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Karaite Judaism emerged in the ninth century in the Islamic Middle
East as an alternative to the rabbinic Judaism of the Jewish
majority. Karaites reject the underlying assumption of rabbinic
Judaism, namely, that Jewish practice is to be based on two
divinely revealed Torahs, a written one, embodied in the Five Books
of Moses, and an oral one, eventually written down in rabbinic
literature. Karaites accept as authoritative only the Written
Torah, as they understand it, and their form of Judaism therefore
differs greatly from that of most Jews. Despite its permanent
minority status, Karaism has been an integral part of the Jewish
people continuously for twelve centuries. It has contributed
greatly to Jewish cultural achievements, while providing a powerful
intellectual challenge to the majority form of Judaism. This book
is the first to present a comprehensive overview of the entire
story of Karaite Judaism: its unclear origins; a Golden Age of
Karaism in the Land of Israel; migrations through the centuries;
Karaites in the Holocaust; unique Jewish religious practices,
beliefs, and philosophy; biblical exegesis and literary
accomplishments; polemics and historiography; and the present-day
revival of the Karaite community in the State of Israel.
Thorough and meticulously researched, this study is based on a
comprehensive reading of philosophical arguments drawn from all the
major Jewish sources, published and unpublished, from the Geonic
period in the ninth century until the dawn of the Haskalah in the
late eighteenth century. The core of the book is a detailed
discussion of the four doctrines of Christianity whose rationality
Jews thought they could definitively refute: trinity, incarnation,
transubstantiation, and virgin birth. In each case, Daniel Lasker
presents a succinct history of the Christian doctrine and then
proceeds to a careful examination of the Jewish efforts to
demonstrate its impossibility. The main text is clearly written in
a non-technical manner, with the Christian doctrines and the Jewish
responses both carefully explained; the notes include long
quotations, in Hebrew and Arabic as well as in English, from
sources that are not readily available in English. At the time of
its original publication in 1977 this book was regarded as a major
contribution to a relatively neglected area of medieval Jewish
intellectual history; the new, wide-ranging introduction prepared
for this paperback edition, which surveys and summarizes subsequent
scholarship, re-establishes its position as a major work.
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