[Revised entry by Benjamin Pollock on October 14, 2024.
Changes to: Bibliography]
Franz Rosenzweig (1886 – 1929) ranks as one of the most original Jewish thinkers of the modern period. As a historian of philosophy, Rosenzweig played a brief but noteworthy role in the neo-Hegelian revival on the German intellectual scene of the 1910s. In the years immediately following the First World War, he sought to bring about the “total renewal of thinking” through a novel synthesis of philosophy and theology he named the “new thinking.” Rosenzweig’s account of revelation as a call from the Absolute…
Post Views: 1
Read the full article which is published on Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (external link)