A number of Jewish philosophers active in Spain and Italy in the
second half of the 15th century (Abraham Bibago, Baruch Ibn Ya'ish,
Abraham Shalom, Eli Habillo, Judah Messer Leon) wrote Hebrew
commentaries and questions on Aristotle. In these works, they
reproduced the techniques and terminology of Late-Medieval Latin
Scholasticism, and quoted and discussed Latin texts (by Albert the
Great, Thomas Aquinas, William of Ockham, John Duns Scotus, and
other authors) about logic, physics, metaphysics, and ethics. All
of these works are still unpublished, and they have not yet been
either studied, or translated in modern languages.
The aim of this book is to give an idea of the extent and
character of this hitherto neglected "Hebrew Scholasticism." After
a general historical introduction to this phenomenon, and
bio-bibliographical surveys of these philosophers, the book gives
complete or partial annotated English translations of the most
significant Hebrew Scholastical works. It includes also critical
editions of some parts of these texts, and a Latin-Hebrew glossary
of Scholastical technical terms.
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