Menu Expand

Kabbala als jüdische Philosophie

Von der esoterischen Philosophie der Hebräer im 17. Jahrhundert zur modernen Mystik-Forschung

Schulte, Christoph

Zeitschrift für Kulturphilosophie, Bd. 2017 (2017), Iss. 2: S. 77–97

Zusätzliche Informationen

Bibliografische Daten

Schulte, Christoph

Abstract

Among early modern Christian kabbbalists such as Pico della Mirandola and Christian Knorr von Rosenroth, Kabbalah counts as part of philosophia perennis and esoteric Jewish philosophy. Bruckers differentiation between Kabbalah as esoteric Jewish philosophy and Maimonides as exoteric Jewish philosophy is taken up by Tiedemann and Hegel, and is well known to Schelling and Molitor. In opposition to this taxinomy among Christian philosophers, Jewish philosophers and scholars of »Wissenschaft des Judentums« like Salomon Munk, Manuel Joel, Hermann Cohen or Julius Guttmann exclude Kabbalah from the canon of Jewish philosophy proper, exemplified by Yehuda Halevi or Maimonides. It is only after World War I that Gershom Scholem inaugurates the modern research of Kabbalah as »mysticism«, juxtaposed to philosophy and to the rationalistic traditions inJudaism.