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    HISTORY OF ISRAEL LIBRARY | 
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 CONTENTS
           
           Introduction
           I. Isaac
          Israeli
           II. David
          ben Merwan Al Mukammas
           III. Saadia
          ben Joseph Al-Fayyumi
           IV. Joseph
          Al-Basir and Jeshua ben Judah
           V. Solomon
          Ibn Gabirol
           VI. Bahya
          Ibn Pakuda
           VII. Pseudo-Bahya
           VIII. Abraham
          Bar Hiyya
           IX. Joseph
          Ibn Zaddik
           X. Judah
          Halevi
           XI. Moses
          and Abraham Ibn Ezra
           XII. Abraham
          Ibn Daud
           XIII. Moses
          Maimonides
           XIV. Hillel
          ben Samuel
           XV. Levi
          ben Gerson
           XVI. Aaron
          ben Elijah of Nicomedia
           XVII. Hasdai
          ben Abraham Crescas
           XVIII.
          Joseph Albo
           Conclusion
           CHAPTER XVIAARON BEN ELIJAH OF NICOMEDIA
           The
          chronological treatment of Jewish philosophy which we have followed makes it
          necessary at this point to take up a Karaite work of the fourteenth century
          that is closely modelled upon the "Guide of the Perplexed." In doing
          this we necessarily take a step backward as far as the philosophical
          development is concerned. For while it is true that the early Rabbanite
          thinkers like Saadia, Bahya, Ibn Zaddik and others moved in the circle of ideas
          of the Mohammedan Mutakallimun, that period had long since been passed. Judah
          Halevi criticized the Kalam, Ibn Daud is a thorough Aristotelian, and
          Maimonides gave the Kalam in Jewish literature its deathblow. No Rabbanite
          after Maimonides would think of going back to the old arguments made popular by
          the Mutakallimun—the theory of atoms, of substance and accident in the
          Kalamistic sense of accident as a quality which needs continuous creation to
          exist any length of time, the denial of law and natural causation, the
          arguments in favor of creation and the existence of God based upon creation,
          the doctrine of the divine will as eternal or created, residing in a subject or
          existing without a subject, the world as due to God's will or to his wisdom,
          the nature of right and wrong as determined by the character and purpose of the
          act or solely by the arbitrary will of God—these and other topics, which formed
          the main ground of discussion between the Muʿtazilites and the Ashariya,
          and were taken over by the Karaites and to a less extent by the early
          Rabbanites in the tenth and eleventh centuries, had long lost their
          significance and their interest among the Rabbanite followers of Maimonides.
          Aristotelianism, introduced by Alfarabi, Avicenna and Averroes among the Arabs,
          and Ibn Daud and Maimonides among the Jews, dominated all speculative thought,
          and the old Kalam was obsolete and forgotten. Gersonides no longer regards the Kalamistic
          point of view as a living issue. He ignores it entirely. His problems as we
          have seen are those raised by the Averroistic system. In this respect then a
          reading of Aaron ben Elijah's "Ez Hayim" (Tree of Life) affects us
          like a breath from a foreign clime, like the odor of a thing long buried. And
          yet Aaron ben Elijah was a contemporary of Levi ben Gerson. He was born about
          1300, and died in 1369. He lived in Nicomedia, Cairo, Constantinople. The
          reason for the antiquated appearance of his work lies in the fact that he was a
          Karaite, and the Karaites never got beyond the Mutazilite point of view.
          Karaism was only a sect and never showed after the days of Saadia anything like
          the life and enthusiastic activity of the great body of Rabbanite Judaism, which
          formed the great majority of the Jewish people. The Karaites had their
          important men in Halaka as well as in religious philosophy and Biblical
          exegesis. Solomon ben Yeroham, Joseph Ha-Maor (Al-Kirkisani), Joseph Al Basir,
          Jeshua ben Judah, Yefet Ha-Levi, Judah Hadassi, Aaron ben Joseph—all these were
          prominent in Karaitic literature. But they cannot be compared to the great men
          among the Rabbanites. There was no Maimonides among them. And Aaron ben Elijah
          cherished the ambition of being to the Karaites what Maimonides was to the
          Rabbanites. Accordingly he undertook to compose three works representing the
          three great divisions of Karaitic Judaism—a book of Laws, a work on Biblical
          exegesis and a treatise on religious philosophy. The last was written first,
          having been composed in 1346. The "Sefer Ha-Mizvot," on the religious
          commandments, was written in 1354, and his exegetical work, known as
          "Keter Torah" (The Crown of the Law) was published in 1362. It is the
          first that interests us, the "Ez Hayim." As was said before, this
          book is closely modelled upon the "More Nebukim," though the
          arrangement is different, being more logical than that of the
          "Guide." Instead of beginning, as Maimonides does, with interpreting
          the anthropomorphic expressions in the Bible, which is followed by a treatment
          of the divine attributes, long before the existence of God has been proved or
          even the fundamental principles laid down upon which are based the proofs of
          the existence of God, Aaron ben Elijah more naturally begins with the basal
          doctrines of physics and metaphysics, which he then utilizes in discussing the
          existence of God. As Maimonides brought to a focus all the speculation on
          philosophy and religion as it was handed down to him by Arab and Jew, and gave
          it a harmonious and systematic form in his masterpiece; so did Aaron ben Elijah
          endeavor to sum up all Karaitic discussion in his work, and in addition declare
          his attitude to Maimonides. The success with which he carried out this plan is
          not equal. As a source of information on schools and opinions of Arabs and
          Karaites, the "Ez Hayim" is of great importance and interest. But it
          cannot in the least compare with the "Guide" as a constructive work
          of religious philosophy. It has not the same originality or any degree remotely
          approaching it. The greater part of the Aristotelian material seems bodily
          taken from Maimonides, and so is the part dealing with the anthropomorphic
          expressions in the Bible. There is a different point of view in his exposition
          of the Mutazilite physics, which he presents in a more systematic and favorable
          light than Maimonides, defending it against the strictures of the latter. But
          everywhere Aaron ben Elijah lacks the positiveness and commanding mastery of
          Maimonides. He is not clear what side of a question to espouse. For the most
          part he places side by side the opposed points of view and only barely
          intimates his own attitude or preference. Under these circumstances it will not
          be necessary for us to reproduce his ideas in
            extenso. It will be sufficient if we indicate his relation to Maimonides in
          the problems common to both, adding a brief statement of those topics which
          Aaron ben Elijah owes to his Karaite predecessors, and which Maimonides omits.
           His
          general attitude on the relation of religion or revelation to reason and
          philosophy is somewhat inconsistent. For while he endeavors to rationalize
          Jewish dogma and Scriptural teaching like Maimonides, and in doing so utilizes
          Aristotelian terminology in matters physical, metaphysical, psychological,
          ethical and logical, he nevertheless in the beginning of his work condemns
          philosophy as well as philosophers, meaning of course the Aristotelians. He
          nowhere expressly indicates the manner of reconciling this apparent
          contradiction. But it would seem as if he intended to distinguish between the
          philosophical method and the actual teachings of the Aristotelians. Their
          method he approves, their results he condemns. The Aristotelians taught the
          eternity of the world, the immutability of natural law, God's ignorance of
          particulars and the absence of special Providence. These doctrines must be
          condemned. Maimonides too rejects these extreme teachings while praising
          Aristotle and maintaining that philosophy was originally a possession of the
          Israelitish people, which they lost in the exile. Aaron ben Elijah is not
          willing to follow the philosophers as far as Maimonides. He admits positive
          attributes in God, which Maimonides rejects; he admits an absolute will in God
          and not merely a relative like Maimonides; he extends God's providence to all
          individuals including irrational creatures, whereas Maimonides limits special
          providence to the individuals of the human species, and so on. And so he
          condemns the philosophers, though he cannot help using their method and even
          their fundamental doctrines, so far as they are purely theoretical and
          scientific. He is willing to go the full length of the Aristotelians only in
          the unity and incorporeality of God, though here too he vindicates sense
          perception to God, i. e., the knowledge of that which we get through our sense
          organs. He too like the philosophers insists on the importance of the reason as
          the instrument of truth and knowledge. Abraham was the first, he tells us, who
          proved the existence of God with his intellect. Then came the law of Moses,
          which strengthened the same idea. The Gentiles hated and envied Israel for
          their superiority and their true opinions; hence they endeavored to refute
          their ideas and establish others in their stead. This was the work of the
          ancient Greek philosophers, who are called enemies in the Bible (Psalms 139,
          21). At the time of the second Temple, seeing that the Jewish religion and its
          teachings were true, they took advantage of the advent of Jesus to adopt his
          false teachings, thus showing their hatred and envy of Israel. At the same
          time, however, they were obliged to borrow some views and methods of proof from
          Israel, for religion as such is opposed to philosophy. Still the true nature of
          God was unknown to them. Then came the Arabs, who imitated the Christians in
          adopting a belief different from Judaism, at the same time borrowing views from
          the Bible. These are the Mutazila and the Ashariya. Later when on account of
          the exile differences arose among the Jews, there were formed the two parties
          of the Karaites and the Rabbanites. The Karaites followed the Mutazila, and so
          did some of the Rabbanites, because their views coincided with those of the
          Bible, from which they were borrowed. The views of the philosophers as being
          opposed to the Bible they naturally rejected. Nevertheless some Rabbanites
          adopted the views of the philosophers, though believing in the Bible. This is a
          mistake, for even the Christians rejected the views of the philosophers.
           Here we
          see clearly the difference in general attitude between Aaron ben Elijah and
          Maimonides. The latter has no use whatsoever for the Mutazila. He realizes the
          immeasurable superiority of the Aristotelians (this is the meaning of the word
          philosophers in medieval Jewish and Arabic literature). His task is therefore
          to harmonize the Bible with Aristotelian doctrine wherever possible. Aaron ben
          Elijah is still, in the fourteenth century, a follower of the Kalam, and
          believes the Mutazila are closer to Scripture than Aristotle. He is two
          centuries behind Maimonides philosophically, and yet he has the truer insight
          because less debauched by Aristotelian learning.
           As was
          said before, Aaron ben Elijah follows a more logical arrangement in the
          disposition of his work than Maimonides. In reality it is the old arrangement
          of the Kalamistic works. The purpose of all Jewish investigators, he says, is
          the same, namely, to prove the existence and nature of God, but there is a
          difference among them in the method of proving God's existence. Some base their
          proofs on the assumption of the creation of the world, others on that of the
          world's eternity. The Mutakallimun follow the former method, the philosophers,
          the latter. Their respective views of the origin of the world are determined by
          their opinions concerning the principles of existence and the existent, that
          is, the fundamental principles of physics and metaphysics. Accordingly Aaron
          ben Elijah finds it necessary to give a preliminary account of the Kalamistic
          as well as the philosophic theories, as Maimonides did before him . It is not
          necessary for us to reproduce here his sketch of the philosophical views, as we
          know them sufficiently from our studies of Ibn Daud and Maimonides. But it will
          be of value to refer to his account of the Kalamistic principles, though we
          have already discussed them in the introduction and in our study of Maimonides
          . This is due principally to the fact that Aaron ben Elijah endeavors to defend
          the Mutakallimun against Maimonides's charge that they were influenced by
          preconceived notions and allowed their religious views to dictate to them their
          interpretation of nature, instead of letting the latter speak for itself. Thus
          Maimonides specifically accuses them of having adopted the atomic theory of the
          pre-Aristotelian philosophers not because they were really and independently
          convinced of its scientific truth—how could that be since Aristotle proved it
          impossible?—but because on this theory they could prove the creation of the
          world, which they must at all hazards maintain as a religious dogma fundamental
          in its nature, since upon it is based the proof of the existence of God.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah denies this charge, maintaining the philosophical honesty of the
          Mutakallimun. Epicurus too, he says, believed in the atomic theory, though he
          regarded the world as eternal. Hence there is no necessary connection between
          atoms and creation. The atomic theory is defensible on its own merits, and the
          motives of the Mutakallimun in adopting it are purely scientific, as follows:
          According to the Mutakallimun there are only body or substance and its
          accidents or qualities. This is the constitution of material objects. There
          are, however, two kinds of qualities or attributes, viz.,
          "characters," and accidents. Characters are such attributes as are
          essential to body and without which it cannot exist. Accidents may disappear,
          while body continues. Since, then, body may exist with or without accidents,
          there must be a cause which is responsible for the attachment of accidents to
          body when they are so attached. This cause we call "union." When a
          body is "united" with accidents it owes this to the existence of a
          certain something, a certain property, let us say, in it which we have called "union."
          Hence when the body is "separated" from accidents, when it is without
          accidents, it is because there is no "union." Further, every body
          possessed of magnitude or extension is divisible, hence it must have
          "union" to hold its parts together. But this "union" is not
          essential to all existents; for we have seen that its function is to unite
          accidents with body. And as accidents are separable while body may continue to
          exist without them, "union" disappears together with the accidents.
          Bodies without "union" are therefore possible and real. But we have
          just seen that all bodies possessing magnitude have "union." It
          follows therefore that if there are "union"-less bodies, they are
          without magnitude, and hence atoms. This is the proof of the atomic theory and
          it has nothing to do with the matter of the origin of the world. As a matter of
          fact the Mutakallimun believe that the atoms were created ex nihilo. But the
          creation of the world can be proved whichever view we adopt concerning the
          nature of the existent, whether it be the atomic theory of the Mutakallimun or
          the principles of matter and form of the Aristotelians. The important principle
          at the basis of this proof is the well-known Kalamistic one that if an object
          cannot do without an attribute originating in time, the object itself has its
          origin in time. Now on either view of the constitution of the existent, body
          must have form or accidents respectively, and as the latter are constantly
          changing, body or matter has its origin in time, hence the world is not
          eternal.
           Besides,
          not to speak of the inconclusive character of the philosophical arguments in
          favor of eternity and the positive arguments for creation (all or most of which
          we have already met in our previous studies, and need not therefore reproduce
          Aaron ben Elijah's version of them), the philosophers themselves without
          knowing it are led to contradict themselves in their very arguments from the
          assumption of eternity. The doctrine of creation follows as a consequence from
          their own presuppositions. Thus on the basis of eternity of motion they prove
          that the heavenly spheres are endowed with soul and intellect, and their
          motions are voluntary and due to conceptions which they endeavor to realize.
          This makes the sphere a composite object, containing the elements, sphericity,
          soul, intellect. Everything composite is a possible existent, because its
          existence depends upon the existence of its parts. What is a possible existent
          may also not exist. Moreover, that which is possible must at some time become
          actual. Hence the sphere must at some time have been non-existent, and it
          required an agent to bring it into being. We are thus led to contradict our
          hypothesis of eternity from which we started.
           Creation
          is thus established, and this is the best way to prove the existence, unity and
          incorporeality of God. Maimonides attempts to prove creation from the
          peculiarities of the heavenly motions, which cannot be well accounted for on
          the theory of natural causes. Adopting the latter in the main, he makes an
          exception in the case of the spherical motions because the philosophers cannot
          adequately explain them, and jumps to the conclusion that here the
          philosophical appeal to mechanical causation breaks down and we are dealing
          with teleology, with intelligent design and purpose on the part of an intelligent
          agent. This leads to belief in creation. But this argument of Maimonides is
          very weak and inconclusive. Ignorance of causes in a special case, due to the
          limitations of our reason, proves nothing. Mechanical causes may be the sole determinants
          of the heavenly motions even though the philosophers have not yet discovered
          what they are.
           Nor is
          Maimonides to be imitated, who bases his proof of the existence of God on the
          theory of eternity. The Bible is opposed to it. The Bible begins with creation
          as an indication that this is the basis of our knowledge of God's existence,
          revelation and providence. This is the method Abraham followed and this is what
          he meant when he swore by the "most high God, the creator of heaven and
          earth" (Gen. 14, 22). Abraham arrived at this belief through ratiocination
          and endeavored to convince others. The same thing is evident in the words of
          Isaiah (40, 26), "Lift up your eyes on high and see who created
          these." He was arguing with the people who believed in eternity, and
          proved to them the existence of God by showing that the world is created. All
          these indications in the Bible show that the doctrine of creation is capable of
          apodeictic proof.
           The
          reader will see that all this is directed against Maimonides, though he is not
          mentioned by name. Maimonides claimed against the Mutakallimun that it is not
          safe to base the existence of God upon the theory of creation, because the
          latter cannot be strictly demonstrated. And while he believed in it himself and
          gave reasons to show why it is more plausible than eternity, he admitted that
          others might think differently; and hence based his proofs of God's existence
          on the Aristotelian theory of eternity in order to be on the safe side. It is
          never too late to prove God's existence if the world is created. We must be
          sure of his existence, no matter what the fate of our cosmological theories
          might be. This did not appeal to the Karaite and Mutakallim, Aaron ben Elijah.
          His idea is that we must never for a moment doubt the creation of the world. To
          follow the procedure of Maimonides would have the tendency of making people
          believe that the world may be eternal after all, as happened in fact in the
          case of Gersonides. Aaron ben Elijah will not leave a way open to such a heresy.
           In the
          doctrine of attributes Aaron ben Elijah likewise maintains the views of the Mutazilite
          Karaites against the philosophers, and especially against Maimonides. The
          general problem is sufficiently familiar to us by this time, and we need only
          present the salient points in the controversy. The question is whether there
          are any positive attributes which may be applied to God as actually denoting
          his essence—hence positive essential attributes. Maimonides denied it, the
          Karaites affirmed it. The arguments for Maimonides's denial we saw before. And
          his conclusion is that the only attributes that may be applied to God are the
          negative, and those positive ones which do not denote any definite thing
          corresponding to them in God's essence, but are derived from the effects of
          God's unitary and simple being on the life of man and nature. He is the author
          of these effects, and we characterize him in the way in which we would
          characterize a human being who would do similar things; but this must not be
          done.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah insists that there are positive essential attributes, which are the
          following five: Omnipotent, Omniscient, Acting with Will, Living, Existent. He
          agrees with Maimonides that these essential attributes must be understood in a
          manner not to interfere with God's simplicity and unity, but is satisfied that
          this can be done. For we must not conceive of them as additions to God's
          essence, nor as so many distinct elements composing God's essence, but as
          representing the multiplicity of powers issuing from him without detriment to
          his unity. We call them essential attributes, meaning that they are the essence
          of God, but not that they are different from each other and each makes up part
          of God's essence. We do not know God's essence, and these terms are simply
          transferred from our human experience, and do not indicate that God's activity
          can be compared to ours in any sense.
           The five
          attributes above named are all identical with God's simple essence.
          "Living" denotes ability to perceive, hence is identical with
          "Omniscient." "Acting with will" likewise denotes just and
          proper action, which in turn involves true insight. Hence identity of will and
          knowledge. "Omnipotent" also in the case of an intellectual being
          denotes the act of the intellect par excellence, which is knowledge. And surely
          God's existence is not distinct from his essence, else his existence would be
          caused, and he would not be the necessary existent all agree him to be. It
          follows then that God is one, and his essence is nevertheless all these five
          attributes.
           There are
          all the reasons in the world why we should apply attributes to God. The same
          reason as we have for applying names to anything else exists for giving names
          to God. In fact it would be correct to say that we should have more names for
          God than for anything else, since in other things we can avoid naming them by
          pointing to them, as they can be perceived by the senses. Not so God. We are
          forced to use words in talking about him. God has given himself names in the
          Bible, hence we may do the same.
           Maimonides
          and his school endeavor to obviate the criticisms of the philosophers, who are
          opposed to all attributes, by excluding all but negative terms. But this does
          not help the matter in the least. A negative attribute is in reality no
          different from a positive, and in the end leads to a positive. Thus if we say
          "not mineral," "not plant," we clearly say
          "animal." The advocates of negative attributes answer this criticism
          by saying that they understand pure negation without any positive implications,
          just as when we say a stone is "not seeing," we do not imply that it
          is blind. But this cannot be, for when they say God is "not
          ignorant," they do not mean that he is not "knowing" either, for
          they insist that he is power and knowledge and life, and so on. This being the
          case, it is much more proper to use positive attributes, seeing that the
          Prophets do so. When they say that the Prophets meant only to exclude the
          negative; that by saying, "Able," "Knowing," they meant to
          exclude "weak" "ignorant," they ipso facto admit that by
          excluding the latter we posit the former.
           The
          arguments against positive essential attributes we can easily answer. By saying
          that certain attributes are essential we do not claim to know God's essence.
          All we know is God's existence, which we learn from his effects, and according
          to these same effects we characterize God's existence by means of attributes of
          which also we know only the existence, not the essence. For we do not mean to
          indicate that these terms denote the same thing in God as they denote in us.
          They are homonyms, since in God they denote essence, whereas in us they are
          accidents. The plurality of attributes does not argue plurality in God, for one
          essence may perform a great many acts, and hence we may characterize the
          essence in accordance with those acts. The error of composition arises only if
          we suppose that the various acts point to various elements in their author. Of
          the various kinds of terms those only are applicable to God which denote pure essence
          or substance like knowledge, power; and those denoting activity like creating,
          doing, and so on.
           In
          reference to the will of God Aaron ben Elijah refuses to agree with the
          peculiar view of the Mutakallimun; but unlike Maimonides, who can afford to ignore
          their discussions entirely and dismiss their fanciful notion with a word
          ("Guide," I. 75, proof 3), Aaron ben Elijah takes up the discussion
          seriously. The Mutakallimun (or the Ashariya, according to Aaron ben Elijah)
          were in dread of anything that might lend some semblance to eternity of the
          world. Hence they argued, If the will of God is identical with his essence like
          the other essential attributes, it follows that as his essence is eternal and
          unchangeable so is his will. And if we grant this, then the objects of his will
          too must be eternal and unchangeable, and we have the much abhorred doctrine of
          the eternity of the world. To avoid this objectionable conclusion they
          conceived of God's voluntary acts as due to an external will. But this external
          will also offered difficulties. It cannot be a power or quality residing in God
          as its subject, for God is not a material substance bearing accidents. It
          cannot be a quality inherent in another subject, for then it would not be God's
          will at all; it would be the will of this other being, and God's acts would be
          determined by someone else. They were thus forced to assume a subject-less will
          newly created with every act of God. This notion Aaron ben Elijah rejects on
          the ground that a subject-less will is an impossibility. An accident must have
          a subject, and will implies life as its subject. Besides, the relation between
          God and this subject-less accident, will, would be the cause of much logical
          difficulty. Aaron ben Elijah therefore accepts the ordinary sane view that the
          will of God is identical with his essence; that God wills through his own
          essence. And he does not fear that this will lead to eternity of the world. He
          identifies God's will with his wisdom, and God's wisdom with right action. As
          we do not know the essence of God's wisdom, so we do not know how it is that it
          prompts him to realize his will at one time and not at another, though his will
          is always the same.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah also follows his party in attributing to God sense perception, not, to
          be sure, the same kind of perception as we have, acquired by means of corporeal
          organs; for this is impossible in God for many reasons. God is not corporeal,
          and he cannot be affected or changed by a corporeal stimulus. But it is clear
          beyond a doubt that nothing can be more absurd than to suppose that the creator
          of the sense organs does not understand the purpose which they serve and the
          objects which they perceive. What we mean then is that the objects which we
          perceive with our senses God also perceives, though in an incorporeal manner.
          Hence it does not follow that there is any change in God due to the external
          object he perceives, nor that the multiplicity of objects involves plurality in
          God; for even our power of perception is one, though it perceives many things
          and opposite. We conclude then that God has perception as well as intelligence,
          but they are not two distinct powers in him. It is the object perceived that
          determines the power percipient. Hence one and the same power may be called
          perception when we are dealing with a sensible object, and intelligence when it
          has an intelligible as its object.
           In his
          discussion of the nature of evil we once more are brought in contact with
          Kalamistic views recalling the old Karaite works of the eleventh century. Thus
          the notion that good and bad are adjectives applied to acts not in view of
          their inherent character, which is per se neither good nor bad, but solely to
          indicate that they have been commanded or forbidden; the idea that only the
          dependent subject can do wrong, but not the master, since his will is the
          source of all right and wrong—these views are frequently discussed in the Mutazilite
          works of Arabs and Karaites. The Rabbanites scarcely ever mention them. Aaron
          ben Elijah enumerates six views on the nature of evil, with all of which except
          the last he disagrees. The opinion named above that an act is made good or bad
          by being commanded or prohibited, he refutes as follows: Such a view removes
          the very foundation of good and bad. For if the person in authority chooses to
          reverse his order, the good becomes bad, and the bad good, and the same thing
          is then good and bad, which is absurd. Besides, if there are two authorities
          giving opposite orders, the same act is good and bad at the same time. To say
          that God's command alone determines the character of an act is incorrect,
          because as long as commanding and prohibiting as such determine the goodness or
          bad ness of an act, the person issuing the command is immaterial. We do say
          quite generally that an act which God commands is good, and one which he
          prohibits is bad; but we mean by this merely that the command or prohibition is
          an indication to us, who are ignorant of the true nature of acts.
           Again, on
          this theory of the value of acts, what will you do with such an act as the
          investigation of the existence and nature of God? Surely such an important
          matter cannot be indifferent. It must be good or bad. And yet we cannot apply
          to it the above test of command and prohibition, for this test implies the
          existence of God, which the act endeavors to prove. It follows therefore that
          the value of an act is inherent in it and not determined and created by command
          and prohibition.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah is similarly dissatisfied with another view, which regards evil as a
          negation. We have heard this opinion before and we know that Maimonides adopted
          it . Its motive as we know is to remove from God the responsibility for evil.
          If evil is nothing positive it is not caused by the activity of an agent. All
          essential activity is good, and all the acts of God are good. Evil consists in
          the absence of good; it is due to matter, and does not come from God. Aaron ben
          Elijah objects properly that as good is a positive act, a doing of something
          positive, so is evil, even on the theory of its negative character, a removal
          of something positive, hence a positive act. Besides, granting all that the
          opponent claims, the argument should work both ways, and if God is not held
          responsible for the evil in the world because it is mere privation, why should
          man be held responsible for doing evil,
            i.e., for removing the positive? He clinches his argument by quoting Isaiah
          (5, 20), "Woe unto those who say of evil it is good, and of good it is
          evil ... that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter." Good and evil
          are placed parallel with sweet and bitter, which are both positive. Hence the
          Bible is opposed to the negative conception of evil.
           His own
          view is that good and evil are qualities pertaining to an act by reason of its
          own nature, but these are not absolute conceptions like true and false. The
          good and the bad are conventional constructs, and the value of an act is
          relative to the end or purpose it serves. The purpose of human convention in
          regarding certain acts as good and others as bad is the protection of the human
          race. An act which conduces to human welfare is good, one that militates against
          it is bad. Still there are instances in which an act generally regarded as bad
          may assume a different character when in the given instance it serves a good
          purpose, as for example when pain is inflicted to obviate more serious danger.
          The surgeon, who amputates a leg to save the patient's life, does good, not
          evil. The judge, who punishes the criminal with imprisonment or death for the
          protection of society and to realize justice, does good, not evil. In this way
          we must explain the evil which God brings upon man. God cannot be the cause of
          evil. For evil in man is due to want or ignorance. Neither is found in God,
          hence he has no motive to do wrong. All the evil of which we complain is only
          apparent. In reality it is good, because it is either brought upon us to
          prevent still greater evils, or it is in the nature of just punishment for
          wrongdoing. In either case it is a good.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah's discussion of Providence follows closely the plan of the corresponding
          arguments in Maimonides. The problem is treated by both in connection with
          God's knowledge, and both maintain that the real motive of those who denied
          God's knowledge of particulars is their observation of apparent injustice in
          the happenings of this world. Both again preface their own views of the
          question of Providence by a preliminary statement of the various opinions held
          by other sects. Here too the two accounts are in the main similar, except that
          Aaron ben Elijah is somewhat more detailed and names a few sects not mentioned
          by Maimonides, among them being the Manicheans and the followers of the Syrian
          Gnostic Bardesanes. In their own views, however, Aaron ben Elijah and
          Maimonides differ; the latter approaching the view of Aristotle, the former
          that of the Mutazila.
           Maimonides
          as we know denies special providence for the individuals of the sublunar world
          with the exception of man. In the case of the lower animals, the species alone
          are protected by divine providence, hence they will continue forever, whereas
          the individual animals are subject to chance. Man, as a rational animal, is an
          exception. He is a free and responsible agent, hence he is under divine
          guidance and is rewarded and punished for his conduct. The extent of the divine
          care depends upon the degree to which the individual develops his reason,
          actualizing his potential intellect.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah argues that this view is erroneous, for it is not proper to make a
          distinction between God's knowledge and his providence. If it would argue
          imperfection in God not to know certain things, the same objection applies to
          limiting his providence, and the two should be coextensive. To say that God's
          providence extends to superior and important things and ignores the inferior is
          to make God guilty of injustice. Aaron ben Elijah believes therefore that
          Providence extends to all individuals, including animals. And he quotes the
          Bible in his support, "The Lord is good to all, and his mercies are over
          all his works," (Ps. 145, 9), and, "Thou shalt not plough with an ox
          and an ass together" (Deut. 22, 10). Maimonides, he says, was led to his
          opinion by his idea that death and suffering always involve sin; and not being
          able to apply this dictum to the suffering of animals that are slaughtered, he
          removed Providence from their individuals entirely. When the Bible orders us to
          consider the feelings of the animal, he says the object is to train our own
          faculties in mercy, and prevent the formation of habits of cruelty, not for the
          sake of the animal. But he cannot remove all difficulties in this way. What
          will he do with the case of a person born crippled, and the sufferings of
          little children? The idea that death and suffering in all cases involve sin
          must be given up. Maimonides is also wrong when he says that reward is purely
          intellectual and is dependent upon the development of the "acquired
          intellect." It would follow from this that right conduct as such is not
          rewarded; that it serves merely as a help to realizing the acquired intellect.
          All this is opposed to Biblical teaching.
           The
          prosperity of the wicked and the adversity of the righteous Aaron ben Elijah
          endeavors to explain as follows. The prosperity of the wicked may be due to
          former good deeds; or by way of punishment, that he may continue in his evil
          deeds and be punished more severely. It may be in order that he may use the
          good fortune he has in whatever way he pleases, for good or ill. Finally his
          good fortune may be given him as a matter of grace, like his creation.
          Correspondingly we may explain the adversity of the righteous in a similar
          manner. It may be due to former sins. If he has no sins, his sufferings may be
          intended to test him in order to add to his reward. If he dies without having
          enjoyed life, he will be rewarded in the next world. The pleasures of this
          world must not be considered. For since they are given as a matter of grace,
          they may come or not without involving any injustice. When a man has both good
          deeds and sins, he may be rewarded for his good deeds and punished for his bad,
          or he may be paid according to the element which predominates. Those who are
          born crippled and the sufferings of children will be rewarded later. In
          reference to the slaughter of animals, Aaron ben Elijah does not agree with the
          Mutazila that the animals will be recompensed for their undeserved sufferings.
          There is no immortal part in animals, hence no reward after death. He can
          assign no reason for their sufferings except that men need them for food, but
          he sees nothing wrong in taking an animal's life for food, for as the life of
          animals was given to them as a matter of grace, there is no wrong in taking it
          away. However, to inflict pain in a way different from the manner permitted by
          God is wrong.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah lays great stress upon what he considers an important difference of
          opinion between the Rabbanites and the Karaites concerning the nature and
          purpose of divine punishment. The Rabbanites according to him insist that
          "there is no death without sin, nor suffering without guilt," whereas
          the Karaites admit that some of the sufferings of the righteous are not in the
          nature of punishment at all, but are what are known as "chastisements of
          love." Their purpose is to increase the man's reward later in the future
          world, and at the same time they have a pedagogical value in themselves in
          strengthening the person spiritually. Accordingly Aaron ben Elijah, who in the
          main follows the opinions of the Karaites, differs with the Rabbanites and
          particularly Maimonides in the interpretation of the "trials" of
          Adam, Abraham, Job.
           So far as
          Job is concerned, we know the opinions of Maimonides on the subject. In his
          "Guide of the Perplexed" he interprets the book of Job in connection
          with his discussion of Providence. In the general nature of suffering the idea
          of "chastisement of love" is quite familiar to the Rabbis, though
          Maimonides does not care to insist on it, claiming that there is no support for
          it in the Bible. The idea of "trial" according to him is neither that
          God may know what he did not know before; nor is it to make a man suffer that
          he may be rewarded later. The purpose of trial is that mankind may know
          whatever it is desired to teach them in a given case. In the trial of Abraham
          when he was told to sacrifice Isaac, there was a two-fold reason; first, that
          all may know to what extent the love of God may go in a pious man; and second
          to show that a prophet is convinced of the reality of his visions as an
          ordinary person is of the data of his senses.
           The book
          of Job is to Maimonides a treatise on Providence, and the five characters in
          the drama represent the various opinions on the nature of Providence as they
          were held by different schools of philosophy and theology in Maimonides's day.
          Job has the Aristotelian view that God cares nothing for man. Eliphaz
          represents the correct Jewish view that everything is reward or punishment for
          merit and demerit. Bildad maintains the Mutazilite opinion that many
          misfortunes are for the purpose of increasing reward in the world to come.
          Zophar stands for the view of the Ashariya that all is to be explained by reference
          to the will of God, and no questions should be asked. Elihu finally insists
          that the individual man is the object of the divine care, but that we must not
          compare God's providence with our own interest in, and care for things; that
          there is no relation at all between them except in name. The Rabbis, who do not
          make of Job a philosopher, naturally do not understand the matter as Maimonides
          does, but they nevertheless agree with him that Job deserved the punishment he
          received. The Karaites on the other hand classed Job's sufferings with
          "chastisements of love," which would mean that Job was a perfect man
          and did not deserve any punishment. The sole motive for inflicting pain and
          tribulation upon him was to reward him the more later.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah agrees in the main with his Karaite predecessors that Job was not
          punished for any fault he had committed. He does not see in the arguments of
          Job's friends any difference of opinion on the general question of Providence,
          and Job was not an Aristotelian. Unlike Aristotle, he did believe in God's care
          for man, as is evident from such statements as (Job 10, 10), "Behold like
          milk didst thou pour me out, and like cheese didst thou curdle me." The
          Karaites, he holds, are correct in their main contention that Job's sufferings
          were not in the nature of punishment for previous guilt and wrongdoing, but
          they are mistaken in supposing that Job was altogether right in his conception
          of the meaning and reason of his sufferings; that they had no other purpose except
          to increase his reward in the future. Aaron ben Elijah then explains his own
          view of "trial."
               Man, he
          says, is composed of body and soul, and must therefore endeavor to gain this
          world and the next. If he is punished for guilt or offence, the punishment
          corresponds to the offence. Corporeal guilt is followed by corporeal
          punishment, spiritual guilt by spiritual punishment. Adam offended spiritually
          and was punished spiritually by being driven from the Garden of Eden as will be
          explained later. Abraham endeavored to do justice to both the constituent parts
          of his being; and hence God in his kindness, wishing to strengthen Abraham
          spiritually, gave him the opportunity in the trial of Isaac. At the same time
          the physical suffering was compensated by the promise to Abraham of the
          continuity of Isaac's descendants. Job's sufferings were of the same kind,
          except that they came to him without his knowledge and without his being told
          their purpose. And at first he thought they were in order to give him future reward,
          but without any use in themselves. Later he discovered that they benefited him
          directly by increasing his spiritual strength.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah differs also from Maimonides in reference to the purpose of the world.
          Maimonides maintains that while there is sense in inquiring for the purpose of
          the parts of the world, the question of the ultimate purpose of the world as a
          whole is meaningless. The purpose of a given event or law of nature lies in its
          relation to the other events and laws, hence there is a relative purpose in
          particular things; thus, given the existence of animals they must have food,
          sense perception, and so on. But if we ask why the universe as a whole, the
          only answer that can be given is God's wisdom, which we do not understand. In particular
          Maimonides will not admit that the world is for the sake of man, as this view
          clashes with experience and makes it impossible to explain a great many
          phenomena in nature, which are distinctly of no benefit to man and take no
          cognizance of his interests. Aaron ben Elijah agrees with Maimonides that God's
          wisdom rather than his arbitrary will, as the Ashariya maintain, must be
          appealed to in answering the question of the purpose of the world. But he is
          inclined to regard man as the purpose of the lower world, admitting that we
          cannot know the purpose of the higher worlds of the spheres and Intelligences,
          as they transcend the powers of our comprehension.
           We can
          pass over Aaron ben Elijah's discussion of prophecy very briefly because there
          is no new attitude or contribution in his views. Without saying it, he
          reluctantly perhaps, leans upon Maimonides, and with apparent variations in
          form really adopts the classification of the "Guide". He gives no
          psychological explanation of prophecy because he disagrees with the
          philosophers, to whom prophecy is a purely natural gift which cannot fail to
          manifest itself when the requisite conditions are there, namely, perfection in
          intellect and imagination. In fact when he gives the different views on the
          nature of prophecy, he refuses to identify what seems to stand in his book for
          the view of Maimonides (the fourth view) with that of the followers of the
          Mosaic law. Whereas Maimonides following the philosophers insists on the two
          important elements in prophecy, namely, intellect and imagination, adding
          thereto also moral perfection, Aaron ben Elijah in giving the opinion of those
          who follow the law of Moses, says nothing of the imagination. He insists only
          on perfection in intellect and in ethical character. This difference is,
          however, only apparent; and further on he refers to the imagination as an
          important element, which determines, in its relation to the reason, the
          character of a man as a prophet or a mere statesman or philosopher—all in the
          manner of Maimonides.
           His idea
          of the purpose of prophecy he develops, as it seems, with an eye to the
          criticism of the Brahmins of India, whom he quotes as denying prophecy, though
          admitting Providence, on the ground that it can serve no purpose. The reason
          alone, they say, is sufficient to decide what is right and what is wrong.
          Accordingly Aaron ben Elijah meets their objection as follows: It is true that
          man might have gotten along without prophecy through the laws which his own
          reason established for right and wrong, good and evil. Those who followed these
          rational laws would have attained long life, and the others would have
          perished. But a good man living in a bad environment would have been involved
          in the downfall of the majority, which would not be just. Hence it was necessary
          that God should warn the man, that he might save himself. This is the first
          beginning of prophecy. Witness Noah and Lot. Abraham was a great advance on his
          predecessors. He endeavored to follow God's will in respect to both body and
          soul. Hence God saved him from the danger to which he was exposed in Ur of the
          Chaldees, and wanted to benefit his descendants also that they should perfect
          their bodies and their souls. This is impossible for a whole nation without
          special laws to guide them. This is particularly true of the
          "traditional" laws (ceremonial), which are not in themselves good or
          bad, but are disciplinary in their nature.
           A prophet
          must have both intellectual and ethical perfection. For he must understand the
          nature of God in order to communicate his will; and this cannot be had without
          previous ethical perfection. Hence the twofold requirement. This is the reason,
          he says, why we do not believe in the religions of Jesus and Mohammed, because
          they were not possessed of intellectual perfection. And besides they tend to
          the extinction of the human species by reason of their monastic and celibate
          ideal. They were misled by the asceticism of the prophets, who meant it merely
          as a protest against the material self-indulgence of the time, and called
          attention to the higher life. But those people in their endeavor to imitate the
          prophets mistook the means for the end, with the result that they missed both,
          perfection of soul as well as of body, and merely mortified the flesh, thinking
          it the will of God. Hence, Aaron ben Elijah continues, we shall never accept a
          religion which does not preach the maintenance of this world as well as of the
          next. Not even miracles can authenticate a religion which preaches monasticism
          and celibacy.
           Moses was
          superior to the other prophets. All the others received their messages in a
          vision or a dream, Moses had his inspiration while awake. The others were
          inspired through the medium of an angel, i.e.,
          through the imagination, hence their language abounds in allegories and
          parables. Moses did not use the imagination, hence the plain character of his
          speech. The others were overcome by the vision and physically exhausted, as we
          read in Daniel (10, 17), "There remained no strength in me, and no breath
          was left in me." Moses was free from this weakness—"And the Lord
          spoke unto Moses face to face, as a man speaketh unto his neighbor" (Exod.
          33, 11). The others required preparation, Moses did not. Moses's testimony,
          too, was stronger than that of all the rest. His authority in the end was made
          plain to all the people directly and openly, so that there remained not a shred
          of a doubt. This is why we accept his law and no other, because none is so well
          authenticated. The Law cannot change without implying that the standard of
          perfection has changed, or the world has changed, or God's knowledge has
          changed. All this is impossible. The Law says besides, "Thou shalt not add
          thereto, and thou shalt not diminish therefrom" (Deut. 13, 1). Therefore,
          concludes Aaron ben Elijah the Karaite, we do not believe in the oral or
          traditional law because of the additions to, and subtractions from, the written
          law which it contains.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah agrees with Maimonides that all the commandments of the Bible, including
          the ceremonial laws, have a purpose and are not due to the arbitrary will of
          God. The ceremonial laws are for the sake of the rational, serving a
          pedagogical and disciplinary purpose, and the Law as a whole is for the purpose
          of teaching the truth and inculcating the good. He goes further than Maimonides
          in vindicating the rational and ethical purpose of all the details of the
          various laws, and not merely of the several commandments as a whole.
           A problem
          that occupied the minds of the Mutakallimun, Arabs as well as Karaites, but
          which Maimonides does not discuss, is the purpose of God's giving commandments
          to those who he knew would remain unbelievers, and refuse to obey. That God's
          knowledge and man's freedom co-exist and neither destroys the other, has
          already been shown. If then God knows, as we must assume, that a given person
          will refuse to obey the commandments, what is the use of giving them to him?
          And granting that for some reason unknown to us they have been given, is it
          just to punish him for disobedience when the latter might have been spared by
          not giving the man in question any commandments?
           Aaron ben
          Elijah answers these questions by citing the following parallel. A man prepares
          a meal for two guests and one does not come. The absence of the guest does not
          make the preparation improper, for the character of the act does not depend
          upon the choice of the guest to do or not to do the desire of the host. The
          invitation was proper because the host meant the guest's benefit. To be sure,
          the case is not quite parallel, and to make it so we must assume that the host
          expects that the guest will not come. His intention being good, the invitation
          is proper. In our problem knowledge takes the place of expectation. God does
          not merely expect, he knows that the man will not obey. But as God's desire is
          to benefit mankind and arouse them to higher things, the command is proper, no
          matter what the person chooses to do.
           To punish
          the man for disobedience is not unjust because God intended to benefit him by
          the command. If he disobeyed, that is his lookout. If the benefit could have
          been had without the command, then the punishment would be unjust, but not
          otherwise.
           If only
          good men were commanded and the rest ignored, the danger would be that the
          former being thereby assured of reward, might be tempted to do wrong; and the
          others in despair might be worse than they would be under ordinary
          circumstances. God saw that man has evil tendencies, and needs warning and
          guidance from without. And just as he gave men understanding and ability to
          believe though he knew that a given person would not avail himself thereof, so
          he gave all men commandments, though he knew that some would not obey.
           The rest
          of the book is devoted to such questions as reward and punishment after death,
          immortality of the soul, the problem of the soul's pre-existence, the nature of
          the future life, repentance—questions which Maimonides left untouched in the
          "Guide" on the ground that whatever religion and tradition may say
          about them, they are not strictly speaking scientific questions, and are not
          susceptible to philosophical demonstration.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah proves that there must be reward and punishment after death. For as man
          is composed of body and soul, there must be reward for each according as man
          endeavors to maintain and perfect them. Thus if a man cares for his body alone,
          he will be rewarded in his body, i.e., in this world. The other man who looks out for both body and soul must have the
          same reward in this world as the other, since their physical efforts were
          similar. At the same time he must have something over and above the other in
          the nature of compensation for his soul, and this must be in the next world.
           The
          prosperity of the wicked and the misery of the righteous are also to be
          explained in part, as we have seen, by reference to their respective destinies
          in the next world, where the inequalities of this world will be adjusted.
           Finally,
          material reward cannot be the consequence of intellectual and spiritual merit;
          it would mean doing the greater for the sake of the smaller. And besides the
          soul is not benefited by physical goods and pleasures, and would remain without
          reward. Hence there must be another kind of reward after death. In order to
          deserve such reward the soul must become wise. At the same time the common
          people, who observe the ceremonial commandments, are not excluded from a share
          in the world to come, because the purpose of these laws is also intellectual
          and spiritual, as we said before, and hence their observance makes the soul
          wise, and gives it immortality. This last comment is clearly directed against
          the extreme intellectualism of Maimonides and Gersonides, according to whom
          rational activity alone confers immortality.
           The
          considerations just adduced imply the immortality of the soul, to which they
          lend indirect proof. But Aaron ben Elijah endeavors besides to furnish direct
          proof of the soul's continuance after the death of the body. And the first
          thing he does is to disarm the criticism of the philosophers, who deny
          immortality on the ground that the soul being the form of the body, it must
          like other material forms cease with the dissolution of the things of which
          they are the forms. He answers this by showing that the soul as the cause of
          knowledge and wisdom—immaterial faculties—is itself immaterial. Being also the
          cause of the body's motion, it is not itself subject to motion, hence not to
          time, and therefore not destructible like a natural form. Besides the composition
          of body and soul is different from that of matter and form in the ordinary
          sense. For in the former case each of the constituent parts is already a
          composite of matter and form. The body has both matter and form, and the soul
          has likewise. For the acquired intellect is the form of the soul, which is the
          matter. Other proofs are as follows: The rational soul performs its functions
          without help from the body, hence it is independent in its existence. The proof
          of the last statement is that the power of the rational soul is not limited,
          and does not become weary, as a corporeal power does. Hence it can exist
          without the body. Again, as the corporeal powers grow stronger, the
          intellectual powers grow weaker, and vice versa as the corporeal powers grow
          weaker in old age, the intellect grows stronger. Hence the soul is independent
          of the body, and when the physical powers cease entirely in death, the
          intellect is at its height.
           The
          question of the soul’s pre-existence before coming in contact with the body,
          Aaron ben Elijah answers in the affirmative, though his arguments in favor of
          the opposite view are stronger. His sole argument in favor of its pre-existence
          is that the soul, being a self-subsisting substance and not an accident, is not
          dependent upon the body, and must have existed before the body. The consequence
          which some have drawn from this supposition combined with the soul's
          immortality, namely, that the soul is eternal, he refuses to adopt. The soul
          existed before the body, but like all things which are not God it was created
          in time.
           Though we
          have thus seen that the soul existed before the body, it is mistaken to suppose
          that it was completely developed. For though the gradual progress in knowledge
          and understanding as the individual matures proves nothing for the soul's
          original imperfection, as we may account for this progress by the gradual
          adaptation of the physical elements to the functions of the soul, there is a
          more valid objection. If the soul was perfectly developed before entering the
          body, all souls should be alike when they leave it, which is not the case. We
          come to the conclusion therefore that the soul does acquire knowledge while in
          contact with the body. The human soul is a unit, and from its connection with
          the body arise the various powers, such as growth, life, reason. When the soul
          is separated from the body, those powers which functioned with the aid of the body
          perish; the others remain.
           In the
          matter of eschatology Aaron ben Elijah gives a number of views without
          declaring himself definitely for any of them. The main difference among the
          three points of view quoted concerns the possibility of the resurrection of the
          body, and the meaning of the terms "revival of the dead"
          ("Tehiyat ha-metim") and "the world to come" ("Olam
          ha-ba"). Aaron ben Elijah seems to incline to the first, in favor of
          resurrection.
           We must
          endeavor, he says, to get some notion of final reward and punishment. For
          without any idea of its nature a man's hope or fear is taken away from him, and
          he has no motive for right conduct. To be sure it is not possible to get a
          clear understanding of the matter, but some idea we must have. The first view
          which he seems to favor is that revival of the dead and world to come are the
          same thing; that the end of man is the resurrection of the body and its reunion
          with the soul. This is the future life, and this is meant by reward and
          punishment. There is Biblical support for this view in such expressions as,
          "Thy dead shall live, thy dead bodies shall arise" (Isa. 26, 19).
          "The Lord killeth, and maketh alive; he bringeth down to the grave and
          bringeth up" (1 Sam. 2, 6). There is nothing to object in this, he says,
          for the same God who made man of the dust can revive him after death. Besides,
          there seems to be a logical propriety in bringing soul and body together for
          reward and punishment just as they were during conduct in life. When the soul
          is once reunited with the body in the resurrection, it is never separated
          again. The expression "garden of Eden" for paradise is a figure of
          speech for eternal life free from pain.
           The
          second opinion is expressed by those who do not believe in bodily resurrection.
          The end of man according to these is the return of the soul to the world of
          souls. This is the meaning of "world to come"; and "revival of
          the dead" means the same thing. For it is not possible that the soul
          should be reunited with the body, which is temporary in its nature and subject
          to dissolution. Besides, the body has organs, such as those of food and
          reproduction, which would be useless in the future life. The advocates of this
          theory also believe in transmigration of souls as a punishment. Aaron ben
          Elijah rejects metempsychosis on the ground that there is some relation between
          a soul and its body, and not every body can receive every soul.
           Aaron ben
          Elijah also quotes without comment the classification, already familiar to us ,
          of human souls into (1) dead, (2) alive, (3) healthy, and (4) sick. Death
          denotes evil deeds; life, good deeds; health, intellectual knowledge; disease,
          ignorance. This classification is applied in determining the destiny of the
          soul after death. If one is alive and healthy, i. e., has knowledge and good
          deeds, he has a share in the world to come. If he is healthy and dead
          (knowledge + evil deeds), the soul is kept in an intermediate world forever. If
          he is alive and sick (good deeds + ignorance), the soul rises to the upper air,
          whence it returns again and again to the body until it acquires wisdom to be
          able to rise to the world of angels. If he is dead and sick (evil deeds +
          ignorance), the soul dies like an animal.
           Finally,
          the third opinion is a combination of resurrection and "future
          world." Seeing that some of the functions of the soul are performed with
          the help of the body, while others are not, the advocates of this view maintain
          that the soul will be rewarded in both conditions—with the body, in
          resurrection, without the body, in the world to come.
           If a man
          has merits and demerits, his good and evil deeds are balanced against each
          other, and the surplus determines his reward or punishment according to its
          nature.
           
 
 CHAPTER XVII .HASDAI BEN ABRAHAM CRESCAS (1340-1410)
 
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 HISTORY OF THE JEWS
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