.) - 2012 - New York: Routledge.
    War and peace in the Bible -- Theoretical aspects of war in rabbinic thought -- War and peace in modern Jewish thought and practice -- Israel, war, ethics and the media.
     
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  4.  7
    One Life for Another in the Holocaust: A Singularity for Jewish Law?Melech Westreich - 2000 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 1 (2).
    Millions of Jews who were committed to the Halacha, the Jewish code of law, were under Nazi rule and control during the Second World War. Various sources indicate that during the Holocaust, such Jews petitioned rabbis and Halacha sages with questions on halachic matters, both of a ritual nature as well as a legal nature. Due to the tremendous profusion during the Holocaust of situations in which the matter of preferring one life over another arose, one would expect to (...)
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  5.  24
    Jewish social ethics.David Novak - 1992 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Leading contemporary Jewish thinker David Novak has here compiled ten of his essays on a variety of issues in Jewish ethics. Drawing constantly on classical Jewish tradition, Novak also looks at a wide range of modern critical scholarship on the ancient sources. He aims to point out certain common features of Jewish and Christian ethics and the normative implications of this overlapping of traditions; he assumes the reality of a "Judeo-Christian ethic," while refusing to minimize the (...)
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  6. The fall and rise of myth in ritual+ Exploring formative influences on the''naturalization''of Judaic law in the Middle-Ages: Maimonides versus Nahmanides on the''Hiqqim''(rabbinic statutes), astrology, and the war against idolatry.J. Stern - 1997 - Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy 6 (2):185-263.
     
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  7.  64
    Bal taschit: A jewish environmental precept.Eilon Schwartz - 1997 - Environmental Ethics 19 (4):355-374.
    The talmudic law bal tashchit (”do not destroy”) is the predominant Jewish precept cited in contemporary Jewish writings on the environment. I provide an extensive survey of the roots and differing interpretations of the precept from within the tradition. The precept of bal tashchit has its roots in the biblical command not to destroy fruit-bearing trees while laying siege to a warring city. The rabbis expandthis injunction into the general precept of bal tashchit, a ban on any wanton (...)
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  8.  2
    Law, Politics, and Morality in Judaism.Michael Walzer (ed.) - 2006 - Princeton University Press.
    This volume of collected essays by Michael Walzer seeks to bring a more concentrated focus on specifically Jewish outlooks regarding three key themes: "Political Order and Civil Society"; "Territory, Sovereignty, and International Society"; and "War and Peace.".
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  9. RETRACTED ARTICLE: The “Default Hypothesis” Fails to Explain Jewish Influence.Kevin MacDonald - 2022 - Philosophia 51 (1):403-403.
    The role of Jewish activism in the transformative changes that have occurred in the West in recent decades continues to be controversial. Here I respond to several issues putatively related to Jewish influence, particularly the “default hypothesis” that Jewish IQ and urban residency explain Jewish influence and the role of the Jewish community in enacting the 1965 immigration law in the United States; other issues include Jewish ethnocentrism and intermarriage and whether diaspora Jews are (...)
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  10. Where Nothing Happened: The Experience of War Captivity and Levinas’s Concept of the ‘There Is’.Johanna Jacques - 2017 - Social and Legal Studies 26 (2):230-248.
    This article takes as its subject matter the juridico-political space of the prisoner of war (POW) camp. It sets out to determine the nature of this space by looking at the experience of war captivity by Jewish members of the Western forces in World War II, focusing on the experience of Emmanuel Levinas, who spent 5 years in German war captivity. On the basis of a historical analysis of the conditions in which Levinas spent his time in captivity, it (...)
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  11.  56
    The perfect law of freedom.Frank van Dun - unknown
    ‘The one who peers into the perfect law of freedom and perseveres, and is not a hearer who forgets but a doer who acts, such a one shall be blessed in what he does’ (James 1:25). Freedom, in one sense of the word or another, is a central theme of the bible, the Old Testament as well as the New. During the Middle Ages, Christian theologians developed this theme into a doctrine of the natural right of freedom of the individual (...)
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  12. ha-Tsava ka-halakhah: hilkhot milḥamah ṿe-tsava.Yitsḥaḳ ben Yosef Ḳofman - 1992 - Yerushalayim: Hotsaʼat Ḳol mevaśer.
     
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  13.  2
    An Examination on Whether the State's Policy on Non-Muslim Temples is Religious or Political in the Islamic Law of States.İsa Atci - 2022 - Atebe 7:15-36.
    People who are not Muslims but live under the rule of the Islamic state under certain conditions are called "non-Muslim". With the Prophet’s migration to Madinah, he encountered a non-Muslim community and clearly demonstrated his stance on them with the "Madinah Convention". As a result of the intense conquest movements that started with the Companions period, non-Muslim people became the citizen of the Islamic state. Legal arrangements have been made regarding these, and their status before the state and within the (...)
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  14. Sefer Ṿe-ḥai bahem. Merid - 1996 - Yerushalayim: [Ḥ. Mo. L.].
    Ṿe-ḥai ba-hem ṿe-lo she-yamut bahem -- Devarim ha-nitṿasfin -- Ḳunṭres Mitsṿat ha-kibush.
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  15. ʻArakhim be-mivḥan milḥamah: musar u-milḥamah bi-reʼi ha-Yahadut: ḳovets maʼamarim le-zikhro shel Ram Mizraḥi..Ram Mizraḥi (ed.) - 1985 - Yerushalayim: Be-hotsaʼat ha-mishpaḥah ṿeha-ḥaverim bi-Yeshivat Har-ʻEtsyon.
     
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  16. ha-Milḥamah be-ṭeror: ḳovets maʼamarim be-ʻinyene musar ṿe-halakhah.Yaʼir Haleṿi (ed.) - 2006 - Ḳiryat Arbaʻ: ha-Makhon le-rabane yishuvim Ḳiryat Arbaʻ Ḥevron.
     
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  17.  7
    The Philosophy of Joseph B. Soloveitchik.Heshey Zelcer & Mark Zelcer - 2021 - New York, NY: Routledge. Edited by Mark Zelcer.
    Providing a concise but comprehensive overview of Joseph B. Soloveitchik's larger philosophical program, this book studies one of the most important modern Orthodox Jewish thinkers. It incorporates much relevant biographical, philosophical, religious, legal, and historical background so that the content and difficult philosophical concepts are easily accessible. The volume describes his view of Jewish law and how he answers the fundamental question of Jewish philosophy, namely, the "reasons" for the commandments. It shows how many of his disparate (...)
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  18. Sefer Torat ben Noaḥ: ʻal seder ha-Rambam Hilkhot melakhim p. 8 u-f. 9, yo. l. mi-ket. y. ha-meḥaber ; Sefer Yad Efrayim: ʻal tsaṿaʼat R. Y. he-Ḥasid, yo. l. be-mahadurah shelishit metuḳenet.Efrayim Billiṭtser - 2005 - Yerushalayim: Efrayim Bilitser. Edited by Efrayim Billiṭtser.
     
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  19. Sefer Torat ben Noaḥ: ʻal seder ha-Rambam Hilkhot melakhim p. 8 u-f. 9, yo. l. mi-ket. y. ha-meḥaber ; Sefer Yad Efrayim: ʻal tsaṿaʼat R. Y. he-Ḥasid, yo. l. be-mahadurah shelishit metuḳenet.Efrayim Billiṭtser - 2005 - Yerushalayim: Efrayim Bilitser. Edited by Efrayim Billiṭtser.
     
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  20. Be-ʻiḳvot Milḥemet Yom ha-kipurim: pirḳe halakhah, hagut u-meḥḳar.Dov Ginzburg (ed.) - 1973 - [Israel]: Mifḳedet Piḳud ha-merkaz, ha-Rabanut ha-tsevaʼit.
     
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  21.  17
    The Best Love of the Child: Being Loved and Being Taught to Love as the First Human Right ed. by Timothy P. Jackson.Mary M. Doyle Roche - 2014 - Journal of the Society of Christian Ethics 34 (2):231-232.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Reviewed by:The Best Love of the Child: Being Loved and Being Taught to Love as the First Human Right ed. by Timothy P. JacksonMary M. Doyle RocheReview of The Best Love of the Child: Being Loved and Being Taught to Love as the First Human Right EDITED TIMOTHY P. JACKSON Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2011. 416 pp. $28.00With The Best Love of the Child, Eerdmans adds to an already (...)
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  22.  11
    Divine Spirit and Physical Power: Rabbi Shlomo Goren and the Military Ethic of the Israel Defense Forces.Arye Edrei - 2006 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 7 (1):255-297.
    The renewal of Jewish sovereignty in 1948 created a grave challenge to Jewish tradition. As a system that was constructed in exile for a non-sovereign society, Jewish law was lacking "laws of state." The legitimacy of military action and the distinction between just and unjust wars are prime examples of fundamental issues that Jews did not have to confront for a very long period of time. This article examines contemporary Jewish legal responses to the challenges posed (...)
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  23.  9
    Perspectives on Maimonides: philosophical and historical studies.Joel L. Kraemer & Lawrence V. Berman (eds.) - 1991 - Portland, Or.: Littman Library of Jewish Civilization.
    Leading scholars have combined forces to produce this volume on the philosophy and legal views of Moses Maimonides (11381204) and the historical context in which he worked. The philosophical section examines Maimonides ethical~doctrine, his paradoxical life-style, his Guide of the Perplexed, his attitude to mysticism, his use of language, and his theory of astronomy. The legal section deals with law and medicine, the relation of Maimonides legal thought to the~Talmud, his doctrine of a just war, and his theory of redemption (...)
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  24.  13
    A life of H.L.A. Hart: the nightmare and the noble dream.Nicola Lacey - 2004 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    Herbert Lionel Adolphus Hart was born in Yorkshire in 1907 to second generation Jewish immigrants. Having won a scholarship to Oxford University, he went on to become the most famous legal philosopher of the twentieth century. From 1932-40 H.L.A Hart practised as a barrister in London. He was pronounced physically unfit for military service in 1940, and was recruited by MI5, where he worked until 1945. During his time at the Bar he had continued to study philosophy and at (...)
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  25.  6
    Legal Sabotage: Ernst Fraenkel in Hitler's Germany.Douglas G. Morris - 2020 - Cambridge University Press.
    The Jewish leftist lawyer Ernst Fraenkel was one of twentieth-century Germany's great intellectuals. During the Weimar Republic he was a shrewd constitutional theorist for the Social Democrats and in post-World War II Germany a respected political scientist who worked to secure West Germany's new democracy. This book homes in on the most dramatic years of Fraenkel's life, when he worked within Nazi Germany actively resisting the regime, both publicly and secretly. As a lawyer, he represented political defendants in court. (...)
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  26.  57
    Kurt H. Wolff and Italy: Tracing the Steps of an Elusive Spirit on his Journey Home.Onorina Del Vecchio - 2016 - Human Studies 39 (3):433-450.
    This article traces Kurt H. Wolff’s involvement with Italy, from his first sojourn in the 1930s as a German Jewish intellectual in exile to the end of his life. Wolff developed profound ties with the country that hosted him, and that he was forced to abandon once racial laws were introduced there on the eve of World War II. Nonetheless, throughout his life he regarded Italy as an elective homeland of sorts. Wolff’s Italian experience is revisited through a detailed (...)
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  27.  46
    Tradizioni morali. Greci, ebrei, cristiani, islamici.Sergio Cremaschi - 2015 - Roma, Italy: Edizioni di storia e letteratura.
    Ex interiore ipso exeas. Preface. This book reconstructs the history of a still open dialectics between several ethoi, that is, shared codes of unwritten rules, moral traditions, or self-aware attempts at reforming such codes, and ethical theories discussing the nature and justification of such codes and doctrines. Its main claim is that this history neither amounts to a triumphal march of reason dispelling the mist of myth and bigotry nor to some other one-way process heading to some pre-established goal, but (...)
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  28.  58
    Understanding religious ethics.Charles Mathewes - 2010 - Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
    God and morality -- Jewish ethics -- Christian ethics -- Islamic ethics -- Friendship -- Sexuality -- Marriage and family -- Lying -- Forgiveness -- Love and justice -- Duty, law, conscience -- Capital punishment -- War (I) : towards war -- War (II) : in war -- Religion and the environment -- Pursuits of happiness : labor, leisure, and life -- Good and evil.
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  29.  75
    Breve storia dell'etica.Sergio Cremaschi - 2012 - Roma RM, Italia: Carocci.
    The book reconstructs the history of Western ethics. The approach chosen focuses the endless dialectic of moral codes, or different kinds of ethos, moral doctrines that are preached in order to bring about a reform of existing ethos, and ethical theories that have taken shape in the context of controversies about the ethos and moral doctrines as means of justifying or reforming moral doctrines. Such dialectic is what is meant here by the phrase ‘moral traditions’, taken as a name for (...)
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  30.  31
    Carl Schmitt: A Biography.Reinhard Mehring - 2014 - Malden, MA: Polity.
    Carl Schmitt is one of the most widely read and influential German thinkers of the twentieth century. His fundamental works on friend and enemy, legality and legitimacy, dictatorship, political theology and the concept of the political are read today with great interest by everyone from conservative Catholic theologians to radical political thinkers on the left. In his private life, however, Schmitt was haunted by the demons of his wild anti-Semitism, his self-destructive and compulsive sexuality and his deep-seated resentment against the (...)
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  31.  20
    Hermann Cohen.Scott Edgar - 2010 - The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Hermann Cohen (b. 1842, d. 1919), more than any other single figure, is responsible for founding the orthodox neo-Kantianism that dominated academic philosophy in Germany from the 1870s until the end of the First World War. Earlier German philosophers finding inspiration in Kant tended either towards speculative, metaphysical idealism, or sought to address philosophical questions with the resources of the empirical sciences, especially psychology. In contrast, Cohen’s seminal interpretation of Kant offered a vision of philosophy that decisively maintained its independence (...)
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  32.  11
    A Life of H. L. A. Hart: The Nightmare and the Noble Dream.Nicola Lacey - 2004 - New York: Oxford University Press UK.
    Shortlisted for the 2005 British Academy Book prize, Nicola Lacey's entrancing biography recounts the life of H.L.A. Hart, the pre-eminent legal philosopher of the twentieth century. Following Hart's life from modest origins as the son of Jewish tailor parents in Yorkshire to worldwide fame as the most influential English-speaking legal theorist of the post-War era, the book traces his successive metamorphoses; from Yorkshire schoolboy to Oxford scholar, from government intelligence officer to Professor of Jurisprudence, from awkward batchelor to family (...)
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  33.  58
    The Ethics of Salomon Maimon.David Baumgardt - 1963 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 1 (2):199-210.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:The Ethics of Salomon Maimon (1753-1800) DAVID BAUMGARDT* SALOMON MAIMON is now generally considered the most acute mind among the earliest critics of Kant. Kant himself had praised his acumen,1 though later qualifying his regard decisively.2 Johann Gottfried Herder called * We have just learned of the death of the author. David Baumgardt, born in Germany on April 20, 1890, studied in Vienna and in Berlin and taught philosophy (...)
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  34. L'etica del Novecento. Dopo Nietzsche.Sergio Cremaschi - 2005 - Roma RM, Italia: Carocci.
    TWENTIETH-CENTURY ETHICS. AFTER NIETZSCHE -/- Preface This book tells the story of twentieth-century ethics or, in more detail, it reconstructs the history of a discussion on the foundations of ethics which had a start with Nietzsche and Sidgwick, the leading proponents of late-nineteenth-century moral scepticism. During the first half of the century, the prevailing trends tended to exclude the possibility of normative ethics. On the Continent, the trend was to transform ethics into a philosophy of existence whose self-appointed task was (...)
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  35.  17
    Political Authority: A Christian Perspective.Michael von Brück - 2010 - Buddhist-Christian Studies 30:159-170.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Political AuthorityA Christian PerspectiveMichael von BrückGeneral Reflection: Apocalyptic and Utopian Models of Progress and ReligionEuropean tradition of thought is shaped by two different mythical imaginations of time structure: apocalyptic thought and the concept of utopia.Jewish apocalyptical thinking culminated in the expectation that God would finally complete the processes of history at the end of time. In conjunction with Iranian dualism this expectation was interpreted metaphysically: After the collapse (...)
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  36.  18
    Eugenics.Mary Carrington Coutts & Pat Milmoe McCarrick - 1995 - Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 5 (2):163-178.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:EugenicsMary Carrington Coutts (bio) and Pat Milmoe McCarrick (bio)The word eugenics (from the Greek eugenes or well-born) was coined in 1883 by Francis Galton, an Englishman and cousin of Charles Darwin, who applied Darwinian science to develop theories about heredity and good or noble birth (I, Kevles 1985, p. x).The entry under "eugenics" in the Encyclopedia of Bioethics notes that the term has had different meanings in different eras: (...)
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  37. In Between States.Paul Amitai - 2012 - Continent 2 (3):208-217.
    Introduction Paul Boshears The following excerpt from Paul Amitai's In Between States: Field notes and speculations on postwar landscapes (2012) confounds its reader. Presenting an alternate history of the State of Israel as a space station orbiting Earth, the excitement of possibilities crackles across the texts and images. Like Chris Marker's La Jeteé , the accompanying static images distort the viewer's temporality: are these archaeological items, images from a past, or a future? Why isn't this our future? In Between States (...)
     
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  38.  10
    Exile, Statelessness, and Migration: Response to my critics.Seyla Benhabib - 2020 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 46 (1):34-44.
    My new book, Exile, Statelessness, and Migration. Playing Chess With History From Hannah Arendt to Isaiah Berlin, considers the intertwined lives and work of Jewish intellectuals as they make their escape from war-torn Europe into new countries. Although the group which I consider, including Hannah Arendt, Theodor Adorno, Walter Benjamin, Judith Shklar, Albert Hirschman and Isaiah Berlin, have a unique profile as migrants because of their formidable education and intellectual capital, I argue that their lives are still exemplary for (...)
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  39.  17
    A Prophetic Peace: Judaism, Religion, and Politics.Alick Isaacs - 2011 - Indiana University Press.
    Challenging deeply held convictions about Judaism, Zionism, war, and peace, Alick Isaacs's combat experience in the second Lebanon war provoked him to search for a way of reconciling the belligerence of religion with its messages of peace. In his insightful readings of the texts of Biblical prophecy and rabbinic law, Isaacs draws on the writings of Ludwig Wittgenstein, Jacques Derrida, Abraham Joshua Heschel, and Martin Buber, among others, to propose an ambitious vision of religiously inspired peace. Rejecting the notion of (...)
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  40.  23
    Theaters of Justice: Arendt in Jerusalem, the Eichmann Trial, and the Redefinition of Legal Meaning in the Wake of the Holocaust.Shoshana Felman - 2000 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 1 (2).
    This paper explores the Eichmann trial in its dimension as a living, powerful event, whose impact is defined and measured by the fact that it is "not the same for all." I examine this legal event from two perspectives: Hannah Arendt's and my own. I pledge my reading against Arendt's, in espousing the State's vision of the trial, but in interpreting the legal meaning of this vision us one that exceeds its own deliberateness and distinct from the State's ideology. I (...)
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  41.  6
    Loving Judaism through Christianity.Shaul Magid - 2020 - Common Knowledge 26 (1):88-124.
    This contribution to the Common Knowledge symposium on xenophilia examines the life choices of two Jews who loved Christianity. Elijah Zvi Soloveitchik, born into an ultra-Orthodox, nineteenth-century rabbinic dynasty in Lithuania, spent much of his life writing a Hebrew commentary on the Gospels in order to document and argue for the symmetry or symbiosis that he perceived between Judaism and Christianity. Oswald Rufeisen, from a twentieth-century secular Zionist background in Poland, converted to Catholicism during World War II, became a monk, (...)
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  42. Proceedings of the British Academy Volume 125, 2003 Lectures.P. Marshall (ed.) - 2004 - British Academy.
    Fergus Kelly: Thinking in Threes: The Triad in Early Irish Literature Brian Pullan: Charity and Usury: Jewish and Christian Lending in Renaissance and Early Modern Italy Noel Malcolm: The Crescent and the City of the Sun: Islam and the Renaissance Utopia of Tommaso Campanella H. R. Woudhuysen: The Foundations of Shakespeare's Text J. G. A. Pocock: The Re-Description of Enlightenment Andrew Hadfield: Michael Drayton and the Burden of History Eric Foner: Abraham Lincoln: The Great Emancipator? Gillian Beer: Revenants and (...)
     
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  43.  5
    “Truth” is a Divine Name: Hitherto Unpublished Papers of Edward A. Synan, 1918-1997.Janice L. Schultz-Aldrich (ed.) - 2010 - Brill / Rodopi.
    This volume contains essays on an array of topics originally presented orally by a master teacher and scholar. With characteristic rhetorical elegance, Msgr. Synan, late professor at the Pontifical Institute in Toronto, delivered these papers in a variety of settings on issues relating to his specialty of mediaeval Christian philosophy and to his interest in Jewish-Christian dialogue, on the theology of sanctity and of death, and on morally significant historical events. Medieval figures represented here include Aquinas, Augustine, Abelard, and (...)
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  44. Conscientious Objections: Toward a Reconstruction of the Social and Political Philosophy of Jesus of Nazareth.J. Landrum Kelly - 1994 - Edwin Mellen Press.
    This study argues for the historical existence of Jesus of Nazareth as a radical Jewish pacifist who angered both the orthodox religious establishment and those who advocated violent insurrection against the Romans. The author asserts that Jesus' views were based on belief in a non-retributive, omnibenevolent God, challenging not only the Mosaic Law but assumptions about eternal punishment and the divine sanction of the state and its retributive institutions of war and punishment. The volume also interprets Paul as being (...)
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  45.  13
    The Occupied Territories, Gaza, and Israel’s Recent Slide to Authoritarianism.Menachem Mautner - 2020 - The Law and Ethics of Human Rights 14 (2):273-292.
    In recent years there have been numerous warnings in the press and in the social networks that Israel is about to convert its liberal democracy into a fascist regime. This Article argues that the occupation of the West Bank stands at the root of the most important processes that have been taking place in Israel in the past five decades. One of those processes is the erosion of Israel’s liberalism. I claim that the prolongation of the occupation is the central, (...)
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  46.  12
    “Truth” is a Divine Name. [REVIEW]Raymond Dennehy - 2011 - Review of Metaphysics 65 (2):449-450.
    This volume contains essays on an array of topics originally presented orally by a master teacher and scholar. With characteristic rhetorical elegance, Msgr. Synan, late professor at the Pontifical Institute in Toronto, delivered these papers in a variety of settings on issues relating to his specialty of mediaeval Christian philosophy and to his interest in Jewish-Christian dialogue, on the theology of sanctity and of death, and on morally significant historical events. Medieval figures represented here include Aquinas, Augustine, Abelard, and (...)
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  47.  25
    Liability in the Care of the Elderly. [REVIEW]P. Iyer - 2004 - Modern Schoolman 33 (1):124-131.
    This volume contains essays on an array of topics originally presented orally by a master teacher and scholar. With characteristic rhetorical elegance, Msgr. Synan, late professor at the Pontifical Institute in Toronto, delivered these papers in a variety of settings on issues relating to his specialty of mediaeval Christian philosophy and to his interest in Jewish-Christian dialogue, on the theology of sanctity and of death, and on morally significant historical events. Medieval figures represented here include Aquinas, Augustine, Abelard, and (...)
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  48.  15
    Public Health, Racial Tensions, and Body Politic: Mass Ringworm Irradiation in Israel, 1949–1960.Nadav Davidovitch & Avital Margalit - 2008 - Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics 36 (3):522-529.
    The BiDil affair brought once again to the fore questions of race and medicine. As discussed in other essays in this collection, the emergence of BiDil as the first medication approved and marketed for treating specific racial groups raises important questions for medicine and society: How are race and ethnicity framing our understanding of health and illness? Should treatment decisions be based on the race and ethnicity of patients? Should we encourage the development of race-specific medical treatments in order to (...)
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  49. Transitional Justice and the Right of Return of the Palestinian Refugees.Nadim N. Rouhana & Yoav Peled - 2004 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 5 (2):317-332.
    All efforts undertaken so far to establish peace between Israel and the Palestinians have failed to seriously address the right of return of the Palestinian refugees. This failure stemmed from a conviction that the question of historical justice in general had to be avoided. Since justice is a subjective construct, it was argued, allowing it to become a subject of negotiation would only perpetuate the conflict. However, the experience of these peace efforts has shown that without solving the problem of (...)
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  50.  12
    The Use of Force Beyond the Liberal Imagination: Terror and Empire in Palestine, 1947.Shai Lavi - 2006 - Theoretical Inquiries in Law 7 (1):199-228.
    The question of the use of force and its relation to political power has resurfaced in an era of terror attacks and wars against terror. The liberal conceptualization of this relation is limited by the bipolar understanding of force as either legitimate or illegitimate. Turning to the history of the Irgun, a Jewish underground movement, and its struggle against the British Empire in 1947 Palestine, this article seeks to expand the understanding of force beyond the liberal paradigm. The article (...)
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