Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Jewish_theosophy> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 94 of
94
with 100 triples per page.
- Jewish_theosophy abstract "Jewish theosophy (also termed Judaeology) is a mystical movement in Judaism. Its fundamental tenet involves the overcoming of existential motives of the ego. The Self becomes more aware of its relationship to God, and thus with the eternal Cosmos. It deals with the improvement of the individual spiritually, physically and emotionally, within the larger framework of society. This relates to the individual's present and future "Selfsoul", through the unconditional belief in God's wisdom and love. The aforementioned "love" refers not to a corporal or emotional entanglement, such as that between living beings, but to a state akin to such stirred from the contemplation of the infinite, similar to the Yiddish term naches. The self and/or soul ("SelfSoul") seeks perfection but can never attain it, for the only Perfection is God and he alone exists outside the constraints and constructs of the Cosmos and spacetime. God is in itself within its own axiomatic system and thus can neither be proven nor disproven within our own system.This movement was founded by Rabbi Shalom ben Rubin. It has been revealed by ben Rubin that the "World to Come" in the Messianic age will be filled with the resurrected. The re-unification of body and soul. For after death, time ceases and the righteous perceive no lapse in existence, while those without stock in the world-to-come will be trapped in the illusion of time (see Jewish eschatology). At the "end of days" time no longer exists, allowing for the merger of God's world with our own (see Julian Barbour "The End of Time: The Next Revolution in Our Understanding of the Universe").This is not to say that the present is not an important. To the movement, the "here-and-now" is as important, if not more so, than the future. It is of a fundamental concern that each and every individual must strive to "repair the world" (Tikkun olam), broken from the first bite of the Forbidden fruit presented by Eve to Adam. This is God's will and wish. The closer to repair, the closer mankind will get to the Messianic age.One of the main principles is the belief that the only way to an improved Self is through study (see Mussar movement and Jewish ethics). The major works for this neo-gnostic philosophy are derived from the fundamental syllabus of Judaism. As such, the major source is the Torah and especially in its synthesis, the Talmud. The canon of Jewish theosophy is open, that is to say, the source material can constantly be added to or updated by the group or individual. Material can be derived from other Jewish sources, such as the writings of Jewish Kalam and the Zohar of Jewish mysticism (i.e. kabbalah), or even non-Jewish sources, such as the Sufism of Islam or the Yoga of Hinduism, and classic Hellenistic philosophy of the Platonists and Stoics. Some of these concepts are encapsulated in the works of E. P. Sanders and in the "New Perspective on Paul", through the early works of Philo and his Hellenistic Judaism.Another tenet of Jewish theosophy is that although God knows all thoughts, decisions and actions of the individual, present and future, the individual does have free will to think and do. This fundamental allows for self-improvement, for the want and good of God and not necessarily for the good of the individual.It has been postulated that the first major work of Jewish theosophy was Maimonides' The Guide for the Perplexed. In this work Maimonides, in his words, tries "to promote the true understanding of the real spirit of the Law, to guide those religious persons who, adhering to the Torah, have studied philosophy and are embarrassed by the contradictions between the teachings of philosophy and the literal sense of the Torah," and his main purpose is to expound on Maaseh Bereishit and Maaseh Merkavah works of Jewish mysticism regarding the theology of creation from Genesis and the passage of the Chariot from Ezekiel, these being the two main mystical texts in the Tanakh.More recent texts include Jewish Theosophy by Arthur Edward Waite and the many works of Jewish Renewal by Rabbi Zalman Schachter-Shalomi.".
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageID "19982138".
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageLength "5804".
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageOutDegree "53".
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageRevisionID "538336843".
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink A._E._Waite.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Adam.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Edward_Waite.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Axiomatic_system.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jewish_mysticism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jewish_theology.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Category:Theosophy.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Cosmos.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink E._P._Sanders.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink End_time.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Eve.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Existentialism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Ezekiel.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Forbidden_fruit.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Free_will.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Gnostic.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Gnosticism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Gxc3xb6dels_incompleteness_theorems.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Hellenistic_Judaism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Hellenistic_philosophy.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Hinduism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Id,_ego_and_super-ego.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Incompleteness_theorems.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Islam.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Jewish_Kalam.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Jewish_Renewal.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Jewish_eschatology.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Jewish_ethics.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Jewish_mysticism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Judaism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Julian_Barbour.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Kabbalah.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Maaseh_Bereishit.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Maimonides.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Merkabah.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Merkabah_mysticism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Messianic_Age.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Messianic_age.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Musar_movement.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Mussar_movement.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink New_Perspective_on_Paul.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Philo.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Philosophy_of_self.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Platonism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Platonists.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Resurrected.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Resurrection.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Self_(philosophy).
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Shalom_ben_Rubin.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Spacetime.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Stoicism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Stoics.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Sufism.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Talmud.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink The_End_of_Time:_The_Next_Revolution_in_Our_Understanding_of_the_Universe.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink The_End_of_Time_(book).
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink The_Guide_for_the_Perplexed.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Theology.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Tikkun_olam.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink World_to_Come.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink World_to_come.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Yiddish.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Yiddish_language.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Yoga.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Zalman_Schachter-Shalomi.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLink Zohar.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageWikiLinkText "Jewish theosophy".
- Jewish_theosophy hasPhotoCollection Jewish_theosophy.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Multiple_issues.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Jewish_theosophy wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Who.
- Jewish_theosophy subject Category:Jewish_mysticism.
- Jewish_theosophy subject Category:Jewish_theology.
- Jewish_theosophy subject Category:Theosophy.
- Jewish_theosophy hypernym Movement.
- Jewish_theosophy type Article.
- Jewish_theosophy type Organisation.
- Jewish_theosophy type School.
- Jewish_theosophy type Article.
- Jewish_theosophy type Movement.
- Jewish_theosophy type Page.
- Jewish_theosophy type School.
- Jewish_theosophy comment "Jewish theosophy (also termed Judaeology) is a mystical movement in Judaism. Its fundamental tenet involves the overcoming of existential motives of the ego. The Self becomes more aware of its relationship to God, and thus with the eternal Cosmos. It deals with the improvement of the individual spiritually, physically and emotionally, within the larger framework of society. This relates to the individual's present and future "Selfsoul", through the unconditional belief in God's wisdom and love.".
- Jewish_theosophy label "Jewish theosophy".
- Jewish_theosophy sameAs m.04y8frm.
- Jewish_theosophy sameAs Q6190143.
- Jewish_theosophy sameAs Q6190143.
- Jewish_theosophy wasDerivedFrom Jewish_theosophy?oldid=538336843.
- Jewish_theosophy isPrimaryTopicOf Jewish_theosophy.