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Kuzari - Question of attributes |  | Kuzari - Question of attributes: Encyclopedia II - Kuzari - Question of attributes |  | In the second essay Judah enters into a detailed discussion of some of the theological questions hinted at in the preceding one. To these belongs in the first place that of the divine attributes. Judah rejects entirely the doctrine of essential attributes which had been propounded by Saadia Gaon and Bahya ibn Paquda. For him there is no difference between essential and other attributes. Either the attribute affirms a quality in God, in which case essential attributes can not be applied to Him more than can any other, because it is impossible ...
See also:Kuzari, Kuzari - Introduction, Kuzari - Creatio ex Nihilo, Kuzari - Superiority of his faith, Kuzari - Question of attributes, Kuzari - Names of God, Kuzari - Arguments against philosophy, Kuzari - Influence of the Kuzari, Kuzari - The Kuzari Principle, Kuzari - Bibliography |  | | Kuzari, Kuzari - Arguments against philosophy, Kuzari - Bibliography, Kuzari - Creatio ex Nihilo, Kuzari - Influence of the Kuzari, Kuzari - Introduction, Kuzari - Names of God, Kuzari - Question of attributes, Kuzari - Superiority of his faith, Kuzari - The Kuzari Principle |  | |
|  |  | Kuzari: Encyclopedia II - Kuzari - Question of attributes
Kuzari - Question of attributes
In the second essay Judah enters into a detailed discussion of some of the theological questions hinted at in the preceding one. To these belongs in the first place that of the divine attributes. Judah rejects entirely the doctrine of essential attributes which had been propounded by Saadia Gaon and Bahya ibn Paquda. For him there is no difference between essential and other attributes. Either the attribute affirms a quality in God, in which case essential attributes can not be applied to Him more than can any other, because it is impossible to predicate anything of Him, or the attribute expresses only the negation of the contrary quality, and in that case there is no harm in using any kind of attributes. 'Accordingly Judah divides all the attributes found in the Bible into three classes: active, relative, and negative, which last class comprises all the essential attributes expressing mere negations. See also: Divine simplicity; Negative theology
The question of attributes being closely connected with that of anthropomorphism, Judah enters into a lengthy discussion on this point. Although opposed to the conception of the corporeality of God, as being contrary to Scripture, he would consider it wrong to reject all the sensuous concepts of anthropomorphism, as there is something in these ideas which fills the human soul with the awe of God.
The remainder of the essay comprises dissertations on the following subjects: the excellence of Palestine, the land of prophecy, which is to other countries what the Jews are to other nations; the sacrifices; the arrangement of the Tabernacle, which, according to Judah, symbolizes the human body; the prominent spiritual position occupied by Israel, whose relation to other nations is that of the heart to the limbs; the opposition evinced by Judaism toward asceticism, in virtue of the principle that the favor of God is to be won only by carrying out His precepts, and that these precepts do not command man to subdue the inclinations suggested by the faculties of the soul, but to use them in their due place and proportion; the excellence of the Hebrew language, which, although sharing now the fate of the Jews, is to other languages what the Jews are to other nations and what Palestine is to other lands.
The third essay is devoted to the refutation of the teachings of Karaism and to the history of the development of the oral tradition, the Talmud. Judah ha-Levi shows that there is no means of carrying out the precepts without having recourse to oral tradition; and that such tradition has always existed may be inferred from many passages of the Bible, the very reading of which is dependent upon it, since there were no vowels and accents in the original text.
Other related archivesAbraham, Angels, Arabic, Aristotelian, Aristotle, Bahya ibn Paquda, Bible, Christian, D.M. Dunlop, Divine simplicity, Egypt, Epicureans, First Cause, God, Greek culture, Greek philosophers, Hebrew, Hebrew language, Israelites, Jew, Jewish, Jewish culture, Jewish religion, Khazars, Mount Sinai, Muslim, Negative theology, Neoplatonists, Palestine, Saadia Gaon, Scripture, Spanish, Talmud, Toledo, Spain, Torah, Yehuda Halevi, Zohar, animal, asceticism, astronomical, cosmology, creatio ex nihilo, creation, ethical, history, human culture, ibn Tibbon, king, matter and form, medical, metaphysics, mineral, nature, pagan, philosopher, prophecy, psychology, rabbinical, religion, resurrection, science, soul, the Law, theory, truth, vegetable, vowels
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Question of attributes", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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