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Moses Maimonides (1135–1204)

Author of The Guide for the Perplexed

377+ Works 3,546 Members 18 Reviews 12 Favorited

About the Author

Maimonides (Moses ben Maimon) was born in Cordoba, Spain, but spent his most productive years in Cairo, where he served as a royal physician. The Arabic cultural environment brought him into contact with classical Greek philosophy. Maimonides fused neo-Aristotelian philosophy with the Jewish legal show more tradition into a systemic whole. His main philosophic work, "The Guide for the Perplexed," is an apologetic appeal to rationalists troubled by the corporeality of God in the biblical accounts. He proposes a philosophic interpretation of the Bible that emphasizes abstract and spiritual meaning over literal interpretation. Maimonides formulated the 13 principles of faith that represent the irreducible core of Judaism. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: From Wikimedia Commons

Series

Works by Moses Maimonides

The Guide for the Perplexed (1190) 1,344 copies, 10 reviews
The Guide of the Perplexed, Vol. 1 (1974) 242 copies, 1 review
Le Livre de la connaissance (1981) 23 copies
Epistle to Yemen (1952) 6 copies
Treatise on asthma (2002) 6 copies
Obras filosóficas y morales (2006) 5 copies, 1 review
Moses Maimonides (Rambam) (1966) 5 copies
Letters of Maimonides (1977) 5 copies
Epîtres (1993) 5 copies
מלות ההגיון (2004) 2 copies
Lettera sull'astrologia (1994) 2 copies
Work 1 copy
Traité de logique (1996) 1 copy
Igrot 1 copy
Rambam L'Am 1 copy
On evil 1 copy

Associated Works

The Philosopher's Handbook: Essential Readings from Plato to Kant (2000) — Contributor — 234 copies, 1 review
A Golden Treasure of Jewish Literature (1937) — Contributor — 82 copies, 1 review
Het derde testament joodse verhalen (1995) — Contributor, some editions — 7 copies
Haut ab!: Haltungen zur rituellen Beschneidung (2014) — Contributor — 4 copies, 1 review
Maimonides, der Mann, sein Werk und seine Wirkung — Associated Name — 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Maimonides, Moses
Legal name
ben Maimun, Moshe
Other names
RamBam (רמב"ם)
Abu Imran Musa bin Maimun ibn Abdallah al-Qurtubi al-Israili
أبو عمران موسى بن ميمون بن عبد الله القرطبي الإسرائيلي
Birthdate
1135-03-30
Date of death
1204-12-13
Gender
male
Occupations
rabbi
physician
philosopher
author
Relationships
Maimonides, Obadyah (grandson)
אברהם בן משה בן מימון (son)
Short biography
Rabbi Moshe ben Maimon is known in English as Maimonides and in Hebrew by the acronym of his name, Rambam. His importance and influence in Jewish legal and philosophical thought is embodied in the saying, "From Moses (of the 10 Commandments) to Moses (Maimonides) there was none like Moses." Numerous schools around the world are named for him.
Nationality
Spain (birth)
Birthplace
Cordoba, Spain
Places of residence
Córdoba, Spain (birth)
Fes, Morocco
Fostat, Egypt (death)
Place of death
Fostat, Egypt
Burial location
Tiberias, Israel
Map Location
Spain
Egypt
Morocco

Members

Reviews

22 reviews
Looking to reconcile Aristotelian philosophy and Jewish theology, Moses Maimonides wrote The Guide for the Perplexed. A three part letter to his student, the book was influential not only to Jewish thought but Christian and Islamic thought throughout the Middle Ages while still giving those in the 21st Century insights to consider.

The first part focuses on Maimonides arguing against the anthropomorphism of God, basically stating God is incorporeal, and all references in the Bible to God show more doing physical things are essentially figurative language to allow the human mind to understand the works of God. This leads into a discussion by Maimonides that states that God cannot be described in positive terms only negative conceptions because while positive terms put limits on God, the negative does not. This leads into a discussion of philosophy and mysticism of various kinds. The second part begins on Maimonides expounding on the physical structure of the universe, an essentially Aristotelian world-view, which eventually leads into a debate on if the universe is eternal or created. Though Maimonides admits that Aristotle’s arguments for an eternal universe are better, Divine Revelation decides the matter. Maimonides then expounds on the Creation presented in Genesis and theories on the possible end of the world. The last part is explained as the climax of the whole work as Maimonides expounds on the mystical passage of the Chariot found in Ezekiel, which isn’t supposed to be directly taught only hinted at though over time direct instruction has become the normal. This is followed by analysis of the moral aspects of the universe and explaining the reasons for the 613 laws in the Torah. Maimonides ends the book with how God is worshipped correctly, through wisdom.

The comparison of and thesis of complimenting of long held Jewish theological thought and Aristotelian philosophy by Maimonides could have been hard to follow, the text was more than readable and thus the arguments very understandable. While his arguments and logic are insight and enlightening, Maimonides is yet another religious individual who has married ‘pagan’ philosophy with divine revelation to the determinant of the latter like many of his Christian contemporaries were doing and their predecessors before them and many would do after. This is the book’s biggest flaw, but instead of being a reason not to read it is the main one to read it and thus understand the arguments of those who want to merge two separate worldviews into one.

The Guide for the Perplexed was intended by Maimonides for learned individuals to give his view on philosophy more than theology, however the two could not be connected within the text. While I do not adhere to the vast majority of the thoughts the author expounded upon, the insight into medieval thought were invaluable and insightful.
show less
Come dare un 'giudizio' a un'opera di questo calibro?
Rendere 'giustizia', con poche parole, sarebbe solamente per 'grazia'.

Da riprendere e tenere alla portata di mano, una pietra che potrebbe essere considerata di fondamento per ogni intelletto.

Un testo che occupa sia spazio che tempo ma su cui puoi tranquillamente appurare la non appartenenza allo spazio e al tempo.

Buona Lettura
Reading used to be simpler. One just had to find a comfortable chair, turn on a good reading light, open the book and read. Now reading has become a project or rather, in my case, two projects.

First, I am reading The Guide of the Perplexed by Moses Maimonides. The edition we (the reading is part of a class in the Basic Program of Liberal Education of the University of Chicago) are using is the translation by Shlomo Pines.
A close reading of this two volume work requires not only attention show more to the text, but accompanying support of the following volumes from my library: The Oxford NIV Schofield Study Bible, my (two volume) edition of the Complete Works of Aristotle; Geddes MacGregor's Dictionary of Religion and Philosophy; and an English language dictionary. The translator's introduction suggests that I may have further recourse to Plato, Epicurus, Galen and others (this may require a camp out at the Chicago Public Library). Admittedly, these are requirements for reading a serious work of philosophy that inter alia attempts to reconcile the old testament prophets with ancient Greek philosophy. show less
Wow! If I could give more stars to this book, I would. Moreh Nevuchim helps to dispel common misconceptions people have over passages in the Torah/Bible. Ultimately, the goal of Rambam, is to help the reader achieve a level where they can have a true knowledge of Hashem, and to dispel of preconceived ideas of Hashem which ultimately lead to avodah zara. The english in this version of the book is a bit archaic, so you might to read Shlomo Pines version, which I plan to do next.

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Statistics

Works
377
Also by
9
Members
3,546
Popularity
#7,159
Rating
3.9
Reviews
18
ISBNs
202
Languages
17
Favorited
12

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