Concepts of Scripture in Yehezkel Kaufmann 245
however, Kaufmann generally understands that the same kind of scribal errors can
be found in other biblical texts as well.
- Kaufmann, Toledot, 1:xxi – xxii. For Dilthey’s “infi nite variety of philosophi-
cal forms,” see Wilhelm Dilthey, Dilthey’s Philosophy of Existence: Introduction to
Weltanschauungslehre, ed. William Kluback and Martin Weinbaum (London: Vi-
sion, 1957); Hans Peter Rickman, Dilthey: Selected Writings (Cambridge: Cam-
bridge University Press, 1976), 133 – 54. - Here, too, Kaufmann seems to take his cue from Dilthey’s work; see, e.g.,
Dilthey, Selected Works, vol. 1, Introduction to the Human Sciences, ed. Rudolf
Makkreel and Frithjof Rodi (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1989), 136 – 69. - Rickman, Dilthey: Selected Writings, 93.
- See Kaufmann, Religion of Israel, 21 – 59, esp. 23n. 1, where this term is de-
fi ned. Cf. also Mark Smith’s critique of Kaufmann in his Th e Origins of Biblical
Monotheism: Israel ’s Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts (New York: Ox-
ford University Press, 2001), 12, 201n. 70. For a response to Smith’s critique from a
Kaufmannian perspective, see Sommer, Bodies of God, 274n. 125. - Yehezkel Kaufmann, “Th e Biblical Age,” in Th e Great Ages and Ideas of the
Jewish People, ed. Leo Schwartz (New York: Random House, 1956), 10. - See Kaufmann, “Religion of Israel” (in Hebrew), in Encyclopedia Miqra’it,
4:729 – 30; cf. Maimonides, the fi rst chapter (esp. sec. 7) of “Basic Principles of the
Torah,” in Th e Mishneh Torah. Th is oneness, for Kaufmann, is indeed not numeri-
cal. Elsewhere he notes that biblical monotheism can assume the existence of other
divine beings besides YHWH: “Th ere is room in monotheism for the worship of
lower divine beings — with the understanding that they belong to the suite of the
One” (Kaufmann, Religion of Israel, 137). - Cf. what Dilthey calls the “enigmas of life.” See David Naugle, Wo r l d v i e w :
Th e History of a Concept (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2002), 82 – 98, esp. 86 – 88. - Here, it is not claimed that polytheistic deities have no interest in morality.
Kaufmann himself states that polytheistic deities were also conceived as ruling ac-
cording to the principles of justice and righteousness; see Toledot, 1:224 – 25. - Kaufmann, “Biblical Age,” 92; the quotation is slightly modifi ed according
to the Hebrew original in Mi-kivshonah shel ha-yetsirah ha-mikra’it (Tel Aviv: De-
vir, 1966), 138. - Kaufmann, “Biblical Age,” 14; idem, Religion of Israel, 221 – 23.
- Kaufmann understands that religion alone can no longer serve this role in
modern times, especially in the face of the secularism that dominates Jewish cul-
ture. For the preservation of Jewish identity, he thus holds, a territorial solution is
henceforth inevitable. - Kaufmann, “Th e Bible and Mythological Polytheism,” Journal of Biblical
Literature 70 (1951): 195. - Ibid.