Sunday, August 4, 2019
Moses Mendelssohn :: essays research papers
 Moses Mendelssohn lived between the years 1729 and  1786. He was known as the " father of Haskalah " because  of his contributions to the Haskalah movement. Mendelssohn  was a Jewish philosopher, and got much of his education  from his father, the local rabbi, David Frankel. Mendelssohn  studied the philosophy of Maimonides. He had written the "  Principally Leibnia ",as an attack on the national neglect of  native philosophers. Also published by Mendelssohn was the  " Philosophical Conversations " in 1755. Between the years  1756 and 1759, Mendelssohn became known as the "  leading spirit of the Bibiothek " and ran some risk by freely  criticizing the poems of the king of Prussia. In 1762 he won  the prize offered by the Berlin academy for an essay on the  application of mathematical proofs to metaphysics. On  October 1763, the King granted Mendelssohn the privilege  of Protected Jew (Schutz - Jude), which assured his right to  undisturbed residence in Berlin. Mendelssohn devoted his  life to the culture and emancipation of the Jews. He began by  his German translation of the pentateuch and other parts of  the bible. From this, the Jews learned the German language,  German culture, and got a desire for German nationality.  Mendelssohn put forward his plea for tolerance in Jerusalem  " Oder Uben Religios Macht und Judenthum ". Mendelssohn  was a great philosopher, and his contributions to the Jews  were and still are great. Samson Raphael Hirsch lived  between the years 1808 and 1888. He was the leader of  Orthodoxy in Germany in the nine-teenth century. Hirsch  was known as the " Jewish religious thinker ", and the "  founder of Trenniley-Othodixie " (separatist Orthodoxy). He  was the leading spirit in the establishment and of modernized  Orthodox Jewish congregation and school system. The  slogan of the growing " neo-orthodox " group was " torah  combined with wordily wisdom ". They believed in schools  that the Hebrew language, Jewish subjects, secular studies,  and the school curriculum should be taught. Prussia adopted  a law permitting Jews to secede from the general Jewish  community and establish separate religious societies. Hirsch  wrote " Nineteen Letters "," Horeb ", commentaries on the  Pentateuch, Psalms, the Hebrew prayer book, and edited  the monthly " Jeshurun ". Hirsch showed Judaism as a  community based on faith, aiming at the sanctification of life,  the spiritualization of man, and the attainment of an  awareness of G-d's presence on Earth. He rejected biblical  criticism, and the application of scientific methods to the  study of Judaism. Moses Mendelssohn and Samson Raphael  Hirsch were different in that Mendelssohn believed in secular  education,assimilation within your country, and learning the  language of the country ( in his case, it was Germany ) .  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.