Jewish Philosophy and the Metaphor of Returning to Jerusalem

Sandu Frunza

Abstract


There are multiple manners of defining Jewish philosophy. The controversies woven around this topic seem to leave the issue perpetually open instead of determining a unique and final perspective. However, this outcome is indubitably an indication of the fact that Jewish philosophy proposes a privileged manner of understanding Judaism through the encounter between philosophy and religion as a founding polarity of a creative tradition. One of the ways of asserting this polarity has gained the symbolic dimension of superimposing two cultural paradigms. This has been expressed through the metaphor of two cities, namely Jerusalem and Athens, and through the metaphor of two lands, Greece and Israel. Out of these symbolic designations I will bring into discussion the standpoints of Leo Strauss and Abraham Joshua Heschel and will try to offer a new perspective over this issue.

Keywords


Jewish philosophy, Greek philosophy, Leo Strauss, Abraham Joshua Heschel, elliptic thinking, biblical tradition, Jerusalem and Athens, philosophy of religion

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