This translation of eighteen virtually unknown early publications provides access for the first time to the origins of Leo Strausss thought in the intellectual life of the German Jewish renaissance in the 1920s. Themes range from the Enlightenment critique of the religion of Spinoza and the anti-critique of Jacobi, to the political Zionism of Herzl and the cultural Zionism of Buber and Ahad Haam. The essays and reviews reprinted in this volume document a youth caught in the theological-political conflict between the irretrievability of premodern religion and the disenchantedness of honest atheism, an impossible alternative that precipitated Strauss to seek out the possibility of a return to the level of natural ignorance presupposed in Socratic political philosophy.
Political ScienceHistory & TheoryPhilosophyPoliticalEasternReligious
This translation of eighteen virtually unknown early publications provides access for the first time to the origins of Leo Strausss thought in the intellectual life of the German Jewish renaissance in the 1920s. Themes range from the Enlightenment critique of the religion of Spinoza and the anti-critique of Jacobi, to the political Zionism of Herzl and the cultural Zionism of Buber and Ahad Haam. The essays and reviews reprinted in this volume document a youth caught in the theological-political conflict between the irretrievability of premodern religion and the disenchantedness of honest atheism, an impossible alternative that precipitated Strauss to seek out the possibility of a return to the level of natural ignorance presupposed in Socratic political philosophy.
Political ScienceHistory & TheoryPhilosophyPoliticalEasternReligious