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Bidding Information
Lot #    24474
Auction End Date    8/11/2009 11:46:30 AM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Behinat ha-Dat
Title (Hebrew)    בחינת הדת
Author    Elijah Ben Moses Abba Delmedigo
City    Vienna
Publisher    Anton Schmid
Publication Date    1833
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   [7], 134 pp. octavo 200:118 mm., light age staining. A very good copy bound in contemporary boards, rubbed.
          
Detailed
Description
   Insightful if controversial work on the relation between religion and philosophy by Elijah Ben Moses Abba Delmedigo. Basing himself on a text of Averroes, Delmedigo holds that the study of philosophy is permissible, affirming further that in cases of contradiction between religious faith and philosophic reasoning, the philosopher may interpret religious beliefs as to make them accord with philosophic truth. This, however, does not apply to the basic principles of faith. Every person, including the philosopher, is obligated to believe in the basic dogmas of religion, even when these appear to contradict philosophic truth. Recognizing the possible contradiction between religious principles and philosophic truths Delmedigo tended toward the double faith theory of the Christian Averroists. In Behinat ha-Dat Delmedigo also described rabbinic literature and attacked the Kabbalah. He argued against the antiquity of the Kabbalah, noting that it was not known to the sages of the Talmud, or to the geonim, or to Rashi. He also denies that R. Simeon b. Yohai was the author of the Zohar, since that work mentions personalities who lived after the death of Simeon. In addition, he attacks the extreme allegorists among Jewish philosophers. In another section of his work he discusses the reasons underlying the commandments of the Torah (ta'amei ha-mitzvot). Delmedigo's importance in the history of philosophy rests in his making the teachings of Averroes known to the Italian scholars of the Renaissance, especially through his Latin translations of many of Averroes' works. Behinat ha-Dat was first published in 1629 in Ta'alumot Hokhmah of R. Judah Samuel Ashkenazi. This is the first independent edition, accompanied by a commentary by Isaac Reggio. There is an introduction by Reggio and on pp. 80-83 is a letter from R. Saul ben Moses ha-Kohen Ashkenazi, a student of Delmedigo.

Elijah Ben Moses Abba Delmedigo (c. 1460–1497) was a philosopher and talmudist. Born in Candia, Crete, Delmedigo was also known as Elijah Cretensis. While still a young man he immigrated to Italy. He received a traditional Jewish education, and studied the classics of Islamic and Jewish philosophy, particularly the works of Maimonides and Averroes. In addition he became conversant with classical literature. His Jewish learning was recognized by his contemporaries as can be seen from an exchange of letters with R. Joseph Colon, who addressed Delmedigo in terms of high regard. Delmedigo served for a time as head of the yeshivah in Padua. He also delivered public lectures on philosophy in Padua and possibly other Italian cities. Pico della Mirandola was among Delmedigo's Christian disciples and admirers. On the basis of his reputation as a philosopher, Delmedigo was chosen, under the patronage of the Venice authorities, to act as a mediator in a philosophic dispute which arose between two schools of Italian scholars, and his decision in favor of one side aroused hostility toward him on the part of the other. In addition to this animosity on the part of the Christians, a bitter controversy on a halakhic question developed between R. Delmedigo and the rabbi of Padua, R. Judah Mintz, and after the death of his patron, Pico, in 1494, Delmedigo was compelled to leave Italy and return to his birthplace, where he was welcomed by Jews and Christians alike. There in 1496 he completed his major work, Behinat ha-Dat ("The Examination of Religion"), which he wrote at the request of one of his disciples R. Saul ha-Kohen Ashkenazi. He remained in Crete until his death three years after his return.

He composed the following translations: a translation, no longer extant, of Averroes' commentary on Plato's Republic; a translation of six of Averroes' questions on Aristotle's logic (Venice, 1497); a short translation of Aristotle's Meteorologia, and a translation of parts of Averroes' middle commentary on that work (Venice, 1488); a translation of parts one to seven of Averroes' middle commentary on Aristotle's Metaphysics (Venice, 1560); a translation of Averroes' introduction to his large commentary on Aristotle's Metaphysics (Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, man. latin, Ms. no. 6508); a translation of Averroes' De Spermate (Venice, 1560). In addition to his translations, Delmedigo composed the following original works in Latin: Questiones Tres, consisting of three sections: De Primo Motore, De Mundi Efficentia, and De Esse Essentia et Uno (Venice, 1501); a commentary on Aristotle's natural philosophy (Venice, 1480); a Latin and Hebrew commentary on Averroes' De Substantia Orbis, in Hebrew, Ma'amar be-Ezem ha-Galgal, and two questions on Averroes' theory of the hylic intellect (Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, Cod. héb., 968). A copy of Delmedigo's Behinat ha-Dat was found in the private library of Spinoza, and it may be assumed that it influenced the development of Spinoza's ideas in the Theologico-Political Treatise.

          
Paragraph 2    ... נדפס עתה שנית על פי הדפוס הראשון של באסיליאה [צ"ל: האנויא, שפ"ט]. ונלווה אליו מחדש פירוש והערות מאת יצחק שמואל ריגייו תושב גוריציאה ...

מ' 80-83: מכתב הר"ר שאול (ב"ר משה כהן אשכנזי) ז"ל. הערותיו של ריגייו לא נדפסו בשלמותן. עיין ווינער, מס' 1101.

          
Reference
Description
   BE bet 337; EJ; CD-EPI 0125942
        
Associated Images
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Listing Classification
Period
19th Century:    Checked
  
Location
Other:    Austria
  
Subject
  
Characteristic
Language:    Hebrew
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica