Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life
Hilary Putnam's 2008 study — Rosenzweig, Buber, Levinas, Wittgenstein as resources for a religious life
Tradition: Jewish philosophy / Pragmatism
Putnam's 2008 engagement with modern Jewish philosophy — Rosenzweig, Buber, Levinas — and Wittgenstein as religious thinker
Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life: Rosenzweig, Buber, Levinas, Wittgenstein (2008) gathers Putnam's mature reflections on Jewish religious thought. The book engages Franz Rosenzweig's "new thinking," Martin Buber's I-Thou philosophy, Emmanuel Levinas's ethics of the other, and Ludwig Wittgenstein as resources for thinking about the religious life from within a philosophical sensibility that respects scientific naturalism without reducing the religious to the empirically describable.
Author
Editions cited
- Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life: Rosenzweig, Buber, Levinas, Wittgenstein (Indiana UP, 2008)
School Embodiments
Mature engagement with the modern Jewish-philosophical tradition from a position of practising-Jewish commitment.
"Modern Jewish philosophy is not a curiosity but a major contribution to contemporary thought about the religious life." (Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life)
Reading of modern Jewish philosophy through pragmatist sensibilities — religion as form of life.
"Religious belief is not bare assent to propositions; it is form of life and practice of community." (Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life)
Engagement with Levinas in particular brings phenomenological commitments to ethical encounter.
"What Levinas calls the 'face' of the other is the founding moment of ethical experience." (Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life)
Analytic-philosophical engagement with the modern Jewish-continental tradition — bridging two philosophical worlds.
"There is no good reason for analytic philosophy to ignore the continental Jewish tradition; on the contrary, the two enrich each other." (Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life)
Engages broader liberal-religious-philosophical commitments to non-reductive religious thought.
"Religious belief properly understood is consistent with — though not derivable from — scientific naturalism." (Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life)
Connects modern Jewish philosophy with broader existentialist concerns — Buber and Rosenzweig as existential thinkers.
"Rosenzweig's 'new thinking' is an existentialism rooted in the particularity of Jewish experience." (Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life)
Analytic-philosophical tradition.
Internal Tensions
Putnam's late religious turn has been variously assessed — defenders see it as proper philosophical maturity, critics see tension with his analytic-naturalist commitments.
I. Time
The mature-Putnam late-twentieth-century engagement with the Jewish-philosophical tradition.
Attributes
II. Space
American Jewish life; the broader trans-Atlantic philosophical conversation.
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III. Matter
The embodied practitioner whose religious life is the topic.
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IV. Observer
The Jewish-philosophical reader as participant in tradition.
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V. Energy
The religious-philosophical energies of the modern Jewish renaissance.
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VI. Information
The content of the modern Jewish-philosophical canon as Putnam reads it.
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Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How Jewish Philosophy as a Guide to Life resolves each dilemma
51 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 3 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 6 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.