Lexington Books
Pages: 298
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-4985-9061-7 • Hardback • July 2019 • $117.00 • (£90.00)
978-1-4985-9062-4 • eBook • July 2019 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
Phillip Stambovsky teaches philosophy at Fairfield University and is author of Inference and the Metaphysic of Reason (2009).
Preface Introduction
Part I
Jewish Philosophy and the Idea of a Philosophical Science of Devotional Intelligence
Chapter 1Philosophy of Judaism and the Idea of a “Science of Knowing” Dedicated to Jewish
Religious Thinking
Chapter 2Devotional Intelligence as the Focus of an Essay in the Science of Knowing
Part II
Intelligenceand Maimonidean Religious Thinking: That Knowing is of Being
Chapter 3 Maimonides, Intelligence and Judgment in Religious Thinking
Chapter 4Intelligence in Maimonides’ Ontotheology and in Aristotle’s De anima: Tracing and
Retrieving the Onto-Epistemological Core of Devotional Intelligence
Chapter 5 G. W. F. Hegel’s Psychology of Intelligence as a Resource for a Modern Maimonidean
Appendix I: Hegel’s Conception of Intuition and Devotional Judgment
Appendix II: Prophetic Intuition
Part III
Devotion as Sacral Attunement: Meaning and the Factor of the Transcendent
Chapter 6Fundamental Attunement, the Religious Act, and the Onto-Epistemology of the Sacred
Chapter 7The Shared Warrant of Sacrally Attuned and Scientific Judgment: Meaning and the Factor
of the Transcendent
Part IV
Application and Amplifications:
The Intellectual Warrant of Religious Thinking of the Divine Names
Chapter 8 Jewish Religious Thinking that Identifies the Attributive Divine Names with the Tetragrammaton
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
About the Author
Phillip Stambovsky’s neo-Maimonidean book is an intriguing and original attempt to rethink the notions of intelligence and the intelligible within the context of continental philosophy of religion.
— Yitzhak Y. Melamed, Professor of Philosophy, Charlotte Bloomberg Chair in the Humanities, Johns Hopkins University
In his philosophical essay Devotional Intelligence and Jewish Religious Thinking, Phillip Stambovsky develops a veritable "science of knowing" dedicated to Jewish religious thinking. This rigorous onto-epistemology, reflecting the primordial unity of being and knowing, aims at fostering a disciplined reflective intelligence, a genuinely rational agency. In conversation with Aristotle, Kant, Fichte, Hegel, Heidegger, and Soloveitchik, the author renews Maimonides' philosophical project in a decidedly and critically modern subject-oriented form. Devotional intelligence and Jewish Religious Thinking is the most creative, substantial, rigorous, and undoubtedly controversial instantiation of Jewish philosophy in the 21st century that I am aware of. This extraordinary work is indispensable reading for any serious thinker interested in the contemporary renewal of the metaphysics of knowledge in general and of religious knowledge in particular.
— Reinhard Huetter, Ordinarius Professor of Fundamental and Dogmatic Theology, School of Theology and Religious Studies, The Catholic University of America