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Daniel Merkur makes an excellent discussion of the "unitive experience." He takes a cross cultural approach that gives the reader a fair estimate of what the actual experience of mystical union is for the mystic in practical terms: "Unitive visions are clearly variant forms of unitive ideas in which the ideas have undergone symboliztion into pictorial form, much as ideas do during the dreams of natural sleep.
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Halbertal's tale amusingly illustrates the importance that sacred texts play in Judaism and provides a fitting entrée into this short, but fascinating, exploration of the development and importance of the Bible, the Mishnah and the Talmud as canonical works of the Jewish community.
Halbertal begins with a short introduction adumbrating the meaning of a "canonical" text and its various guises. The adjective, of course, refers to a text's special status in a community. The special status of a canon can be "normative" (it is obeyed and followed as the law of a community), "formative" (it is a curriculum that is taught, read, transmitted, and interpreted) or "exemplary" (it is a paradigm for aesthetic value and achievement). For example, the Talmud is both a normative and a formative canon of the traditional Jewish community; normative in the sense that it establishes appropriate behavior in many aspects of life, formative in the sense that it is a fundamental text that is the object of endless interpretation and debate and, in some cases, the intellectual sine qua non of membership in the community.
From this brief introduction, "People of the Book" then explores, in successive chapters (which mirror the chronological development of each successive text), the canonization of the Bible, the Mishnah, and the Talmud and what the ascendancy of each of these texts meant for the formation of authority and meaning in the Jewish community. He also explores the challenges that philosophy and Kabbalah posed to the Talmudic canon in the Middle Ages and closes with a short appendix discussing how Hobbes and Spinoza appropriated and interpreted the canonical text of the Hebrew Bible in their political philosophy.
In less than one hundred fifty pages (excluding the extensive footnotes), Moshe Halbertal has written a challenging and thoughtful exploration of the development of the canonical works of Judaism and how those canonical works shaped authority and meaning in the community and between the community and the non-Jewish world. "People of the Book" is a concise, but intellectually rich, exegesis of the key texts of Judaism and how those texts shaped Jewish thought through the ages.
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Hoffman, a well-known white supremacist and Holocaust
revisionist. "Moshe Lierberman," interestingly enough,
does not exist. Remarkable that an individual who has
built his reputation on denying the Holocaust associated
with the murder of six million Jews would assert that
currently one is being waged against Palestinians. For more on
Mr. Hoffman, please check out the expose of him by Christopher
Hitchens in a recent issue of Vanity Fair.
This book is very one-sided, and focuses only on the misfortunes of the Palestinian people, which were largely brought upon them by their corrupt government and fanatic Islamists. It doesn't not mention the almost daily suicide bombings and ambushes on Israelis.
The many horrific photographs displayed in this book are of Palestinians reaping the rewards of their peaceful demonstrations, and are nothing compared to what is shown in the news after another suicide bombing. Perhaps hurling rocks and shooting rifles is not the most peaceful way to demonstrate. The book's Jewish authors can be compared to Jews for Jesus, seeking to create controversy for the sake of attention.
I would not bother wasting any time on this "book".
I am saddended but understanding of those ignorant peoples who come to erronious conclusions regarding the conflict in the Middle East. However, the lies told in this book do not come from ignorant people nor are these authors strangers to the realities of the conflict in the Middle East. Rather, these are people who feel a need to undermine there own people under the facade of "humanitarianism".
The infamous "Butcher of Beirut" lie, can also be tolerated by those who claim that Sharon looked away as the SLA killed out a palestinian village. However, those (such as these authors) who claim that the Israelis themselves killed out the village, can be immediately discredited. Even the Palestinians themselves wouldn't tell the story in such a backwards manner.
These authors should be condemned in the strongest terms possible by any person who is commited to honesty and integrity.
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A warning to those doing self-study: this is not useful for self study. Not enough explanation is given for certain grammatical features in BH.
The author's research is very interesting and promising. The book reviews similar microsimulation attempts by others.
However, there is no guidance as to the implementation of microsimulation studies in finance. The eauations/models of finance are easily found elsewhere .... but how do you turn them into a simulation project (?)...