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EMIL L. FACKENHEIM is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy at the University of Toronto and Fellow of the Institute of Contemporary Jewry at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Acknowledgments | |
Preface to the Second Edition | |
Preface to the Midland Edition | |
Auschwitz as Challenge to Philosophy and Theology | |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Systems | p. 4 |
Revelation | p. 6 |
The Holocaust | p. 9 |
"Foundations of Future Jewish Thought": Genesis of a Plan | p. 14 |
"Foundations": From Plan to Execution | p. 19 |
Napoleonic and Related Strategies | p. 22 |
Language | p. 26 |
Toward Future Jewish Thought | p. 28 |
The Problematics of Contemporary Jewish Thought: From Spinoza Beyond Rosenzweig | p. 31 |
Introducing Spinoza and Rosenzweig | p. 33 |
Baruch Spinoza | p. 38 |
Franz Rosenzweig | p. 58 |
Spinoza and Rosenzweig Today | p. 91 |
The Shibboleth of Revelation: From Spinoza Beyond Hegel | p. 103 |
Rosenzweig on Hegel | p. 105 |
Hegel on Judaism and Spinoza | p. 107 |
Revelation as Shibboleth | p. 110 |
The Basis of Hegel's Mediating Thought-Activity | p. 111 |
Spinoza and Hegel on Revelation | p. 115 |
The Core of the Hegelian Mediation | p. 116 |
Hegel's Mediation between Spinoza and Judaism | p. 117 |
The Failure of Hegel's Mediation and Its Dialectical Results | p. 119 |
The Move toward the Extremes | p. 120 |
The End of Constantinianism and the Turn to Dialogical Openness | p. 127 |
Catastrophe | p. 130 |
The Shibboleth of Revelation in Jewish Modernity | p. 136 |
Historicity, Rupture, and Tikkun Olam ("Mending the World"): From Rosenzweig Beyond Heidegger | p. 147 |
Spinoza, Rosenzweig, and Heidegger on Death | p. 149 |
Historicity | p. 151 |
Historicity and Transcendence | p. 154 |
The Ontic-Ontological Circle | p. 162 |
1933: Year of Decision | p. 166 |
The Age of Technology and the Age of Auschwitz | p. 171 |
Unauthentic Thought after the Holocaust | p. 190 |
The Spectrum of Resistance during the Holocaust: An Essay in Description and Definition | p. 201 |
Resistance as an Ontological Category: An Essay in Critical Analysis | p. 225 |
Rupture, Teshuva, and Tikkun Olam | p. 250 |
Historicity, Hermeneutics, and Tikkun Olam after the Holocaust | p. 256 |
On Philosophy after the Holocaust | p. 262 |
Concerning Post-Holocaust Christianity | p. 278 |
Jewish Existence after the Holocaust | p. 294 |
Conclusion: Teshuva Today: Concerning Judaism After the Holocaust | p. 315 |
The Problematics of Teshuva in Our Time | p. 317 |
Rosenzweig after Heidegger | p. 320 |
Yom Kippur after the Holocaust | p. 321 |
The Message of Beit Ha-Tefutsot | p. 325 |
The Sharing of Teshuva after the Holocaust | p. 326 |
Abbreviations | p. 332 |
Notes | p. 335 |
Index | p. 345 |
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