525 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
525 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
This is a report on a series of lectures given
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by Moshe Idel at the University of Washington
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(Seattle) about a year ago. I have divided
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report into three posts, one for each lecture.
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These are not verbatim transcripts: they are
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summaries of the sort that might be made by
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anyone from notes made during the lecture. Not
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everything is included, and most of what Idel
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said is summarized. I have tried to indicate
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where I missed things, and what I missed. The
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initial material is from the flier that was
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passed out to everyone before the lectures.
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Moshe Idel is in no way responsible for my
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reports of his lectures. I have done my best to
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be as accurate as I could. At the same time, I
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should hope that I'm not infringing on his
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copyright by reporting what he said. --Such are
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the mysteries of the copyright law!
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THE SAMUEL & ALTHEA STROUM
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LECTURESHIP IN
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JEWISH STUDIES
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Moshe Idel
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PARDES:THE QUEST FOR SPIRITUAL
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PARADISE IN JUDAISM
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April 16
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Primordial Wisdom: The Philosophers' Quest
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April 18
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Primordial Light: The Ecstatics' Quest
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April 22
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PARDES: Between Sefirot and Demonology
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The Core of the "Pardes" Tradition: Tosefta
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Hagigah 2:3-4
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Four entered the Orchard (Pardes): Ben Azzai,
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Ben Zoma, Akher and Rabbi Aqiva. One peeked and
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died; one peeked and was smitten; one peeked and
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cut down the shoots; one ascended safely and
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descended safely.
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Ben Azzai peeked and died. Concerning him
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Scripture says: "Precious in the eyes of he
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Lord is the death of His loyal ones" (Ps. 16.
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15).
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Ben Zoma peeked and was smitten. Concerning him
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Scripture says: "If you have found honey, eat
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only your fill lest you become filled with it
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and vomit" (Prov. 25:16).
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Akher peeked and cut down the shoots.
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Concerning him Scripture says: "Do not let your
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mouth bring your flesh to sin, and do not say
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before the angel that it is an error; why
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should God become angry at your voice, and ruin
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your handiwork" (Eccl. 5:5).
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Rabbi Aqiva ascended safely and descended
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safely. Concerning him Scripture says: "Draw
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me, let us run after you, the King has brought
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me into His chambers" (Song I:4).
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Lecture I: Primordial Wisdom: The Philosophers'
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Quest
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Tuesday 16 April 1991, 8:00 pm.
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[This is a precis summary; reporter's comments
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are in square brackets; otherwise text should be
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taken as an attempt to transcribe the gist of
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what the speaker actually said. The result is a
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rather dry, compressed text; typographical
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devices have been used to break it up and make
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it more readable. Some of these may not
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transpose well to Net text. I have tried to
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regularize the spellings of Hebrew terms, but
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I'm afraid I've probably let a number of them
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vary all over the map.]
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[The first lecture was something of a Society
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event; there was quite a collection of The
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Better Sort, who actually toughed it out through
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much of the first lecture, if only for the sake
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of the reception afterward. Idel's lecture (in
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thoroughly accented English) made fewer
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concessions than one might imagine to a non-
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specialist audience. These lectures are usually
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edifying cultural events, but Idel used the
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opportunity to go over material he was working
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up for a book. imposing countenances, who had a
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reception for themselves and the speaker
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afterward.]
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First, some general observations in an attempt to
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locate the Pardes legend in its context.
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1: Biblical and Rabbinic Judaism were exoteric in
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nature: Judaism was seen as being open, to both
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the elite and the vulgus [the crowd, common
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people, hoi polloi] on the same basis. The idea
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was that the knowledge and practice were to be
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spread, and could be spread, to all levels of the
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Jewish nation, and that study of the Torah was
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open to all. Religious life was not regarded as
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dangerous.
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2. This might seem like belaboring the obvious,
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but it was not obvious if seen in the context of
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contemporary cults and religions, in either the
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world of early Judaism (with the nature religions
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of neighboring nations) or in the Hellenistic
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world (with its mystery religions). Judaism
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insisted on rules binding on all members, and on
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public rites, as exemplified by the need for a
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quorum to legitimize certain rites. It was
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collective, group-oriented, and "nomian," [cf.
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"antinomian"] that is, oriented toward practicing
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a nomos, i.e., the Torah. The attitude toward the
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Commandments was summed up in the saying, "You
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shall live by them."
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3. Thus, in a sense, that Judaism was relatively
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egalitarian [the speaker actually said
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"equalitarian"]. The Law was (in principle)
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available to and incumbent upon everyone, and the
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Law, the nomos, was the standard. Religious
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practice was collective, public, non-sectarian,
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and not dangerous.
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This then is how one can describe the first
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phases of Judaism, the Biblical and what might be
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called the Classical (i.e. Rabbinic-Midrashic)
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phases.
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But there were also other types of Judaism,
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cultivated in smaller circles, as exemplified by
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the Hekhaloth literature. These involved
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contemplation of the Divine vehicles, or the
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Divine stature, and involved non-Halakhic
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techniques for transcending common experiences in
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favor of achieving a strong but dangerous result:
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the experience or vision of the Merkavah, or of
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the Divine body or glory. One finds these efforts
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expressed in some very ancient texts, which also
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link them with dangers and the paying of a high
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price. These efforts lead to awful [or aweful]
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encounters with angels; their result is the
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experience of a tremendum. It seems to have been
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less than delightful, and it was reserved for the
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very few.It is presented in terms that constitute
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both the statement of an ideal and a warning
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against embarking on a quest for it.
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One of the key exemplary texts is the account of
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the four sages, the four upright persons, who
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entered the Pardes, the Orchard or Garden, all but
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one of whom were severely damaged by the
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experience despite their excellent qualities.
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This cannot be taken as a historical document,
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despite the fact that these four did live at
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approximately the same time. This is not a report
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of historical events; it should be taken as a
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collection of traditions about the effects of
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entering the Pardes. Two results were positive:
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one person died, but remained loyal; one (Rabbi
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Aqiva) remained safe. Two results were negative:
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one person went mad; the other became a heretic.
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Instead of reading this as a biographical
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account, we should read it as a typological
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account, one describing types of experiences and
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the types of effects those experiences can have.
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From its first appearance, this crucial text was
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not historical, but exemplary.
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This text is used in different ways in different
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settings. In mystical literature, it is used to
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point out dangers that can befall the mystic. In
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Talmudic-Midrashic sources, it is used to point
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out the dangers and achievements that are related
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to speculations, rather than to experiences. The
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interpretation of the account depends on the
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context in which it is used; thus it is a mistake
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to try to establish a single "genuine" meaning
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common to all versions.
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This account is, then, a parable whose
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significance is not explicated, as in Kabbalah:
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the Pardes is an unexplained parable for an
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unrevealed secret. There is a crucial vagueness
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here, and one must make the assumption that this
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sort of vagueness does not represent a defeat but
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an opportunity - to introduce new meanings to an
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open text, as in Umberto Eco's account of reading
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texts as open texts. [Cf. Umberto Eco, The Open
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Work.] The Pardes be comes a generalized metaphor
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for the danger zones of religious experience, seen
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as something which is good for the few, but
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pernicious for others.
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The Pardes story, then, has been (re)interpreted
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in a variety of directions; here, we are
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interested in patterns of interpretation proposed
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in the Middle Ages (though the history of the
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interpretation of the story could be continued
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onward from there).
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Today, we talk about Maimonides and the
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philosophical tradition.
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Next: about the ecstatic tradition.
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Last: about (a) the Divine Sefiroth and (b) the
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encounter with the demonic.
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In all three streams of interpretation, the
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vagueness of the basic story contributed to the
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richness of the resulting interpretations.
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After the Classical (Rabbinic) period, Judaism
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underwent two major changes, one of which was its
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transformation into an esoteric religion (at least
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as understood by some elite masters), a religion
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having two levels. An esoteric understanding of
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Judaism was a shared feature of various
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traditions: the Kabbalah, the classical
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philosophical schools (e.g. Maimonides), and the
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Hasidi Ashkenaz and other medieval mystical
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groups. This move involves [though the speaker
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did not overtly label it, the second change] the
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atomization of the collective or the group. The
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group is important as a mystical tool in some
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forms of Kabbalah, but it plays a restricted role.
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The core aim of personal redemption, or the
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achievement of individual perfection, moved to the
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forefront. To understand the underlying secrets,
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and to behave in accordance with them: this was
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crucial to the Jewish elite in the middle ages.
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It was a cult of individual attainment, which
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involved the reading of its sources as secret
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messages hidden in canonical scriptures, messages
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connected to the goal of salvation.
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There were two models for salvation in those
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scriptures: salvation as attaining the End, or as
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returning to the Origin. Thus the effort to
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obtain salvation meant either hastening the end
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(collectively, this involved messianism), or
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reaching back to a lost paradise that had been
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existing since the beginning. This is why the
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concept of Paradise is important in understanding
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the meaning of the Pardes, even though they were
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not originally as closely connected is it might
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seem.
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"Pardes" actually means an orchard. The actual
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term for "Paradise," in the sense of the Garden of
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Eden, was Gan Eden, which in the Septuagint was
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translated by the Greek word for Paradise
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[deriving originally from Persian], from which
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there was a backward linkage to the Hebrew word
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Pardes. The two ideas, originally different, came
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to explain or amplify each other. Thus, the
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dangers associated with Gan Eden [the angel with
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the flaming sword] and Pardes also converged:
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both came to represent dangerous ideals, and ideal
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dangers.
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The Pardes story then came to have as a subtext
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the story of Paradise (Gan Eden). It became a
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common effort of medieval commentators to explain
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the story of Paradise by means of the story of
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Pardes. The attempt to escape ritual and return
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to Paradise was a threat to Judaism as a religion
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[i.e., as a religion based on ritual and the Law];
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thus, it could not be proposed openly as a goal.
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Any attempt to enter Pardes then was an entry into
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a dangerous zone. Classical Judaism was not
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escapist: that is, it did not involve an attempt
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to transcend history. The transcendental ideal
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could stand as an ideal for the few, but it was an
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ideal that was dangerous to (or if adopted by) the
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many; it thus had to be reserved to the few to
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stop escapist religious trends.
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Maimonides' interpretation, in summary, took
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perfect philosophy as the wisdom of Adam, lost but
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retrievable by some (perfect) persons, e.g., R.
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Aqiva. To be in Paradise, from this point of
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view, was to be a philosopher. Philosophy is
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perfection in the present; Paradise is perfection
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in the past and in the future. The ideal of
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philosophy is to exist in continuous
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contemplation. When the Primordial Man fell: he
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was [or became] unable to stay in the state of
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perfect philosophy.
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The Pardes story, however, points out a path of
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return, and suggests an analysis of Judaism as a
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project of return to perfect philosophy. It
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points out both techniques and possible problems.
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The first part of Maimonides major Halakhic work
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is where he explains the meaning of Pardes - but
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of course, since he was a Rabbi, he doesn't
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explain it openly. He mentions that it is a
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matter of the [four?] key "themes dealt with in
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the preceding chapters," leaving the reader to
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select which of the many themes are the key
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themes. Though all four of the characters in the
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story were great men of Israel, not all had the
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capacity to grasp the subject clearly. For him,
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then, the Pardes is linked to speculation: it is
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something to be known, something that must be
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grasped clearly, rather than a mystical
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experience. Maimonides states that it is not
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proper to walk in the Pardes without being filled
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with bread and meat, i.e., knowledge of what is
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permitted and forbidden, i.e., without having had
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a solid Rabbinic education. Why is this? Because
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knowledge of these things gives composure to the
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mind. Maimonides presents Jewish law as a way of
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achieving a certain stability, a mastery of lust
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and imagination. The Commandments are a sine qua
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non, the basis for the requisite composure.
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The Law, then, gives one the possibility of
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calming the mind, of mastering imagination and
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lust, in order to be able ... to study Aristotle.
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By which he meant, to study the Physics and
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Metaphysics.
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This study has two major dangers. One is the
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cognitive or classical or Aristotelian: a
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misunderstanding of physics and metaphysics due to
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imaginative distortion of reality. One's
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understanding [or the clarity of one's
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understanding] can be spoiled by one's [non-
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rational] inclinations.
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There is also the Platonic danger: the
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political implications better not understood by
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the masses, as in Book l [Book XII] of the
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Metaphysics.
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Not all of the four Masters, then, were calm
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enough, educated enough, to grasp Aristotelian
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metaphysics.
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There are two ways of understanding Maimonides'
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position here: one exoteric, the other esoteric.
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The exoteric understanding would take the
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historical Adam as the perfect philosopher,
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brought down into a fallen state by the last
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remnants of desire and fantasy. Thus our current
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condition of isolation from philosophic truth
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would be the historical result of Adam's fall.
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The esoteric reading, however, is that the state
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of the Primordial Man is always open to us, always
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available at any time - as, too, is the sin of
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Adam. In principle, at least. Kafka has an
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interpretation of the expulsion from Paradise that
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can be taken as a key to the esoteric reading of
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Maimonides' position. According to that
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interpretation, the Expulsion from Paradise is
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final, and life in this world is irrevocable. It
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is eternal in nature. [I.e., it is an event "in
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eternity," rather than in history.] At the same
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time we are continuously in Paradise, whether we
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realize it or not. Thus neither the Expulsion nor
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the Paradisal state are historical events: they
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are structures of experience open to each of us.
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This is also, by the way, the Kabbalistic
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interpretation developed by Abulafia, who was the
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first to treat the Pardes as an ongoing
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experience. His interpretation was very similar
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to Kafka's. "Anyone who enters Pardes has to
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enter in peace and exit in peace."
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This spiritualistic reading, that the Pardes is
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not a matter of history but is open to anyone,
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proposes a spiritualistic typology, a scheme of
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typical experiences or states that can be
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actualized at any time. History becomes
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unimportant. By studying Bible, Talmud, Kabbalah,
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philosophy, we become aware of what can happen in
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experience.
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This reading seems to do justice to certain
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passages in Maimonides about people "of the rank
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of R. Aqiva." History disappears: The Bible,
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Talmud, Aristotle - all speak about inner
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experiences related only to the elite because they
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are dangerous, but which are to be pointed out to
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the masses to orient them, to give them the sense
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that Judaism is more than its ritual.
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This approach still assumes that there is
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danger, but Judaism is here seen as trying to cope
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with the problem of the dangerous ideal. The
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ideal may be dangerous, but it is to be
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cultivated. This formulation becomes a way of
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balancing ritualistic approaches against the
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explosion of metaphysical speculations that might
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endanger the observance of the ritual.
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The aim is not merely to propose philosophy but
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to use Aristotelian psychology and metaphysics to
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point to meditations on secret Judaism, to
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introduce a new paradigm for understanding
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Judaism. Thus, Maimonides was able to begin a
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tradition of interpretation (which lasted from
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about the 14th to the 18th centuries) which took
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ritual as means of introduction to philosophy.
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This interpretation fortifies the place of ritual,
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yet puts it in its place, shows that it is not
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final. It is needed, but in a way to be
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transcended - by the few, for whom a higher ideal
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is needed, that of the Pardes.
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Next time, we talk not about philosophic
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speculation but about ecstatic experience, the
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encounter with a terrible Light, the Primordial
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Light.
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QUESTIONS
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Question: The aim is to master the corporeal,
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which if not understood will distort one's
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grasp of reality? Then for Maimonides there
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was a specific absolute reality?
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Answer: Yes. He believed a certain metaphysics
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was true. His was not a modern,
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Heideggerian philosophy. For him, God was
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the sum of the intelligibilia, as was the
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case for other medieval philosophers. God
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was taken as the great intelligence. There
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was a negative theology, but there was also
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a positive theology.
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Question: What about the Pardes story and the
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Ari?
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Answer: A very complex issue - and another story.
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Question: Kafka wrote about Maimonides-
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A: Not about Maimonides, but Genesis.
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Q: Genesis then. If the expulsion is eternal...
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A: We are expelled all the time from Paradise,
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but it is here. We are out and in at the
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same time. It is a matter of each of us.
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That is why the Fall is not final.
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Q: The Halakha becomes then a means - is it time-
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bound? May there be other means at other
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times for Maimonides?
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A: Halakha remains necessary all the time. It is
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not like a ladder. Desires are always
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present. Halakhic discipline is not simply
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preliminary: it is needed all the time - it
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too is eternal. [Cf. the Great Chain of
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Being, or Crowley's understanding of
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initiatory hierarchy.]
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Q: Why is this in the Mishne Torah, not in the
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Guide?
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A: To Maimonides, the code of behavior is an
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introduction to the Pardes. He starts with
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the Pardes, only then to go on to talk about
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the Law. The Pardes is integral to the
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Mishne Torah.
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Q: What then does the RamBam have to say about
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the Messiah?
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A: There is only one hint - Perfect Philosophy is
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Paradise, personal salvation. Each of us
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then is his own Messiah, and we don't need
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another Messiah - as individuals. As a
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collective, it is another story. The
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Messiah is needed to embody a certain
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political, social, et cetera, state.
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Q: And Halakha is a mechanism to reach that
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experience?
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A: Yes.
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Q: What about the discussion of the Castle in the
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Guide?
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A: In III:51 of the Guide of the Perplexed,
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Maimonides mentions Ben Zoma - among rabbis
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expert only in Halakha, unable to understand
|
||
metaphysics. Thus they are outside the
|
||
castle.
|
||
|
||
Q: Is there any significance in this to the fact
|
||
that some of Maimonides' students were not
|
||
Jewish, but Muslim?
|
||
A: I'm not aware of any advanced students who
|
||
were Muslim. There were Muslims who were
|
||
followers, who studied the Guide...
|
||
Q: But there was a Muslim who studied Aristotle
|
||
with Maimonides; we have diaries...
|
||
A: I don't know about that.
|
||
Q: Esotericism was widespread-
|
||
A: But Maimonides was not in Baghdad.
|
||
Q: This was in Egypt...
|
||
|
||
Q: What is the nature of danger in the Kabbalah?
|
||
A: Danger is associated with individual
|
||
initiative. Danger enters with the desire
|
||
for the paranormal, for the transcendent
|
||
experience, the desire to go beyond the
|
||
communal experience.
|
||
|
||
Q: What about the use of PARDES as a code [an
|
||
acrostic] for the four ways of interpreting
|
||
the Torah?
|
||
A: It did become that, but only later, long after
|
||
Maimonides, with Kabbalists in Spain and
|
||
Italy. But there is a huge amount of
|
||
material available, and I had to select it
|
||
very even inside this narrow topic in order
|
||
to be able to give a manageable lecture.
|
||
There is material for a year's worth of
|
||
lectures for any of these topics.
|
||
|