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Since the early 20th century, parenting books, pediatricians, and
other health care providers have dispensed recommendations
regarding children's sleep that frequently involved behavioral and
educational approaches. In the last few decades, however,
psychologists and other behavioral scientists and clinicians have
amassed a critical body of research and clinical recommendations
regarding developmental changes in sleep, sleep hygiene
recommendations from infancy through adolescence, and behaviorally
oriented treatment strategies for children and adolescents. The
Oxford Handbook of Infant, Child, and Adolescent Sleep and Behavior
provides a comprehensive and state-of-the-art review of current
research and clinical developments in normal and disordered sleep
from infancy through emerging adulthood. The handbook comprises
seven sections: sleep and development; factors influencing sleep;
assessment of sleep and sleep problems; sleep challenges, problems,
and disorders; consequences of insufficient sleep; sleep
difficulties associated with developmental and behavioral risks;
and prevention and intervention. Written by international experts
in psychology and related disciplines from diverse fields of study
and clinical backgrounds, this handbook is a comprehensive resource
that will meet the needs of clinicians, researchers, and graduate
students with an interest in the multidisciplinary and emerging
field of child and adolescent sleep and behavior.
In a diverse and innovative selection of new essays by cutting-edge theologians and philosophers, Suffering Religion examines one of the most primitive but challenging questions to define human experience - why do we suffer? As a theme uniting very different religious and cultural traditions, the problem of suffering addresses issues of passivity, the vulnerability of embodiment, the generosity of love and the complexity of gendered desire. Interdisciplinary studies bring different kinds of interpretations to meet and enrich each other. Can the notion of goodness retain meaning in the face of real affliction, or is pain itself in conflict with meaning? Themes covered include: *philosophys own failure to treat suffering seriously, with special reference to the Jewish tradition *Martin Bubers celebrated interpretations of scriptural suffering *suffering in Kristevan psychoanalysis, focusing on the Christian theology of the cross *the pain of childbirth in a home setting as a religiously significant choice *Gods primal suffering in the kabbalistic tradition *Incarnation as a gracious willingness to suffer.
Are mysticism and morality compatible or at odds with one another?
If mystical experience embraces a form of non-dual consciousness,
then in such a state of mind, the regulative dichotomy so basic to
ethical discretion would seemingly be transcended and the very
foundation for ethical decisions undermined. Venturing Beyond - Law
and Morality in Kabbalistic Mysticism is an investigation of the
relationship of the mystical and moral as it is expressed in the
particular tradition of Jewish mysticism known as the Kabbalah. The
particular themes discussed include the denigration of the non-Jew
as the ontic other in kabbalistic anthropology and the
eschatological crossing of that boundary anticipated in the
instituition of religious conversion; the overcoming of the
distinction between good and evil in the mystical experience of the
underlying unity of all things; divine suffering and the ideal of
spiritual poverty as the foundation for transmoral ethics and
hypernomian lawfulness.
First Published in 1998. This is the proceedings of the
International Conference held by The Institute of Jewish Studies,
University College London, 1994, in Celebration of its Fortieth
Anniversary. Dedicated to the memory and academic legacy of its
Founder Alexander Altmann.
This superb collection of writings comes as a tribute to one of the
leading scholars of Judaic Studies in our century, Alexander
Altmann, and to the Institute of Jewish Studies, which he founded.
His former students and colleagues present essays which touch upon
the many areas of Professor Altmann's interests. The studies range
from early rabbinic mystical texts to contemporary theological
investigations. The majority of the articles explore leading
figures and issues in medieval and early modern Jewish philosophy
and mysticism.
Among the important persons whose writings are examined are
Maimonides, Gersonides, Abraham Abulafia, Mendelssohn, Leo Strauss,
and Altmann himself. The contributors to this volume are at the
forefront of contemporary scholarship in the field.
This book explores the co-dependency of monotheism and idolatry by
examining the thought of several prominent twentieth-century Jewish
philosophers-Cohen, Buber, Rosenzweig, and Levinas. While all of
these thinkers were keenly aware of the pitfalls of scriptural
theism, to differing degrees they each succumbed to the temptation
to personify transcendence, even as they tried either to circumvent
or to restrain it by apophatically purging kataphatic descriptions
of the deity. Derrida and Wyschogrod, by contrast, carried the
project of denegation one step further, embarking on a path that
culminated in the aporetic suspension of belief and the consequent
removal of all images from God, a move that seriously compromises
the viability of devotional piety. The inquiry into apophasis,
transcendence, and immanence in these Jewish thinkers is
symptomatic of a larger question. Recent attempts to harness the
apophatic tradition to construct a viable postmodern negative
theology, a religion without religion, are not radical enough. Not
only are these philosophies of transcendence guilty of a turn to
theology that defies the phenomenological presupposition of an
immanent phenomenality, but they fall short on their own terms,
inasmuch as they persist in employing metaphorical language that
personalizes transcendence and thereby runs the risk of undermining
the irreducible alterity and invisibility attributed to the
transcendent other. The logic of apophasis, if permitted to run its
course fully, would exceed the need to posit some form of
transcendence that is not ultimately a facet of immanence.
Apophatic theologies, accordingly, must be supplanted by a more
far-reaching apophasis that surpasses the theolatrous impulse lying
coiled at the crux of theism, an apophasis of apophasis, based on
accepting an absolute nothingness-to be distinguished from the
nothingness of an absolute-that does not signify the unknowable One
but rather the manifold that is the pleromatic abyss at being's
core. Hence, the much-celebrated metaphor of the gift must give way
to the more neutral and less theologically charged notion of an
unconditional givenness in which the distinction between giver and
given collapses. To think givenness in its most elemental,
phenomenological sense is to allow the apparent to appear as given
without presuming a causal agency that would turn that given into a
gift.
This long-awaited, magisterial study-an unparalleled blend of
philosophy, poetry, and philology-draws on theories of sexuality,
phenomenology, comparative religion, philological writings on
Kabbalah, Russian formalism, Wittgenstein, Rosenzweig, William
Blake, and the very physics of the time-space continuum to
establish what will surely be a highwater mark in work on Kabbalah.
Not only a study of texts, Language, Eros, Being is perhaps the
fullest confrontation of the body in Jewish studies, if not in
religious studies as a whole. Elliot R. Wolfson explores the
complex gender symbolism that permeates Kabbalistic literature.
Focusing on the nexus of asceticism and eroticism, he seeks to
define the role of symbolic and poetically charged language in the
erotically configured visionary imagination of the medieval
Kabbalists. He demonstrates that the traditional Kabbalistic view
of gender was a monolithic and androcentric one, in which the
feminine was conceived as being derived from the masculine. He does
not shrink from the negative implications of this doctrine, but
seeks to make an honest acknowledgment of it as the first step
toward the redemption of an ancient wisdom. Comparisons with other
mystical traditions-including those in Christianity, Buddhism, and
Islam-are a remarkable feature throughout the book. They will make
it important well beyond Jewish studies, indeed, a must for
historians of comparative religion, in particular of comparative
mysticism. Praise for Elliot R. Wolfson: "Through a Speculum That
Shines is an important and provocative contribution to the study of
Jewish mysticism by one of the major scholars now working in this
field."-Speculum
This long-awaited, magisterial study-an unparalleled blend of
philosophy, poetry, and philology-draws on theories of sexuality,
phenomenology, comparative religion, philological writings on
Kabbalah, Russian formalism, Wittgenstein, Rosenzweig, William
Blake, and the very physics of the time-space continuum to
establish what will surely be a highwater mark in work on Kabbalah.
Not only a study of texts, Language, Eros, Being is perhaps the
fullest confrontation of the body in Jewish studies, if not in
religious studies as a whole. Elliot R. Wolfson explores the
complex gender symbolism that permeates Kabbalistic literature.
Focusing on the nexus of asceticism and eroticism, he seeks to
define the role of symbolic and poetically charged language in the
erotically configured visionary imagination of the medieval
Kabbalists. He demonstrates that the traditional Kabbalistic view
of gender was a monolithic and androcentric one, in which the
feminine was conceived as being derived from the masculine. He does
not shrink from the negative implications of this doctrine, but
seeks to make an honest acknowledgment of it as the first step
toward the redemption of an ancient wisdom. Comparisons with other
mystical traditions-including those in Christianity, Buddhism, and
Islam-are a remarkable feature throughout the book. They will make
it important well beyond Jewish studies, indeed, a must for
historians of comparative religion, in particular of comparative
mysticism. Praise for Elliot R. Wolfson: "Through a Speculum That
Shines is an important and provocative contribution to the study of
Jewish mysticism by one of the major scholars now working in this
field."-Speculum
Menahem Mendel Schneerson (1902-1994) was the seventh and
seemingly last Rebbe of the Habad-Lubavitch dynasty. Marked by
conflicting tendencies, Schneerson was a radical messianic
visionary who promoted a conservative political agenda, a reclusive
contemplative who built a hasidic sect into an international
movement, and a man dedicated to the exposition of mysteries who
nevertheless harbored many secrets. Schneerson astutely masked
views that might be deemed heterodox by the canons of orthodoxy
while engineering a fundamentalist ideology that could subvert
traditional gender hierarchy, the halakhic distinction between
permissible and forbidden, and the social-anthropological division
between Jew and Gentile.
While most literature on the Rebbe focuses on whether or not he
identified with the role of Messiah, Elliot R. Wolfson, a leading
scholar of Jewish mysticism and the phenomenology of religious
experience, concentrates instead on Schneerson's apocalyptic
sensibility and his promotion of a mystical consciousness that
undermines all discrimination. For Schneerson, the ploy of secrecy
is crucial to the dissemination of the messianic secret. To be
enlightened messianically is to be delivered from all conceptual
limitations, even the very notion of becoming emancipated from
limitation. The ultimate liberation, or true and complete
redemption, fuses the believer into an infinite essence beyond all
duality, even the duality of being emancipated and not
emancipated--an emancipation, in other words, that emancipates one
from the bind of emancipation.
At its deepest level, Schneerson's eschatological orientation
discerned that a spiritual master, if he be true, must dispose of
the mask of mastery. Situating Habad's thought within the evolution
of kabbalistic mysticism, the history of Western philosophy, and
Mahayana Buddhism, Wolfson articulates Schneerson's rich theology
and profound philosophy, concentrating on the nature of apophatic
embodiment, semiotic materiality, hypernomian transvaluation,
nondifferentiated alterity, and atemporal temporality.
The Philosophical Pathos of Susan Taubes offers a detailed analysis
of an extraordinary figure in the twentieth-century history of
Jewish thought, Western philosophy, and the study of religion.
Drawing on close readings of Susan Taubes's writings, including her
correspondence with Jacob Taubes, scholarly essays, literary
compositions, and poems, Elliot R. Wolfson plumbs the depths of the
tragic sensibility that shaped her worldview, hovering between the
poles of nihilism and hope. By placing Susan Taubes in dialogue
with a host of other seminal thinkers, Wolfson illumines how she
presciently explored the hypernomian status of Jewish ritual and
belief after the Holocaust; the theopolitical challenges of Zionism
and the dangers of ethnonationalism; the antitheological theology
and gnostic repercussions of Heideggerian thought; the mystical
atheism and apophaticism of tragedy in Simone Weil; and the
understanding of poetry as the means to face the faceless and to
confront the silence of death in the temporal overcoming of time
through time. Wolfson delves into the abyss that molded Susan
Taubes's mytheological thinking, making a powerful case for the
continued relevance of her work to the study of philosophy and
religion today.
Martin Heidegger (1889-1976) is considered one of the most
influential philosophers of the twentieth century in spite of his
well-known transgressions-his complicity with National Socialism
and his inability to show remorse or compassion for its victims. In
The Duplicity of Philosophy's Shadow, Elliot R. Wolfson intervenes
in a debate that has seen much attention in scholarly and popular
media from a unique perspective, as a scholar of Jewish mysticism
and philosophy who has been profoundly influenced by Heidegger's
work. Wolfson sets out to probe Heidegger's writings to expose what
remains unthought. In spite of Heidegger's explicit anti-Semitic
statements, Wolfson reveals some crucial aspects of his
thinking-including criticism of the biological racism and militant
apocalypticism of Nazism-that betray an affinity with dimensions of
Jewish thought: the triangulation of the concepts of homeland,
language, and peoplehood; Jewish messianism and the notion of
historical time as the return of the same that is always different;
inclusion, exclusion, and the status of the other; the problem of
evil in kabbalistic symbolism. Using Heidegger's own methods,
Wolfson reflects on the inextricable link of truth and untruth and
investigates the matter of silence and the limits of speech. He
challenges the tendency to bifurcate the relationship of the
political and the philosophical in Heidegger's thought, but parts
company with those who write off Heidegger as a Nazi ideologue.
Ultimately, The Duplicity of Philosophy's Shadow argues, the
greatness and relevance of Heidegger's work is that he presents us
with the opportunity to think the unthinkable as part of our
communal destiny as historical beings.
A comprehensive treatment of visionary experience in some of the
main texts of Jewish mysticism, this book reveals the
overwhelmingly visual nature of religious experience in Jewish
spirituality from antiquity through the late Middle Ages. Using
phenomenological and critical historical tools, Wolfson examines
Jewish mystical texts from late antiquity, pre-kabbalistic sources
from the tenth to the twelfth centuries, and twelfth- and
thirteenth-century kabbalistic literature. His work demonstrates
that the sense of sight assumes an epistemic priority in these
writings, reflecting and building upon those scriptural passages
that affirm the visual nature of revelatory experience. Moreover,
the author reveals an androcentric eroticism in the scopic
mentality of Jewish mystics, which placed the externalized and
representable form, the phallus, at the center of the visual
encounter.
In the visionary experience, as Wolfson describes it,
imagination serves a primary function, transmuting sensory data and
rational concepts into symbols of those things beyond sense and
reason. In this view, the experience of a vision is inseparable
from the process of interpretation. Fundamentally challenging the
conventional distinction between experience and exegesis,
revelation and interpretation, Wolfson argues that for the mystics
themselves, the study of texts occasioned a visual experience of
the divine located in the imagination of the mystical interpreter.
Thus he shows how Jewish mystics preserved the invisible
transcendence of God without doing away with the visual dimension
of belief.
Menahem Mendel Schneerson (1902-1994) was the seventh and
seemingly last Rebbe of the Habad-Lubavitch dynasty. Marked by
conflicting tendencies, Schneerson was a radical messianic
visionary who promoted a conservative political agenda, a reclusive
contemplative who built a hasidic sect into an international
movement, and a man dedicated to the exposition of mysteries who
nevertheless harbored many secrets. Schneerson astutely masked
views that might be deemed heterodox by the canons of orthodoxy
while engineering a fundamentalist ideology that could subvert
traditional gender hierarchy, the halakhic distinction between
permissible and forbidden, and the social-anthropological division
between Jew and Gentile.
While most literature on the Rebbe focuses on whether or not he
identified with the role of Messiah, Elliot R. Wolfson, a leading
scholar of Jewish mysticism and the phenomenology of religious
experience, concentrates instead on Schneerson's apocalyptic
sensibility and his promotion of a mystical consciousness that
undermines all discrimination. For Schneerson, the ploy of secrecy
is crucial to the dissemination of the messianic secret. To be
enlightened messianically is to be delivered from all conceptual
limitations, even the very notion of becoming emancipated from
limitation. The ultimate liberation, or true and complete
redemption, fuses the believer into an infinite essence beyond all
duality, even the duality of being emancipated and not
emancipated--an emancipation, in other words, that emancipates one
from the bind of emancipation.
At its deepest level, Schneerson's eschatological orientation
discerned that a spiritual master, if he be true, must dispose of
the mask of mastery. Situating Habad's thought within the evolution
of kabbalistic mysticism, the history of Western philosophy, and
Mahayana Buddhism, Wolfson articulates Schneerson's rich theology
and profound philosophy, concentrating on the nature of apophatic
embodiment, semiotic materiality, hypernomian transvaluation,
nondifferentiated alterity, and atemporal temporality.
This book explores the co-dependency of monotheism and idolatry by
examining the thought of several prominent twentieth-century Jewish
philosophers-Cohen, Buber, Rosenzweig, and Levinas. While all of
these thinkers were keenly aware of the pitfalls of scriptural
theism, to differing degrees they each succumbed to the temptation
to personify transcendence, even as they tried either to circumvent
or to restrain it by apophatically purging kataphatic descriptions
of the deity. Derrida and Wyschogrod, by contrast, carried the
project of denegation one step further, embarking on a path that
culminated in the aporetic suspension of belief and the consequent
removal of all images from God, a move that seriously compromises
the viability of devotional piety. The inquiry into apophasis,
transcendence, and immanence in these Jewish thinkers is
symptomatic of a larger question. Recent attempts to harness the
apophatic tradition to construct a viable postmodern negative
theology, a religion without religion, are not radical enough. Not
only are these philosophies of transcendence guilty of a turn to
theology that defies the phenomenological presupposition of an
immanent phenomenality, but they fall short on their own terms,
inasmuch as they persist in employing metaphorical language that
personalizes transcendence and thereby runs the risk of undermining
the irreducible alterity and invisibility attributed to the
transcendent other. The logic of apophasis, if permitted to run its
course fully, would exceed the need to posit some form of
transcendence that is not ultimately a facet of immanence.
Apophatic theologies, accordingly, must be supplanted by a more
far-reaching apophasis that surpasses the theolatrous impulse lying
coiled at the crux of theism, an apophasis of apophasis, based on
accepting an absolute nothingness-to be distinguished from the
nothingness of an absolute-that does not signify the unknowable One
but rather the manifold that is the pleromatic abyss at being's
core. Hence, the much-celebrated metaphor of the gift must give way
to the more neutral and less theologically charged notion of an
unconditional givenness in which the distinction between giver and
given collapses. To think givenness in its most elemental,
phenomenological sense is to allow the apparent to appear as given
without presuming a causal agency that would turn that given into a
gift.
Breaking with strictly historical or textual perspectives, this
book explores Jewish philosophy as philosophy. Often regarded as
too technical for Judaic studies and too religious for philosophy
departments, Jewish philosophy has had an ambiguous position in the
academy. These provocative essays propose new models for the study
of Jewish philosophy that embrace wider intellectual arenas
including linguistics, poetics, aesthetics, and visual culture as a
path toward understanding the particular philosophic concerns of
Judaism. As they reread classic Jewish texts, the essays articulate
a new set of questions and demonstrate the vitality and originality
of Jewish philosophy."
While many scholars have noted Martin Heidegger's indebtedness to
Christian mystical sources, as well as his affinity with Taoism and
Buddhism, Elliot R. Wolfson expands connections between Heidegger's
thought and kabbalistic material. By arguing that the Jewish
esoteric tradition impacted Heidegger, Wolfson presents an
alternative way of understanding the history of Western philosophy.
Wolfson's comparison between Heidegger and kabbalah sheds light on
key concepts such as hermeneutics, temporality, language, and being
and nothingness, while yielding surprising reflections on their
common philosophical ground. Given Heidegger's involvement with
National Socialism and his use of antisemitic language, these
innovative readings are all the more remarkable for their
juxtaposition of incongruent fields of discourse. Wolfson's
entanglement with Heidegger and kabbalah not only enhances
understandings of both but, more profoundly, serves as an ethical
corrective to their respective ethnocentrism and essentialism.
Wolfson masterfully illustrates the redemptive capacity of thought
to illuminate common ground in seemingly disparate philosophical
traditions.
While many scholars have noted Martin Heidegger's indebtedness to
Christian mystical sources, as well as his affinity with Taoism and
Buddhism, Elliot R. Wolfson expands connections between Heidegger's
thought and kabbalistic material. By arguing that the Jewish
esoteric tradition impacted Heidegger, Wolfson presents an
alternative way of understanding the history of Western philosophy.
Wolfson's comparison between Heidegger and kabbalah sheds light on
key concepts such as hermeneutics, temporality, language, and being
and nothingness, while yielding surprising reflections on their
common philosophical ground. Given Heidegger's involvement with
National Socialism and his use of antisemitic language, these
innovative readings are all the more remarkable for their
juxtaposition of incongruent fields of discourse. Wolfson's
entanglement with Heidegger and kabbalah not only enhances
understandings of both but, more profoundly, serves as an ethical
corrective to their respective ethnocentrism and essentialism.
Wolfson masterfully illustrates the redemptive capacity of thought
to illuminate common ground in seemingly disparate philosophical
traditions.
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