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108. - Kabbalah

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Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2025

Karolina Hübner
Affiliation:
Cornell University, New York
Justin Steinberg
Affiliation:
Cornell University, New York
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Summary

“Kabbalah” refers to the tradition of mystical writings and practices in Judaism. By the early seventeenth century the dominant and most creative development within Kabbalah stems from the teachings of R. Isaac Luria, who taught in the mid sixteenth century, and his disciples Haim Vital and Israel Sarug. The Lurianic cosmology is grounded in a supreme divine principle, the Ein Sof (Unlimited), and its creation narrative invokes the divine light, which, through a process of outpouring, becomes manifest in ten sefirot (circles, attributes, numbers) configured first as a Primordial Man (Adam Kadmon), incorporating five configurations, and then through a complex series of processes and “four worlds,” finally in the sensible, material world in which we live. The Sarugian version of the Lurianic Kabbalah includes the important process of divine contraction and concentration (tzimtzum) from Luria, together with elaborate arrangements of divine points formed into letters, prior to the expression of the sefirot in the form of Adam Kadmon. In the 1630s, a student of Sarug, living in Amsterdam, wrote a work in which the Lurianic cosmogony and cosmology are elucidated through an exhaustive synthesis of philosophical arguments and exploration from the Middle Ages and Renaissance.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024

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References

Recommended Reading

Annen, J. (2016). The Kabbalistic sources of Spinoza. Journal of Jewish Thought & Philosophy, 24, 279–99 .Google Scholar
Coudert, A. P. (1994). The Kabbalah Denudata: Converting Jews or seducing Christians? In Popkin, R. H. and Weiner, G. M. (eds.), Jewish Christians and Christian Jews: From the Renaissance to the Enlightenment (pp. 7396). Kluwer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Franks, P. (2015). ‘Nothing comes from nothing’: Judaism, the Orient, and Kabbalah in Hegel’s reception of Spinoza. In Della Rocca, M. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Spinoza (pp. 512–39). Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Melamed, Y. (2018). Spinozism, acosmism, and Hassidism: A closed circle. In Kravitz, A. and Noller, J. (eds.), The Concept of Judaism in German Idealism (pp. 7585). Suhrkampf.Google Scholar
Melamed, Y. (forthcoming). From the Gate of Heaven to the ‘Field of Holy Apples’: Spinoza and the Kabbalah. In C. Cisiu (ed.), Early Modern Philosophy and the Kabbalah.Google Scholar

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