Moses Mendelssohn: A Biographical Study

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University of Alabama Press, 1973 - Philosophy - 900 pages
Altmann (1906-1987, founder of the Institute for Jewish Studies) presents Mendelssohn in strictly biographical terms. He does not attempt to assess his significance or trace his image in subsequent generations, but rather, he seeks to observe Mendelssohn's life from the period within which it was set. The result is a narrative of the entire European intellectual scene, Jewish and non-Jewish. Drawing from archival material, Altmann portrays a wide array of people--scholars, artists, politicians, scientists, philosophers, and theologians--with whom Mendelssohn was in contact, and sometimes in conflict. Altmann gives special attention to the relationships between Judaism and the Enlightenment, between reason and tolerance, and between assimilation and the Jewish identity. Distributed by ISBS. First published by Alabama University Press in 1973. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

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Contents

CHAPTER ONE Years of Growth
3
CHAPTER FOUR
89
CHAPTER TWO Maturity and Fame
92
Copyright

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