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Reform Judaism and Darwin by Daniel Langton
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Reform Judaism and Darwin

How Engaging With Evolutionary Theory Shaped American Jewish Religion

De Gruyter · 2019-07-22

Reform Judaism and Darwin: How Engaging With Evolutionary Theory Shaped American Jewish Religion

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Who It's For

  • Good for readers who enjoy Religion / Judaism / Theology
  • Good for readers interested in american

What You Get

  • Themes: Science, Religion.
  • Reading lane: Judaism.
  • Publisher: De Gruyter.

Categories

What we read

  • Religion / Judaism / Theology

    73%
  • Religion / Judaism / Orthodox

    72%
  • Religion / Judaism / History

    71%

About This Book

Darwin provoked Jewish as well as Christian thinkers so that many felt obliged to establish oppositional, alternative, synthetic, or complimentary models relating Jewish religion to his theory of natural selection. This book examines a range of leading nineteenth- and early twentieth-century American progressive Jewish thinkers, with the primary focus being rabbis Kohler, Wise, Hirsch, Krauskopf, and Hahn, although many others are covered. Key themes include the widespread c...

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Darwin provoked Jewish as well as Christian thinkers so that many felt obliged to establish oppositional, alternative, synthetic, or complimentary models relating Jewish religion to his theory of natural selection. This book examines a range of leading nineteenth- and early twentieth-century American progressive Jewish thinkers, with the primary focus being rabbis Kohler, Wise, Hirsch, Krauskopf, and Hahn, although many others are covered. Key themes include the widespread commitment to universal evolutionism, that is, the application of biological evolutionary theory to other realms (e.g. history, religion, cosmic), and the particular fascination with the evolution of ethical systems within human societies, bearing in mind mankind’s bestial origins and the new challenges for understanding religious authority and revelation. It is argued that Reform Jewish discussions about the nature of God have been more profoundly shaped by engagement with evolutionary theory than has been recognized before, and that evolutionary thought provides the key framework for understanding Reform Judaism itself. The precise nature of Jewish Reform engagement with Christian proponents of theistic evolution are important, as are their interest in alternative evolutionists to Darwin, such as Spencer and Haeckel.

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