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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 XVIII.JOSEPH ALBO (1380-1444)
           Of the
          post-Maimonidean philosophers Crescas is the last who contributes original
          views of philosophical value. Joseph Albo, of Monreal in Aragon, is of little
          importance as a philosopher. He rehashes the problems which occupied a
          Maimonides, a Gersonides and a Crescas, and sides now with one, now with the
          other. He benefited by the writings of his predecessors, particularly
          Maimonides, Crescas, and Simon Duran; and the philosophical discussions in the
          last three sections of his "Book of Roots" ("Sefer
          Ikkarim") give the impression of an eclectic compilation in the interest
          of a moderate conservatism. The style is that of the popularizer and the
          homilist; and to this he owes his popularity, which was denied his more
          original teacher, Crescas.
           But
          philosophy as such was not Albo's forte, nor was it his chief interest. While
          it is true that all the Jewish thinkers of the middle ages were for a great
          part apologetes, this did not prevent a Maimonides or a Gersonides from making
          a really thorough and disinterested study of science and philosophy; and often
          their scientific and philosophic conviction was so strong that the apologia was pro philosophia sua rather than pro Judaismo. The central theme therefore
          in the majority of Albo’s philosophical predecessors was the equally
          metaphysical and theological, of God and his attributes. These were proved by
          reason and confirmed by Scripture and tradition. Judaism had to be formulated
          and defended with a view not so much to the dangers threatening from
          Christianity and Mohammedanism as to those endangering all religions alike,
          namely, the opinions of science and philosophy as taught especially by the
          Aristotelians. Hence Maimonides treated for the most part of the same problems
          as the Mohammedan Mutakallimun before him, and Thomas Aquinas the Christian had
          no scruple in making the Jewish philosopher's method his own when he undertook
          to defend the Catholic faith "contra Gentiles."
               Different
          were the circumstances as well as the attitude of Joseph Albo. The purely
          philosophic interest was not strong in his day. He was not confronted by the
          necessity of proving the existence and incorporeality of God by reason. No one
          doubted these things and they had been abundantly written about in times gone
          by. In the interest of completeness and for the benefit of those who were not
          trained in technical philosophy, Albo found it desirable to restate the results
          of previous discussions of these topics in a style more accessible to the readers
          of his day. But the central interest in his age was shifted. It was a time of
          religious disputations and forced conversions. Albo himself had taken part in
          such a disputation held at Tortosa in 1413-14, and he had to defend Judaism
          against Christianity. He had to show his own people that Judaism was the true
          religion and Christianity spurious. Hence it was religion as such he had to
          investigate, in order to find what marks distinguished a divine law from a
          human, and a genuine divine law from one that pretended to be such. To make
          this investigation logically complete he had to show that there must be such a
          thing as a divine law, and that no such law can be conceived without assuming
          certain basal beliefs or dogmas. A discussion of religious dogma was essential,
          for upon the nature of these fundamental beliefs depended one's judgment of a
          given law and its character as divine or human, genuine or spurious. Hence the
          title of Albo’s treatise, "Book of [religious] Roots [dogmas]." And
          while it is true that Maimonides, the systematizer and codifier, could not fail
          to put down in his commentary on the Mishna a list of articles of the Jewish
          creed, nothing is said of this in his philosophical work, the "Guide of
          the Perplexed." With Albo the establishment of the fundamental dogmas is
          the central theme.
           At the
          same time Albo was anticipated even in this, his more original contribution.
          Crescas, his teacher, had written, beside the "Or Adonai," a work
          against Christianity. And in the "Or Adonai" itself he devotes
          considerable space to the question of the fundamental dogmas of Judaism, and
          takes occasion to criticize Maimonides for his faulty method in the selection
          of the thirteen articles, on the ground that he did not distinguish between
          what was fundamental and what was derivative. This suggestion gave Albo his
          cue, which he developed in his own way.
           Human
          happiness, Albo tells us, depends upon theory and practice, as Aristotle says.
          But the human mind is inadequate to know by itself the truth touching these two.
          Hence there is need of something superior to the human mind which will define
          right practice and the true ideas. This can be only by divine guidance. Hence
          everyone must be able to tell the divine legislation from those which are not
          divine. For this it is necessary to know what are the principles without which
          a divine law cannot exist. This is the purpose of the book, to explain the
          essential principles of a divine law.
           A
          knowledge of the principles of religion would seem easy, for all people profess
          some religion or other, and hence are presumed to know upon what their
          religions are based. But this question has not been treated adequately before,
          and there is no agreement among previous writers about the number of the
          principles or their identity. Some say there are thirteen (Maimonides), some
          say twenty-six, some six (Crescas), without investigating what are the
          principles of divine religion generally. For we must distinguish between the
          general principles which pertain to divine legislation as such and hence are
          common to all religions, and special principles which are peculiar to a particular
          religion.
           Seeing
          the importance of this subject, Albo continues, I undertook this investigation.
          I came to the conclusion that there are three general principles of divine
          religion, existence of God, Revelation, and Reward and Punishment after death.
          Then there are special principles peculiar to a particular religion. From the
          general principles ("Ikkarim") follow particular or derivative
          principles ("Shorashim.")
           The
          investigation of the principles of religion is a delicate matter because one is
          in danger of being reckoned an infidel if he denies what is considered by
          others a fundamental dogma. Thus according to Maimonides the belief in the
          Messiah is fundamental, and he who denies it is a heretic and has no share in
          the world to come. And yet Rabbi Hillel in the Talmud (Sanhedrin, 99a) said,
          "Israel need expect no Messiah, for they had the benefit of one in the
          days of Hezekiah, King of Judah." On the other hand, Maimonides does not
          regard creation ex nihilo as fundamental, whereas others do; and to their mind
          Maimonides is open to the charge of unbelief.
           The truth
          is that only he is an unbeliever who deliberately and knowingly contradicts the
          Bible. A person who believes in the Bible but is led mistakenly to misinterpret
          it, and denies real principles because he thinks the Bible does not require us
          to believe them as principles, or does not require us to believe them at all,
          is guilty of error and in need of forgiveness, but is not a heretic.
           Having
          thus defined his attitude and purpose, Albo proceeds to criticize the list of
          dogmas laid down by Maimonides and modified by Crescas, and then defends his
          own view. A fundamental principle ("Ikkar," lit. root) is one upon
          which something else depends and without which this latter cannot exist.
          Maimonides counts thirteen principles of Judaism as follows: (1) Existence of
          God, (2) Unity, (3) Incorporeality, (4) Eternity, (5) He alone must be
          worshipped, (6) Prophecy, (7) Superiority of the prophecy of Moses, (8)
          Revelation, (9) Immutability of the Law, (10) God's Omniscience, (11) Reward
          and Punishment, (12) Messiah, (13) Resurrection. This list is open to
          criticism. If Maimonides intended to admit strict principles only without which
          Judaism cannot exist, we understand why he named (1), (6), (8), (10), (11),
          which are general principles of any divine religion, and (7) and (9) as special
          principles of Judaism. But we cannot see why he included (2) and (3). For while
          they are true, and every Jew should believe them, Judaism can be conceived as
          existing without them. It is still more strange that (5) should be counted as a
          principle. To be sure, it is one of the ten commandments, "Thou shalt have
          no other Gods before me.... Thou shalt not bow thyself down to them, nor serve
          them" ... (Exod. 20, 35), but Judaism can be conceived to exist even with
          the belief in a mediator. Similarly it is not clear why (13) should be
          considered as a fundamental dogma. On the other hand, he omitted Tradition and
          Free Will as beliefs essential to any divine religion.
           If, in
          defence of Maimonides, we say that he intended to name not only fundamental
          principles, but also true beliefs, whether fundamental or derivative, then
          there are many others he might have mentioned, such as creation ex nihilo,
          belief in miracles, that God rests in Israel through the Torah, and so on.
           Another
          writer counts twenty-six principles, including everything that occurred to his
          mind, such as the attributes of eternity, wisdom, life, power, will and others,
          counting paradise and hell as two, and other absurd ideas. Others again,
          criticizing Maimonides's principles, reduce them to six, viz. (1) God’s
          knowledge, (2) Providence, (3) Power, (4) Prophecy, (5) Free Will, (6) Purpose,
          adding thereto the three proved by Maimonides, God's existence, unity and
          incorporeality. The objection to this list is that it does not contain the
          special dogmas of Judaism, and does not give us a principle by which we can
          distinguish between the genuine and spurious divine religion. For the dogmas
          named in the above list give us the necessary requirements for a divine law,
          but not the sufficient. We may have all these principles and yet not have a
          divine religion. As to Free Will and Purpose, they are essential to divine
          legislation to be sure, but not qua divine; they are also essential to a
          conventional human law. Divine religion has a special purpose peculiar to it.
           Having
          laid bare the defects in the attempts at a list of fundamental dogmas of Judaism
          made by his predecessors, Albo categorically lays down the following three
          principles as fundamental to divine religion: (1) Existence of God, (2)
          Providence, and reward and punishment, (3) Revelation.
           To
          justify this statement Albo finds it necessary to make clear what is meant by
          divine law or religion, and what relation it bears to other laws, not divine.
          This necessitates an explanation of existing laws and their motives and causes.
           Animal
          life, we are told, may be divided into three classes according to the mode of
          living adopted by each. Beasts of prey live separately and not in groups.
          Mankind must live in communities, as one individual is dependent upon the work
          of another, and social life is essential to their existence. Intermediate
          between beast of prey and man are the gregarious animals, which keep together
          not as a matter of necessity, as is the case in man, but for convenience, for
          the sake of being together. Man is social by nature; and in order to make
          communal life possible, there must be some order in the community which
          prohibits violence, robbery, and so on. This is known as "natural
          law." In addition to this there are in many places "conventional
          laws," made by kings and emperors, regulating more carefully and with
          greater detail than the natural law the affairs of the members of the
          community.
           But this
          is not all. There is still another kind of law due directly to God's
          providence. The providence of God is seen even in the lower animals, in the
          constitution of their bodies, not merely in matters essential to the
          preservation of the animal, but also in the interest of comfort and
          convenience, as for example the duplication of the sense organs. It stands to
          reason therefore that there is a divine influence which provides for man even to
          a greater degree. This providence may extend only to one individual, but this
          person brings about the perfection of the race; just as in the individual man
          the heart is instrumental in giving life to all the other limbs. The law which
          is promulgated through this person is a "divine law."
               The term
          "law" ("Dat") applies to any system of directions embracing
          a large aggregate of men, whether it contains many commands or one. There are
          thus three kinds of law, natural, conventional and divine. Natural law is the
          same for all persons, times and places. Conventional law is ordered by a wise
          man or men in conformity with the necessity of the persons, times and places,
          as the reason dictates, without special divine suggestion. Divine law is
          ordered by God through a prophet. The purpose of natural law is to remove wrong
          and promote right, keeping men from robbery and theft so that society may be
          able to exist. Conventional law goes further and tends to remove the unseemly
          and to promote the becoming. Divine law has for its purpose to guide men to
          true happiness, which is the happiness of the soul and its eternal life. It
          points out the way to follow to reach this end, showing what is the true good
          for man to pursue, and what is the real evil which one must shun; though it
          also lays down the law of right and wrong like the other two.
           The
          conventional law is inferior to the divine in a number of ways.
           The
          conventional law only orders human conduct for the purpose of improving social
          life, but does not concern itself with perfection in theoretical speculation
          and knowledge, which leads the soul to eternal life. The divine law embraces
          both the parts upon which human perfection depends, conduct and theory. It
          embraces the becoming and unbecoming (practice), and the true and untrue
          (theory). As the Psalmist has it, "The Law of the Lord is perfect,
          restoring the soul" (Psal. 19, 8).
           The
          conventional law, being human, cannot always decide with certainty what is
          becoming and what unbecoming. It is liable to error. This is particularly the
          case in matters of theory, such as the creation or eternity of the world. The
          divine law gives us certainty in all things, "The testimony of the Lord is
          sure, making wise the simple" (ib.).
           The
          person guided by the conventional law is not sure that he is always guided
          aright; hence he cannot feel the satisfaction and the joy of the man whose
          guide is the divine law, making him certain of being right—"The precepts
          of the Lord are upright, rejoicing the heart" (ib. 9).
           The
          conventional law can give general rules only, but is unable to advise in a
          particular case. So Aristotle in the Ethics points out that virtue is a mean,
          but he cannot determine exactly the proper measure at a given time. This is the
          function of the divine law—"The commandment of the Lord is clear,
          enlightening the eyes" (ib.).
           The
          conventional law is subject to change in the course of time. Witness the
          marriage of sisters in the early period of Adam and Abel. The divine law alone
          does not change—"The fear of the Lord is pure, enduring for ever"
          (ib. 10).
           The
          conventional law cannot estimate exactly the merited amount and kind of reward
          and punishment; whereas, "The ordinances of the Lord are the truth; they
          are just altogether" (ib.).
           Freedom
          and Purpose are principles of conventional law. Without freedom there is no
          sense in giving orders. For this reason Freedom and Purpose are not correctly
          given as fundamental dogmas of divine law, for while the latter cannot get
          along without them, they are not peculiar to divine law as such, but are common
          also to conventional law. This is why Maimonides omitted Freedom in his creed.
          The same is true of Purpose in general. The divine law, however, has a special
          purpose, perfection and eternal life, hence Maimonides did include it in his list.
           The
          fundamental dogmas of divine law are, as we said before, Existence of God,
          Revelation, Reward and Punishment. It is evident that there cannot be a divine
          law without the first two. The third is also necessary; for the purpose of
          divine law must be a perfection greater than the conventional law can
          accomplish. This is eternal life, and is signified by Reward and Punishment.
           As all
          agree that the Law of Moses is divine, it is proper to use it as a standard in
          order to discover what a divine law must have. Accordingly if we examine the
          first four chapters of Genesis, we find the principle of the existence of God
          in chapter one, describing creation. The second and third chapters give
          evidence of revelation, or communication of God with man for the purpose of
          directing his conduct. Finally in the Cain incident in chapter four is
          illustrated the third dogma of Reward and Punishment.
           Creation
          ex nihilo is a true belief but not a fundamental principle. For though the
          Aristotelian view of eternity is heretical, as it takes away the possibility of
          miracles, nay even the possibility of Moses and the Messiah (for these could
          exist only after the lapse of an infinite number of individuals), one who
          believes like Plato in a primitive matter is not necessarily in contradiction
          with the Biblical miracles, for they were not ex nihilo.
           It is not
          sufficient to believe in the three principles mentioned to be considered a
          believer and to be entitled to a share in the world to come. One must believe
          also in the derivative principles following from them. Thus from the existence
          of God follow his unity and incorporeality. And if a man does not believe in
          incorporeality, he disbelieves in the real nature of God, and it is as if he
          denied the original principle.
           The
          derivative principles ("Shorashim" = roots) are as follows. From
          existence of God are derived four: (1) Unity, (2) Incorporeality, (3) Independence
          of time, (4) Freedom from defects. From Revelation are derived three: (1) God's
          knowledge, (2) Prophecy, (3) Authenticity of God's messenger. From Reward and
          Punishment is derived one—Providence in the sense of special Providence. In all
          there are eleven dogmas.
           A
          particular commandment of the Law is not reckoned either as a fundamental
          principle or as a derivative. He who trangresses it is a sinner and is punished
          for his misdeed, but is not a heretic who loses his share in the world to come,
          unless he denies that the commandment in question is from God. In that case he
          comes in the category of those who deny revelation. Similarly the belief in
          tradition is not a principle because it is a particular commandment. Unity of
          God is a principle though it is apparently a special commandment, because the
          term unity contains two concepts; first, that God is one and there is not
          another like him; second, that being one and free from any multiplicity or
          composition, he is the cause of all the multiplicity in the world. The latter
          is not a particular commandment, but a principle derived from the existence of
          God. The former is a particular commandment. If particular commandments were
          regarded as principles, we should have as many principles as there are commandments
          in the Bible.
           The above
          distinction between the two senses of the term unity, one of which is
          rationally derived from the existence of God, whereas the other not being so
          derivable is not a principle, and is given in the Bible as a special
          commandment, is clearly due to Crescas, who after a few attempts at proving the
          unity of God in the sense of excluding dualism, gives it up as incapable of
          proof logically, and falls back upon the testimony of Scripture, "Hear, O
          Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is One." The other sense of the word
          unity Crescas proves by reason. Hence Albo counts it among the derivative
          principles.
           If a
          particular commandment is not a principle, which means that a fundamental or
          derivative dogma cannot itself be a commandment, but must lie at the basis of
          all commandments, the question arises whence come these principles, and who is
          to warrant their truth. In the sciences we know that the basal principles of a
          given science are not proved in that science itself, but are borrowed from
          another science in which they are proved. Thus physics takes the concepts of
          substance and accident from metaphysics. In turn the latter takes the idea of a
          first mover from physics. Among the laws, too, the conventional law takes its
          principles, freedom and purpose, from political philosophy. Whence does divine
          law take its principles? The existence of God can be demonstrated
          philosophically from premises going back to axioms and first principles. But
          this is not true of Prophecy and Providence.
           The answer
          Albo gives to this question is that of Judah Halevi and Crescas. The principles
          of the divine law are known empirically, i.
            e., by experience. Adam knew of the existence of God, of prophecy and
          reward and punishment from personal experience. Similarly Noah and Abraham.
          Nowadays we know the law by tradition, but the majority of the principles thus
          known are so certain that there is neither difference of opinion nor doubt
          entertained by anyone concerning them. Such is the status for example of the
          principle of Revelation. Other principles again, like the existence of God,
          are, as was said before, known by theoretical speculation.
           To find
          out whether a religion professing to be of divine origin is really so or not,
          it must be examined first with reference to the three fundamental, and the
          other derivative principles. If it opposes them, it is spurious and not
          genuine. If it is not opposed to the principles in question, it must be further
          examined with a view to determining whether the promulgator is a genuine messenger
          of God or not. And the test here must be a direct one. Miracles and signs are
          no conclusive proof of prophecy, and still less do they prove that the person
          performing them is a messenger sent by God to announce a law. They merely show
          that the person is considered worthy of having miracles performed through him,
          provided the miracles are genuine and not performed through magic. The test of
          the prophet and the messenger of God must be as direct as it was in the case of
          Moses, where the people actually saw that he was addressed by God and
          commissioned with a message for them.
           This
          opinion of Albo is clearly intended as a defence of Judaism against
          Christianity's claim that Jesus performed miracles, a claim which the Rabbis of
          the middle ages were inclined to recognize.
           In
          addition to the three fundamental and eight derivative principles of divine
          legislation, there are six dogmas, which every follower of the Mosaic law must
          believe. They are (1) Creation ex nihilo, (2) Superiority of Moses to other prophets,
          (3) Immutability of the Law, (4) That human perfection can be attained by any
          one of the commandments of the Law, (5) Resurrection, (6) Messiah.
           Creation
          ex nihilo is neither a fundamental nor a derivative principle of religion
          generally or of Judaism specially because, as we saw before, they can exist
          without this dogma. At the same time it is a truth which it behooves every
          religionist and particularly every Jew to believe. It follows from the
          principle of the existence of God. If God cannot create ex nihilo, there is a
          defect in him. For creation ex nihilo is admitted in a certain sense even by those who hold that the world is
          eternal. They admit that God is the cause of everything else; hence matter is
          his effect through the mediation of the separate Intellect. But how can a
          separate Intellect be the cause of matter if there is no creation ex nihilo.
          This is ex nihilo as much as anything can be. To say that we can find no reason
          why he should create at a particular time rather than at another, and hence the
          world must be eternal, is no argument; for this reasoning can apply only to
          action from necessity. Voluntary action is just of this kind, that it takes
          place at a particular time.
           In the
          above argument for creation the reader will not fail to see reminiscences of
          Maimonides as well as Crescas.
           The
          superiority of Moses to other prophets is not essential to Judaism,
          nevertheless it behooves every Jew to believe it, as it is included in the
          principle of Revelation, and the Bible tells us, "And there arose not a
          prophet since then in Israel like unto Moses" (Deut. 34, 10).
           The
          Immutability of the Law will be treated in detail later. Here it will suffice
          to say that while it is not a sine qua
            non of Judaism, every Jew should believe it, as it is included in the
          derivative principle of the Authenticity of God's messenger.
           It stands
          to reason that human perfection can be attained by the performance of any one
          of the commandments of the Law. For if it requires the performance of all the
          commandments for this purpose, then the Law of Moses makes it more difficult to
          reach perfection than the previous laws, which is not in consonance with the
          statement of the Rabbis that "God gave Israel so many laws and
          commandments because he wished to make them meritorious" (Tal. Bab.
          Makkot, 23 b).
           Resurrection
          will be treated more at length later. It must be believed because it has been
          accepted by Israel and has come down to us by tradition. The same thing applies
          to the belief in the Messiah. This is also a traditional belief and is related
          to the principle of Reward and Punishment, though it is not like the latter
          indispensable either to religion in general or to Judaism in particular.
           The
          difference, it will be seen, between Albo and Maimonides in the question of Jewish
          dogmas is simply one of classification and grading. Albo includes in his
          enumeration all the thirteen dogmas of Maimonides with the exception of the
          fifth, namely, that God alone be worshipped, but instead of placing them all on
          the same level of importance as equally essential to the structure of Judaism,
          as Maimonides apparently intended, Albo divides them into three categories of
          descending rank as follows: fundamental principles, derived principles, true
          beliefs. Of Maimonides's list the last two, Messiah and Resurrection, belong to
          the last category. None the less Albo believed strictly in both and held it
          incumbent upon every Jew to believe in them. It was only a question of the
          status of a person who mistakenly denies these true beliefs. According to
          Maimonides, it would seem, he would be called a heretic and be excluded from a
          share in the world to come equally with one who denied the existence of God;
          whereas according to Albo a person so guilty is a sinner and needs forgiveness,
          but is not a heretic. Of the other eleven dogmas of Maimonides, (1), (8) and
          (11) are placed by Albo in his first class, (2), (3), (4), (6) and (10) belong
          to the second class, while (7) and (9) come under true beliefs along with
          Messiah and Resurrection. The difference between the first and the second class
          is purely logical and not practical. As we saw before, one who denies
          incorporeality (a principle of the second class) disbelieves in the true nature
          of God, which is tantamount to denying the principle of the existence of God.
           Before
          concluding this general discussion of the fundamental dogmas of religion and
          Judaism, Albo undertakes to answer two questions which must have been near his
          heart, and which were on the tongues no doubt of a great many honest people in
          those days of religious challenge and debate. The first question is, Is it
          proper, or perhaps obligatory, to analyze the fundamental principles of one's
          religion, to see if they are true; and if one finds another religion which
          seems to him better, is one permitted to adopt it in place of his own? Albo
          sees arguments against both sides of the dilemma. If a man is allowed to
          analyze his religion and to choose the one that seems best to him, it will
          follow that a person is never stable in his belief, since he is doubting it, as
          is shown by his examination. And if so, he does not deserve reward for belief,
          since belief, as Albo defines it elsewhere (Pt. I, ch. 19), means that one
          cannot conceive of the opposite being true. Again, if he finds another religion
          which he thinks better and is allowed to exchange his own religion for the new
          one, he will never be sure of any religion; for he may find a third still
          better, and a fourth, and so on, and as he cannot examine all the possible
          religions, he will remain without any religious convictions.
           On the
          other hand, if he is not allowed to investigate the foundations of his belief,
          it follows either that all religions alike bring their believer happiness, no
          matter how contradictory they are, which is absurd; or God would seem unfair if
          only one religion leads its devotees to happiness and no one is allowed to
          change his religion for one that seems to him the true one.
           The
          answer of Albo to this interesting question is characteristic. It shows that he
          armored himself in advance, before he risked such a delicate question. He makes
          it clear that it really does not expose to any danger the religion of Judaism,
          the mother of the other two, which they came to supersede. If all religions in
          the world, Albo tells us, were opposed to one another, and regarded each other
          as untrue, the above difficulty would be real. But it is not so. All religions
          agree in respect to one of them that it is divine; but they say that it is
          superseded. Hence every religionist who is not a Jew must investigate his
          religion to see if it is justified in opposing the religion which is
          acknowledged to be divine. Similarly the professor of the admittedly divine
          religion should investigate to see if his religion is temporary or eternal. In
          this investigation he must first see if the religion conforms to the principles
          of divine religion above mentioned. If it does this and in addition endeavors
          to order human affairs in accordance with justice, and leads its devotees to
          human perfection, it is divine. It is still, however, possible that it is the
          work of a wise man of good character. It is therefore necessary to investigate
          the character of the promulgator, to find out whether he is a genuine divine
          messenger or not. This test, as was said above, must be a direct test and not
          an indirect.
           The other
          question is whether there can be more than one divine religion. Apparently
          there can be only one, since the giver is one, and the recipients are of one
          species. But in reality the receivers vary in temperament according to
          difference in inheritance and environment. Hence there may be a difference in
          the law according to the character of the people for whom it is intended.
          Since, however, the difference is due to the receiver and not to the giver, it
          must reside in those elements which are dependent upon the receiver, i.e., in particulars and details, not in
          the principles, fundamental or derived. So the Noachite and the Mosaic laws
          differ only in details, not in fundamental principles.
           We have
          now completed the exposition of the part of Albo's teaching that may be called
          distinctly his own. And it seems he was aware that he had nothing further to
          teach that was new, and would have been content to end his book with the first
          part, of which we have just given an account. But his friends, he tells us in
          the concluding remarks to the first part of the "Ikkarim," urged him
          to proceed further and discuss in detail the principles, fundamental and
          derived, the true beliefs and the so-called "branches," which he
          barely enumerated in the first part. He was persuaded by their advice and added
          the other three sections, each devoted to one of the three fundamental dogmas
          and the corollaries following from it. Here Albo has nothing new to teach. He
          follows the beaten track, reviews the classic views of Maimonides, takes
          advantage of the criticisms of Gersonides and Crescas, and settles the problems
          sometimes one way sometimes another, without ever suggesting anything new.
          Accordingly it will not be worth our while to reproduce his discussions here.
          It will suffice briefly to indicate his position on the more important
          problems.
           The
          second section deals with the existence of God and the derived principles and
          branches growing out from this root. In proving the existence of God he refers
          to Maimonides's four proofs, and selects the third and fourth as really valid
          and beyond dispute. The first and second are not conclusive; the one because it
          is based upon the eternity of motion, which no Jew accepts; the other because
          the major premise is not true. It does not follow if one of the two elements a,
          b, of a composite a + b is found separately, that the other must be found
          existing separately likewise.
           We have
          seen that from the principle of the existence of God follow four derivative
          dogmas, unity, incorporeality, independence of time, freedom from defects. We
          are now told that from these secondary roots issue a number of branches. From
          Unity it follows that no attributes either essential or accidental can be applied
          to God, such as wisdom, strength, generosity, and so on, for they would cause
          multiplicity. From incorporeality we infer that God is not subject to corporeal
          affections like fear, sorrow, joy, grudge, and so on. Independence of time
          implies infinite power and want of resemblance to other things. Freedom from
          defect implies absence of such qualities as ignorance, weakness, and so on.
           In the
          discussion of the divine attributes Albo has nothing new to offer, but instead
          he argues forward and backward, now with Maimonides, now against him,
          reproducing a good deal of Maimonides's classification, embodying some material
          of Bahya on unity, and after this rambling and not very consistent discussion,
          he comes to the conclusion that none but active and negative attributes are
          applicable to God; and yet some essential attributes too must be his, but these
          must be understood as implying only the aspect of perfection, and not that
          other aspect of attribute which is responsible for multiplicity.
           He asks
          the question so often asked before, How can multiplicity come from unity? And
          after giving Ibn Sina's scheme of the emanation of the Intelligences one after
          the other, and criticizing it in the manner of Gazali and Maimonides, he gives
          his own solution that the variety and multiplicity of the world tends to one
          end, which is the order of the world. And thus are reconciled plurality and
          unity.
           He
          discusses the question of angels or Intellects, gives the views of the
          philosophers concerning their nature and number, each being the effect of the
          superior and the cause of the inferior, and objects to their idea on the ground
          that these cannot be the same as the Biblical angels, who are messengers of God
          to mankind. He then gives his own view that the number of angels is infinite,
          not as the philosophers say ten or fifty, and that they are not related to each
          other as cause and effect, but that though they are immaterial Intellects they
          are individuated and differentiated according to the degree of understanding
          they have of God.
           In
          discussing the second fundamental principle, Revelation, Albo argues in the
          good old fashion that man is the noblest creature of the sublunar world, and
          the most distinctive and noblest part of man—his form and essence—is the
          theoretical reason. Hence the purpose of man must be the realization of the
          theoretical intellect. At the same time, and with little consistency, Albo
          takes the part of Judah Halevi and Crescas, employing their arguments, without
          naming them, that the philosophers and the philosophizing theologians are wrong
          who make human immortality, perfection and happiness depend solely upon
          intellectual activity. He comes to the conclusion, therefore, that spiritual
          understanding, which gives perfection of soul when in combination with practice,
          is not acquisition of ideas but the intention of doing the will of God in the
          performance of good deeds, and not that of pleasure or reward.
           This
          being so, it becomes an important question what are the practices which tend to
          human perfection, and what are those which tend the other way. In general we
          may conclude, as like desires and rejoices in like, that those deeds which give
          the soul pleasure before and after performance are good and helpful, while
          those which cause subsequent pain, regret and sorrow are bad, and tend away
          from the soul's perfection.
           But the
          criterion of pleasure and pain just suggested is not sufficient as a guide in
          conduct, for a great deal depends upon a man's temperament. What a hot-blooded
          man may commend and find pleasure in, the phlegmatic temperament will object
          to, and will feel discomfort in doing. Besides, as the good deed is always a
          mean between two extremes, which it is hard to measure precisely; and as the
          good deed is that which pleases God, and beyond generalities we cannot tell
          what does, and what does not please God, since we do not know his essence, it
          was necessary for man's sake that God should reveal his will to mankind through
          a prophet. Thus Revelation is proved by reason.
           This
          leads to the problem of prophecy, one of the derivative principles of
          Revelation. The divine influence from which man gets a knowledge of the things
          pleasing and displeasing to God, he cannot obtain without the divine will.
          Instead of magic, divination, and communication with evil spirits and the dead,
          which the ancient heathen employed in order to learn the future, God sent
          prophets to Israel, to tell the people of the will of God. Foretelling the
          future was only secondary with them. Prophecy is a supernatural gift, whether
          it takes place with the help of the imagination or not. If it were a natural
          phenomenon dependent upon the intellectual power of the individual and his
          faculty of imagination, as the philosophers and some Jewish theologians think,
          there should have been prophets among the philosophers.
           Here
          again we see Albo adopt the view of Halevi and Crescas against the
          intellectualism of Maimonides and Gersonides. His further classification of the
          grades of prophecy is based upon Maimonides, though Albo simplifies it. Instead
          of eleven Albo recognizes four grades in all, including that of Moses. The
          great majority of mankind, he says, stop with the ability to analyze, such as
          is exhibited in the analysis of things into matter and form, and so on, though
          not all of them go so far. But there are some few who go farther and are
          enabled to speak words of wisdom and to sing praises to God without being able
          to account for the power. This is the holy spirit ("Ruah ha-Kodesh").
          Some go still farther, and through the strength of their reason and imagination
          they dream true dreams and receive prophecies; though, the imagination having
          the upper hand, they struggle very hard and tremble and faint, almost losing their
          soul. This is the first stage of prophecy. The second stage is when the
          imagination and reason are equal. In that case there is no struggle or
          fainting. Visions come to the prophet at night in dreams, or in a revery at
          daytime. The forms that appear are not real, but the meanings they convey are.
          Such are the figures of women, horses, basket of summer fruit, and so on, in
          the visions of Zechariah and Amos. The third stage is when the reason gets the
          better of the imagination and there are no forms or images, but real essences
          and ideas, like the visions of Ezekiel, which represent real things in the
          secrets of nature and divinity. The prophet in this stage also hears an angel
          speaking to him and giving him information of importance to himself or others.
          In all these cases the will of God is essential. No preparation can replace it.
          Finally the fourth stage is reached when the imagination does not come into
          play at all. In this stage there is no angel or form, and the message comes to
          the prophet at daytime while he is awake. He hears a voice telling him what he
          desires to know; and whenever he chooses he can summon this power. Moses alone
          attained to this final stage. Outside of the prophets, the righteous and the
          pious have various degrees of power according to the degree of their union with
          God. Some can in this way influence the powers of nature to obey them, as a
          person can, by thinking of food, make his mouth water. So they can by taking
          thought cause rain and storm. Others can bring down fire from above and revive
          the dead.
           Through
          the influence of a prophet the gift of prophecy may sometimes rest upon
          individuals who are themselves unprepared and unworthy. Witness the revelation
          on Sinai where the entire people, six hundred thousand in number, were endowed with
          the spirit of prophecy, and that too of the highest degree, like Moses himself.
          The prophetic medium reflects the spirit of prophecy on others as a smooth
          surface reflects the light of the sun upon dark bodies. This is why prophecy is
          found only in Israel and in Palestine, because the ark and the Tables of Stone,
          upon which the Shekinah rests, reflect the divine spirit upon those who are
          worthy and have in them something resembling the contents of the ark, namely,
          the Torah and the commandments.
           Among the
          true beliefs we have seen that Immutability of the Law is related to the
          principle of Revelation. Hence this is the place to discuss this question. Can
          a divine religion change with time or not? It would seem at first sight that it
          cannot. For the giver expresses his will in the Law, and his will never
          changes. The receivers are the same, i. e., the same nation, and a nation does
          not change. Finally the purpose of the Law or religion is to give people true
          opinions, and these never change.
           And yet
          on further reflection there seems no reason why religion should not change with
          the change of the recipient, as the physician changes his prescription with the
          progress of the patient, and as a matter of fact we find that the commandments
          given to Adam were different from those given to Noah and to Abraham and to
          Moses. Adam was not allowed to eat meat, Noah was. Abraham was commanded
          circumcision. High places were at first permitted and later forbidden.
          Maimonides makes the immutability of the Law a fundamental dogma, relying upon
          the commandment, "Thou shalt not add thereto, and thou shalt not diminish
          therefrom" (Deut. 13, 1). But in the first place the verse refers to
          changes in the mode of observing the laws; and besides, it says nothing about God
          himself changing the Law.
           The
          phrases "an eternal statute," "throughout your
          generations," "it is a sign for ever," are no proof of the
          eternity of the Law; for not all commandments have these expressions attached,
          and this shows rather that the others are subject to change. Besides, the
          expressions, "for eternity," and so on, are not to be taken
          absolutely. They are often used to express finite periods of time.
           After the
          Babylonian Exile two changes were made. They changed the characters in which
          the Bible was written, and the order and names of the months, beginning with
          Tishri instead of Nisan. There is no reason, therefore, why other laws might
          not change, too. We need not, then, regard Immutability of the Law as a
          fundamental dogma with Maimonides. Hasdai Crescas also classes it with true
          beliefs and not with fundamental principles.
           Albo
          resolves the problem as follows: A matter that is revealed by God himself
          cannot be changed by a prophet unless it is changed by God himself. The first
          two commandments, "I am the Lord thy God,& c.," and "Thou
          shalt not have other gods, &c.," were heard by the people directly
          from God without the intervention of Moses, hence they cannot be changed by any
          prophet. It follows therefore that the three fundamental dogmas, existence of
          God, Revelation and Reward and Punishment can never be changed by a prophet,
          for they are implied in the first two commandments, which were heard from God
          himself. The rest of the commandments, as they were heard from God through the
          interpretation of Moses, can be changed by a prophet as a temporary measure.
          The other laws which were given by Moses may be changed by a later prophet even
          permanently. But the prophet must be greater than Moses, and he must show this
          by the greatness, number, publicity and permanence of his miracles, which must
          excel those of Moses. He must likewise show that he was sent by God to change
          the Law, as clearly as Moses proved that he was sent to give it. But it is
          unlikely that any such prophet will come, for the Torah says that there never
          was or will be any prophet like Moses.
           Before
          discussing the third fundamental dogma, Albo finds it desirable to dispose
          first of a few other problems implied by this dogma, one of which, God's
          knowledge, was postponed to this place, though it is connected with Revelation,
          because it cannot well be separated in discussion from the problem of Freedom.
          Providence is the other related problem, which is derived from the dogma of
          Reward and Punishment.
           There is
          nothing that is new in Albo’s treatment of knowledge and Freedom. He insists
          like Maimonides that God must be omniscient, and on the other hand the
          contingent cannot be denied, and neither can freedom. He gives the stock
          arguments, which it is not necessary to reproduce at this late hour. And his
          solution is that of Maimonides that in God human freedom and divine Omniscience
          are reconcilable because God's knowledge is not our knowledge.
           
           Nor is
          there anything original in Albo's discussion of the problem of Providence. He
          recognizes with Maimonides and others that a strong argument against special
          Providence is the observed inequality between the destinies of men and their
          apparent merits. And he endeavors in the well-worn method to give reasons and
          explanations for this inequality which will not touch unfavorably God's justice
          or his special Providence. The reasons are such as we met before and we shall
          not repeat them. Albo also gives a few positive arguments to prove the reality
          of special Providence for man. He sees in various natural and human phenomena
          evidence of deviation from the merely "natural" as demanded by the
          principles of Aristotle's Physics or the laws of uniformity. This shows special
          Providence. Thus the existence of dry earth, the heaviest element, above water,
          cannot be accounted for by the laws of Physics. The phenomenon of rain cannot
          be reduced to law, hence it argues will and purpose and Providence. Admonition
          in dreams is direct evidence of special Providence, and it is scarcely likely
          that man, who has special equipment above the other animals in his reason,
          should not also receive special care above that which the lower animals have.
          Now they are protected in the species, hence man is provided for as an
          individual.
           Having
          disposed of the auxiliary dogmas, Albo takes up the fundamental principle of
          Reward and Punishment. He cites various opinions on the subject, which are
          dependent upon the idea one entertains concerning the nature of the soul. Thus
          if one holds that the human soul is not different in kind from the animal soul,
          it follows that as there is no reward and punishment for the animal, there is
          none for man. And if one regards the human soul as merely a capacity or
          possibility of intelligence he must necessarily conclude that the soul perishes
          with the body and there is no spiritual reward and punishment after death. The
          only reward there is must therefore be corporeal, during life. On the other
          hand, our general experience, which brings before us many cases of good men
          suffering and bad men enjoying prosperity, would seem to argue against
          corporeal reward and punishment in this world. This taken together with the
          philosophical opinion that the soul is an immaterial and indestructible
          substance gives rise to the third view that the only recompense is spiritual
          after death. None of these views is satisfactory to Albo. The first two because
          they are based upon an erroneous notion of the soul. All agree, philosophers as
          well as theologians, that the human soul is different in kind from the soul of
          the animal; and it is likewise admitted that the human soul is immortal. His
          criticism of the third view so far as it is based upon the intellectualist idea
          that the thing of highest value is intellectual effort, and the only reward is
          immortality which intellectual activity engenders, is similar to that of Halevi
          and Crescas in its endeavor to refute this notion and to substitute for it the
          religious view that the soul is an independent substance having a capacity for
          intelligence in God's service. The degree in which a person realizes this
          service determines his reward and punishment. The argument from experience Albo
          does not answer here, but we may suppose he regards it as answered by what he
          said in his discussion of Providence, where he tries to account for the
          prosperity of the wicked and the adversity of the righteous.
           Albo's
          own view accordingly is that which he also attributes to the Bible that there
          is a twofold reward, in this world and in the next. There is still a difference
          of opinion concerning the nature of the true and ultimate reward, whether it is
          given to the soul alone, or to body and soul combined in resurrection. He
          quotes Maimonides's opinion, with whom he agrees, that the real reward is
          purely spiritual enjoyed by the soul alone. To be sure, after the coming of the
          Messiah the bodies of the righteous will be resurrected to make known abroad
          God's wonders, or to give these people bodily pleasure for the pain they
          suffered during life, or to give them additional opportunity to acquire
          perfection so that they may have a greater reward later. But this state of
          resurrected life will last only for a time, and then all will die again, and
          the souls will enjoy spiritual life forever.
           The other
          opinion, held by Nachmanides, is that the real and ultimate reward is that of
          body and soul united to everlasting life. Albo is not satisfied with this view,
          his objections being among others that if only the perfect are resurrected, the
          rest will remain without any reward at all, not to mention the difficulty that
          it is not likely that the human body—a perishable thing—will change into a
          matter that will last forever.
           As to the
          nature of reward and punishment after death, Albo tells us that reward will
          consist in the soul's realization that its endeavors in this world were correct,
          and in the next world it will be prepared to join the spiritual beings, which
          will give it great joy. The erring soul will find itself in a position where it
          will still desire the corporeal pleasures of this world, but will not be able
          to have them for want of corporeal organs. At the same time it will also
          entertain the other more natural desire of a spiritual substance to join the
          other spiritual beings in the other world. This feeling too it will not be able
          to satisfy because of its want of perfection. This division of desires
          unsatisfied will cause the soul excruciating torture, and this is its
          punishment.
           
           CONCLUSION
           
 
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 HISTORY OF THE JEWS
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