Traitement en cours...
Fermer la notification

Toutes nos lignes téléphoniques...

sont actuellement en dérangement du fait de l'opérateur (SFR), qui nous dit mettre tout en œuvre pour rétablir la situation dans les plus brefs délais mais jusqu'ici n'a pas réussi à le faire.
Nous restons cependant à votre disposition par d'autres moyens pour vous informer.
Si vous souhaitez connaître les dates estimées d’expédition des titres que vous avez commandés, pensez à simplement consulter le détail de vos commandes sur side.fr.
Si vous avez besoin d’une autre information, vous pouvez, selon votre urgence, écrire à notre service clients à france@side.fr ou appeler directement votre représentant ou appeler le 06 34 54 96 63, le numéro d'urgence temporaire que nous avons mis en place en attendant de retrouver notre accueil téléphonique habituel.

Afficher la notification

Spinoza and Kabbalah

Benamozegh Élie, Davenne Yehiel
Date de parution 11/05/2024
EAN: 9782383660378
Disponibilité Disponible chez l'éditeur
Elijah Benamozegh was an uninvited guest at the philosophers’ banquet. Self-taught in western philosophy and modern sciences, he was a stranger in the room of Parisian metaphysical debates. Born in Livorno in 1823 to a family emigrated from Marocco, ... Voir la description complète
Nom d'attributValeur d'attribut
Common books attribute
ÉditeurTRANSCENDANTES
Nombre de pages86
Langue du livreAnglais
AuteurBenamozegh Élie, Davenne Yehiel
FormatPaperback / softback
Type de produitLivre
Date de parution11/05/2024
Poids104 g
Dimensions (épaisseur x largeur x hauteur)5,60 x 12,70 x 20,30 cm
Elijah Benamozegh was an uninvited guest at the philosophers’ banquet. Self-taught in western philosophy and modern sciences, he was a stranger in the room of Parisian metaphysical debates. Born in Livorno in 1823 to a family emigrated from Marocco, his first education was done by his maternal uncle, Rabbi Yehuda Coriat, author of important kabbalistic works. This first schooling was only Hebraic, and included the complete reading of the Zohar. Thus read under the guidance of an authentic traditionist, the Zohar would remain the metaphysical inspiration of Benamozegh. This first schooling encompassing the vast span of Hebrew culture, which he shared with Spinoza, should have established his competence as a judge of the latter. But his ‘Spinoza and Kabbalah’, published in 1863 in the very parochial L’Univers Israélite, went almost unnoticed.That the question of the influence of Kabbalah on Spinoza’s ontology should be problematic is in itself a wonder. It never escaped the acuity of careful readers, Leibniz among them. After the most recent research in the field, it has become hardly deniable. The long obfuscation of the fact that the starting point of Spinoza’s speculation on the absolute unity of ultimate Being and the production of the finite by the infinite lays in the kabbalistic books he owned and read, cannot be explained but by a conspiracy of ignorance and interest. Ignorance might be excused. Kabbalah literature has only started to be translated and studied. A cursory review of the interests at play is more interesting. Spinoza has long become the private preserve of enlightened Jewish scholars, for whom he is a personal model and a cultural hero. Compared to the subtlety and profundity of the ontological discussions among the kabbalists, Spinoza’s simplification posing as rationalism might pale and show itself as a closure of the mind bordering on charlatanism. Even more curious, is the destiny of Spinoza as Prophet for some radical circles. An alleged Prophet of radical democratic struggle could not be avowed to be, though heretical, a profoundly religious thinker.But Benamozegh’s contribution is a lot more than a landmark in the retrieval of Spinoza’s intellectual background. He reveals here his philosophical acumen in picking up in Spinoza’s system the weakest link: the modes infinite, immediate and mediate. The exact status and function of these modes, at the same time individuality and infinity, is an old puzzle in the interpretation of Spinozism. Commentators have stressed Spinoza’s own embarrassment when confronted on this question and challenged to give examples of infinite modes.Benamozegh’s main goal in this article was clearly to elevate the intellectual status of Kabbalah in the eyes of his audience: to diagnose Spinoza’s ontology as an aberration of Kabbalah is both proving that Kabbalah is an ontology and that Spinoza’s language might be used as a tool to formulate the rational exposition of that ontology, or at least to make the point that such a rational exposition is possible.Before even pretending to establish the intellectual legitimacy of the Jewish tradition in the eyes of enlightened Europeans, Rabbi Benamozegh had to confront the western European Jewish intellectual and rabbinical establishment on the antiquity and authenticity of Kabbalah itself.In La Kabbale et l’origine des dogmes chrétiens Benamozegh first demonstrates that the main features of Christian theology are already present in the New Testament and are not a late elaboration by the Church. He shows that they can be understood only in the light of Kabbalah as an aberration by simplification and conflagration of ontological levels.This line of argument is the exact counterpart of the one expounded here. Christianity and Spinozism are symmetrical aberrations deviating from a deeper inner core. As teratological models, they are witness to a hidden Truth, infinitely more immense and beautiful.