02672nam 22004455 450 99634774670331620230906190739.01-64469-330-510.1515/9781644693308(CKB)4100000011288986(DE-B1597)550499(DE-B1597)9781644693308(OCoLC)1158111530(ScCtBLL)33f661ec-c4fa-40c2-83ea-614ad6bb2c92(EXLCZ)99410000001128898620200526h20202009 fg engur||#||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierJewish Religion After Theology /Avi SagiBoston, MA :Academic Studies Press,[2020]©20091 online resource (264 p.)Emunot: Jewish Philosophy and KabbalahFrontmatter --Contents --Preface --Chapter One. Are Toleration and Pluralism Possible in Jewish Religion? --Chapter Two. Yeshayahu Leibovitz: The Man against his Thought --Chapter Three. Leibowitz and Camus: Between Faith and the Absurd --Chapter Four. Jewish Religion without Theology --Chapter Five. The Critique of Theodicy: From Metaphysics to Praxis --Chapter Six. The Holocaust: A Theological or a Religious-Existentialist Problem? --Chapter Seven. Tikkun Olam: Between Utopian Idea and Socio-Historical Process --BIBLIOGRAPHY --INDEXJewish Religion after Theology ponders one of the most intriguing shifts in modern Jewish thought: from a metaphysical and theological standpoint toward a new manner of philosophizing based primarily on practice. Different chapters study this great shift and its various manifestations. The central figure of this new examination is Isaiah Leibowitz, whose thoughts encapsulate more than any other Jewish thinker this stance of religion without metaphysics. Sagi explores corresponding issues such as observance, the possibility of pluralism, the meaning of penance without messianic suppositions, and pragmatic coping with theodicy after the Holocaust, presenting the different possibilities within this great alteration in Jewish thought.PHILOSOPHY / ReligiousbisacshPHILOSOPHY / Religious.296.3Sagi Abrahamauthttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/aut1097613Stein Batya852864Knowledge Unlatchedfndhttp://id.loc.gov/vocabulary/relators/fndDE-B1597DE-B1597BOOK996347746703316Jewish Religion After Theology3476353UNISA