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Religion Philosophy

God, Man, and the World

Lectures and Essays

by (author) Franz Rosenzweig

translated by Barbara E. Galli

Publisher
Syracuse University Press
Initial publish date
Dec 1998
Category
Philosophy, Theology, Essays
  • Hardback

    ISBN
    9780815627883
    Publish Date
    Dec 1998
    List Price
    $53.95

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Description

Translated here for the first time by Barbara E. Galli, these five lectures and writings of Franz Rosenzweig will be welcomed by both the novice and the veteran student of the great philosopher.
Based on his lectures at the Jildisches Freies Lehrhaus, the famous Jewish Institute of Adult Education, the essays include notes for a group of lectures of 1920, "Faith and Knowledge," followed by a three-part lecture series of 1922: "The Science of God," "The Science of Man," and the "Science of World."
The pieces form a powerful whole. Not only does this book further our understanding of Rosenzweig's daunting work, The Star of Redemption—a seemingly inexhaustible text—but of Rosenzweig's primary principles, that of the irreducibility of God, human being, and world, and of the needfulness of relation and of time for the nourishment of truth and cognition. He expounds on his premise that faith and knowledge are interdependent, and that knowledge is derivative of faith.

About the authors

Contributor Notes

Michael Oppenheim is the chair of the Department of Religion at Concordia University in Montreal.
Barbara E. Galli is presently the Aaron Aaronov Chair of Judaic Studies at the University of Alabama.

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