Authors: Louis E. Newman
ISBN-13: 9780791438688, ISBN-10: 0791438686
Format: Paperback
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Date Published: September 1998
Edition: New Edition
Past Imperatives explores the nature and development of Jewish ethics by analyzing three important sets of issues: the relationship between Jewish law and ethics, the relationship between Jewish ethics and theology, and the problems and prospects for constructing a contemporary Jewish ethic. The penetrating and provocative essays are drawn from a number of fields, including legal theory, literary theory, and theory of religion. These studies illuminate many previously uninvestigated aspects of Jewish biomedical ethics, covenant theology, and textual interpretation in Judaism.
By exploring these issues within the larger context of historical and theoretical work in religious studies, Past Imperatives moves beyond previous work in Jewish ethics, which has largely sought to offer moral guidance from a Jewish perspective. This volume boldly confronts the fact that Judaism encompasses many, sometimes contradictory, ethical perspectives and investigates their theological underpinnings, how they have developed, and how they differ from other moral and/or religious perspectives.
Explores the nature and development of Jewish ethics by analyzing the relationships between Jewish law and ethics and between Jewish ethics and theology, and the problems and prospects of constructing a contemporary Jewish ethic. The ten essays, written for various audiences over the past decade, consider such topics as Jewish biomedical ethics, covenant theology, and textual interpretation in Judaism. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
Preface | ||
Acknowledgments | ||
Introduction | 1 | |
Ch. 1 | Law, Virtue, and Supererogation in the Halakha: The Problem of Lifnim Mishurat Hadin Reconsidered | 17 |
Ch. 2 | Ethics as Law, Law as Religion: Reflections on the Problem of Law and Ethics in Judaism | 45 |
Ch. 3 | Covenant and Contract: A Framework for the Analysis of Jewish Ethics | 63 |
Ch. 4 | The Quality of Mercy: On the Duty to Forgive in the Judaic Tradition | 83 |
Ch. 5 | Jewish Theology and Bioethics | 101 |
Ch. 6 | Nature and Torah, Creation and Revelation: On the Possibility of a Natural Law in Judaism | 117 |
Ch. 7 | Religious Faith, Historical Relativism, and the Prospects for Modern Jewish Ethics | 139 |
Ch. 8 | Woodchoppers and Respirators: The Problem of Interpretation in Contemporary Jewish Ethics | 161 |
Ch. 9 | Text and Tradition in Contemporary Jewish Bioethics | 185 |
Ch. 10 | Talking Ethics with Strangers: A View from Jewish Tradition | 205 |
Conclusion: New Directions in the Study of the Ethics of Judaism | 221 | |
Notes | 231 | |
References | 265 | |
Index | 279 |