Jewish Concepts of Scripture

(Grace) #1

202 Jonathan Cohen


Options for the Teaching of Canonical Texts: Freud, Fromm, Strauss and Buber
Read the Bible,” in Courtyard: A Journal of Research and Th ought in Jewish Educa-
tion (New York: Jewish Th eological Seminary Press, 1999), 35 – 65.



  1. See Leo Strauss, “What is Liberal Education?,” in Liberalism Ancient and
    Modern (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1968), 7 – 8.

  2. For the phrase “fusion of horizons,” see Hans-Georg Gadamer, Truth and
    Method (New York: Continuum, 1994), 302 – 7.

  3. See Paul Ricoeur, Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences (Cambridge: Cam-
    bridge University Press, 1981), 131 – 44, 182 – 93.

  4. See Eliezer Schweid, “Martin Buber KePharshan Philosophi Shel HaMikra,”
    Mekhkarei Yerushalayim leMachshevet Yisrael 2:4 (1983): 570 – 612.

  5. Fishbane, Garments of Truth, 98.

  6. For this quote, and for a systematic and penetrating description of the
    Sages’ midrashic project, see Gershom Scholem, “Revelation and Tradition as
    Religious Categories in Judaism,” in Th e Messianic Idea in Judaism (New York:
    Schocken Books, 1971), 282 – 303, especially 289.

  7. Even the most sophisticated practitioners of “modern philosophical mid-
    rash,” such as Levinas and Soloveitchik, read with these assumptions. See my ar-
    ticle “Th e Educational Signifi cance of Modern Philosophical Midrash,” in Educa-
    tional Deliberations: Studies in Education Dedicated to Seymour Fox (Jerusalem:
    Keter, 2005), 93 – 118.

  8. For the Bible as “capturing” events of dialogue, see Kepnes, Text as Th ou, 50.

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