“On Enlightenment in Religion”—Skepticism and Tolerance in Educational and Cultural Concepts within the Berlin and Breslau Haskalah
Abstract
:1. Moses Mendelssohn’s Open House
Towards evening, mainly on the Sabbath and on holidays, young men of his religious affiliation came to his home and came with the intention of gaining education and to teach. Older friends and young married men, who had acquired both a taste and love for the sciences, were not missing.
The discussion started off spontaneously, it was light, informal and straightforward.—For the most part, it dealt with morals and linguistics, Hebrew literature, the Jewish religion and its teachings […]. Educational institutions formed the main object of the discussions. Improvement of teaching and a German mother tongue recommendation […].
This world-wise man at times opened the discussion himself […]. ‘Before you came’, he began, ‘a young man from our midst, it seems to me, made a witty remark, a fine observation—a good idea—he presented a sharp-witted objection to an opinion that appeared to be beyond all doubt. You may judge …’ And he then recited the earlier mentioned remark with inimitable delight, accompanying it with so many explanatory additions (even if these actually belonged to a third person, and not to himself) and yet contained as many words as possible of the original speaker’s own words, so that this person gained courage to affirm this and to add new grounds to what had been presented. –When the wise man added: Well, what do you think of this statement? Our young friend seems to be right, the matter seems to be worth discussing on closer consideration; the signal was given, attention awakened, the said statement repeated and the contest began.—This is how Mendelssohn aroused thinking.
2. Modern Jewish Schools
as per Joel Löwe in his speech on the opening of the school (Löwe 2005, p. 429). Emphasizing rational training, Löwe stressed above all learning “to correctly differentiate and correctly judge” so as to be able to act in a (morally) good way. He, therefore, saw the school’s main task in the “development of intellectual powers” in language instruction, geography and natural history, in history, geometry and logics (Löwe 2005, p. 430). Along with advancing reason and the intellect, Löwe also envisaged the Wilhelmsschule as a place of enlightened religiosity. His goal was “warming a boy’s heart at an early age, so that he learns to do good and avoid evil by providing sensible and unfettered religious instruction for him” (Löwe 2005, p. 430). “Love of the good”, self-respect and the fear of God were “the highest goal that one should never wholly lose sight of”. Löwe was primarily interested in achieving the internalization of the religious concepts that he considered correct. Interaction between a knowledge of languages and secular subjects formed the basis of his concept:“all physical and mental faculties, abilities and powers are not only developed and worked on, but are developed and formed in such a way that they stand on a level to be determined by reason, and mutually enhance and embellish each other”
Studying languages will expand and determine his [= the boy’s] ideas; geography, the study of nature and of history will offer him an educational field to enlighten his spirit, to increase his sum of knowledge; and to set it aright; geometry and logic will show him the proper use of his mind and make him a virtuous and also useful member of society. Thus prepared, the leading ideas of basic reason set deep roots, according to which the world was created and according to the wisest plan which also placed the happiness of all beings as its ultimate goal, the teachings of a deity able to see through to the innermost of the human heart and all acts of this world, to punish and award them in another life, to make the lasting impression that they must make, when they become the motives for a righteous world.
3. Moses Mendelssohn’s Writings
The diffusion of writing and books, which, through the invention of the printing press has been infinitely multiplied in our days, has transformed man. The great upheaval in the whole system of human knowledge and convictions which it produced has, indeed, had on the one hand advantageous consequences for the improvement of mankind […]. However, like all good which can come to man here below, it has also had, incidentally, many an evil consequence […]. We teach and instruct one another only through writings; we learn to know nature and man only from writings. We work and relax, edify and amuse ourselves through overmuch writing […]. Hence, it has come to pass that man has almost lost his value for his fellow man. Intercourse with the wise man is not sought, for we find his wisdom in writings. […] Our whole being depends on letters; and we can scarcely comprehend how a mortal man can educate and perfect himself without a book. This was not the case in the bygone days of ancient times. […] Man was more necessary to man; teaching was more closely connected to life, contemplation more intimately bound up with action. The inexperienced man had to follow in the footsteps of the experienced, the student of those of his teacher; he had to seek his company, to observe him and, as it were, sound him out, if he wanted to satisfy his thirst for knowledge.
“were not to be connected to words or written characters which always remain the same, for all men and all times, amid all the revolutions of language, morals, manners, and conditions—words and characters which invariably present the same rigid forms, into which we cannot force our concepts without disfiguring them. They were entrusted to living, spiritual instruction, which can keep pace with all changes of time and circumstances, and can be varied and fashioned according to a pupil’s needs, ability, and power of comprehension”.
“It was, at first, expressly forbidden to write more about the law than God had caused Moses to record for the nation”.
“According to our original system, it was not allowed to write down regulations and rules that had been received orally, these should remain for very wise reasons oral tradition”.
4. Introductive Literature on Translations of Religious Texts
- (1)
- Logical grammar,
- (2)
- Strict observance of the Masora,
- (3)
- Conjectures in well-founded exception,
- (4)
- Older translations for comparison,
- (5)
- Derivatives from related “oriental” languages (Löwe and Wolfssohn 1790, pp. XCI–XXIV).
Indeed, such a translation had to be far more than any other to avoid the appearance of arbitrariness and the imprint of newness, as it far more and frequently abandoned the body, the shell, in order not to lose the core, the spirit.
In an address to hypocrites and the sanctimonious, God himself teaches what real and true worship is. […] Its main content is that not self-chastening, flagellations of the body, outer signs of repentance or loud and incomprehensible praying can please the Eternal, [but rather] the active practice of moral duties towards our fellow men.
great perfection was reached, distanced from an ignoble idolatry of those times and brought closer to the service of a true and only God […]. If now our state is destroyed and our civic happiness lost; if we come under the rule of other nations, who place considerable burdens on us: yet the great happiness remains that we are the servants of the only true God, whose commandments we keep and according to whose will we live. On this consideration alone, the liberation from Mizraim [Egypt] deserves our greatest attention and it is our duty to keep this great occurrence in constant remembrance.
5. Programmatic Publications of Jewish Schools
The exegetics are taught according to the instructions in the Mendelssohn commentary and by other leading commentators. This instruction is at the same time connected to that in Religion and Morals. The teacher strives to introduce his students to the fundamentals of the Jewish religion, with the positive provisions of the Ceremonial Law, but above all with the teachings of purely reasonable ethics.
The divine poet wants to teach his contemporaries that their religious service is not of the kind that could please the Highest Being; that even the pious among them miss the purpose even though they fulfill the Mosaic laws according to the letter, but are unwilling to recognize their spirit accordingly; that they merely want to hold on to the peel but throw away the core. In order to give his teachings more weight and prestige, he brings in God himself. […]—The people are divided into two classes, to each of whom He speaks. The first is truly pious, means well with God and fellow creatures and wholeheartedly wants to do good; but it has such wrong, incorrect and such degrading ideas of deity, it is still so full of heathen prejudices in regard to religion, which the Mosaic laws should be trying to counteract, and is so attached to the external ceremonial laws, and above all to the sacrificial service that they are often misled by this and involuntarily led away from the true good. The other class consists of evil-doers, who, as the poet expresses it, hate all discipline and morality, who use sanctity as a cover for their self-interest, and who only insist so much on the exercise of so-called duties towards God in order to be able to violate the duties towards their fellow human beings all the more safely and undisturbed…
If the laws were such that they could be rationally seen to disregard cause and ultimate objective, how then could other people live and act accordingly, and be held for wise and great? The opposite is undoubtedly intended so that without any exception, all ceremonial laws aim at either spreading a useful truth or banning a harmful prejudice, or to advancing justice, controlling injustice, to improving morals, or to disengage them from bad habits. Of outstanding importance to the laws are three main parts, namely knowledge, morals and civic virtue; they fall accordingly in regard to their purposes into three main sections, in which they either convey enlightenment or perfect moral sense, or should serve to maintain civic order.15
6. Jewish Journals
There is no happiness to be had, no tranquility, no contentment, neither here on earth nor in heaven, without religion and without a morally good way of life. Therefore, have God always in your heart and in your mind’s eye, and beware that you do not agree to anything that is against his commandments and against duty and conscience.
The holy purpose, the highest purpose of mankind is the religious-moral education of life; it is the basic condition of all earthly and eternal blessedness. Religion and morals are the first, the most important source of everything beautiful and good, from which man can draw his eternity, through which the Divine Spirit can once again see Himself and man as divine.
Religions are merely forms that change and become obsolete, such as everything earthly; Religion, however, is eternal and forever. But the Eternal should once connect with the Finite according to human need. You should not be led astray by the different forms, not by their inconsistency, nor by their obsolescence: separate the robe from the spirit and you will recognize in all religions only one eternal religion.18
Sulamith wants reverence towards religion, i.e., towards those truths, which alone deserve the name religion, to awaken in the nation; it wants to revive the urgent need for religious feelings and concepts; at the same time it wants to show the wisdom contained in the Jewish religion, which do absolutely no harm to either the individual person or civil society; furthermore, it wants to lead the nation back to native learning, by demonstrating with irrefutable certainty that this primary learning is completely pure and that its religious concepts and teachings, as long as they are not flawed by superstitious additions, never tread the path of a political constitution, but join them partially and where no total unification can take place, at least join them in a brotherly fashion. Finally, Sulamith wants to wisely separate true from false, reality from deception, the useful from waste and to enlighten the nation in its own self.(Wolf 1806a, pp. 9–10; see also Wolf 1806b)
Difficult passages from the Bible and from the writings of our sages, of blessed memory, are explained herein, pure forms of expression in Hebrew printed so that suitable knowledge surrounding this language could be conveyed. Questions on customs of Israel asked to verify the words of the early sages. We brought in it the ‘History of the Great of the People’, so that it could be a banner for the enlightened.
7. German–Jewish Sermons
We Israelites are instructed by law-giver Moses, by all the prophets, speakers and singers, to develop mind and rationality, to use the documents as sources of insights for our improvement and thus comprehend the pure spirit of religion.(Friedländer 1817c; newly edited in Lohmann 2020, p. 543)
8. Concluding Observations
A friend of reason, as he was, would most certainly have gratefully accepted from other philosophers, what in their doctrine is founded on reason, regardless of what country, or religious party they might belong to. Regarding the truths of reason, one can agree with someone, and nevertheless find various things unbelievable, which that person accepts on faith. Since the brotherly tolerance of the political world is praised so much today; the friends of truth must first foster brotherly tolerance among themselves. What concerns faith, we want to leave to the conscience and peace of mind of each individual, without appointing ourselves as judges on that point. Out of true charity, we don’t want to argue, where the heart speaks louder than reason; and we have confidence in the All-Merciful God that He will justify anything, if our conscience justifies it to us. But we want to share in the truths of reason in a more than fraternal fashion, we want to enjoy them collectively, like the light of the sun. […] Wisdom knows a universal fatherland, a universal religion, and even if it tolerates different beliefs, it doesn’t sanction the hostility and misanthropy of these differences, which you have laid as the foundation of your political institutions.—Thus, I think, a man like Socrates would think in our days, and seen from this viewpoint, the mantle of modern philosophy, which I hang on him, may not appear so unseemly.
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | |
2 | Cf. the present edition and research project “Joel Bril Löwe: Die Breslauer Schulschriften im Kontext (1791–1801)”, funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation) and headed by Uta Lohmann and Kathrin Wittler. |
3 | Cf. Mendelssohn (1843, p. 48). Comparable circles were only held by the enlightener and Hebrew poet Hartwig Wessely (Naphtali Herz Weisel), who moved to Berlin in 1773/74. Cf. also Behm (2002b, pp. 144–54). |
4 | Wolfgang H. Pleger describes Socrates‘ skepticism as follows: “The conviction not to already possess truth, is the Socratic form of skepticism. But this skepticism does not become a clot in a dogmatic thesis on the indiscernibility of being, but becomes a methodically fruitful motif in the joint search for truth”; Cf. Pleger (1991, p. 167). Cf. also Leonard (2012, pp. 17–64). |
5 | With regard to Socrates, this method is called midwifery, maieutics. |
6 | Cf. Friedländer (1818, pp. 153–56), here also the quotes. |
7 | Friedländer (1818, p. 157). Cursive in the original. For a critical view of Maimonides’ view on negative theology, cf. Stern (2019, pp. 116–19). |
8 | On Mendelssohn’s participation see (Behm 2002a, pp. 107–35). |
9 | On religious instruction at the Freischule (cf. Lohmann 2002, pp. 137–65). |
10 | Statement by Friedrich Albert Zimmer, responsible civil servant for the Breslau Jewish community; quote by Freudenthal (1893, p. 335). |
11 | This skepticism is derived indirectly but is yet clear, such as is expressed in the program of the Jewish Freischule in 1788, in which the subjects of a traditional curriculum are listed. It is apparent that this instruction material is only available in selection, more structured than usual and is to be taught by another method. See (Itzig and Friedländer 2001, pp. 206, 208). |
12 | (Mendelssohn 1782, pp. 27–65). David Friedländer comments on the Anmerkungen: “They were the results of his serious contemplations and investigations since his early youth; the guiding principle of his whole life; his unfeigned religious confession” (Friedländer 1814, XVll). |
13 | The pondering reader (“der grübelnde Leser”), (Löwe and Wolfssohn 1790, p. IX). |
14 | Löwe’s Pessach Haggada (Bril [Löwe] 1785) and David Friedländer and Isaak Euchel‘s (1785/86) translations of prayers are dedicated to Jewish women from their own family and communicative environment; see (Lohmann 2017). |
15 | Moses Maimonides, Guide to the Perplexed (late 12th century), Part 3, Cap. 31; quoted acc. to Löwe (1796, pp. 31–32).—The Jewish enlightener Isaak A. Euchel, a close friend of Joel Löwe, shortly before published a new edition of Moreh Nevuchim in the Berlin Orientalische Buchdruckerei (Chevrat Chinuch Ne’arim). The first volume appeared in 1791 with a commentary by Moses Narboni (14th century) Giv’at haMoreh by Salomon Maimon. The second and third volumes were published in 1795, along with a commentary by Isaac Satanow. |
16 | This reveals a parallel to Plato: see inter alia (Gaiser 1998; Reale 2000). |
17 | On Heinemann’s school, see Fehrs (1993, pp. 48–52). |
18 | Schlachter (1818, p. 44). Georg Joachim Schlachter (1785–1860) was a Christian country schoolteacher. The interdenominational exchange is characteristic of the Haskalah’s skeptical conversation culture. |
19 | For the method inventory of cultural scepticism see (Rebiger 2017). |
20 | Rabbinical authorities voiced threats against the German translations of Biblical writings and of Jewish prayers as well as against the modern Jewish educational concept; see (Lohmann 2014). |
21 | See above, FN 91. |
References
- 1817. Ankündigung religiöser und ästhetischer Vorträge von J. Heinemann und H. Winter für gebildete Israelitinnen in Berlin. Jedidja 1: 22–30.
- Ascher, Saul. 2010. Ausgewählte Werke. Edited by Renate Best. Köln, Weimar and Wien: Böhlau. [Google Scholar]
- Behm, Britta L. 2002a. Moses Mendelssohns Stellung in der Haskala. In Jüdische Erziehung und aufklärerische Schulreform. Analysen zum späten 18. und 19. Jahrhundert. Edited by Britta L. Behm, Uta Lohmann and Ingrid Lohmann. Münster, New York, München and Berlin: Waxmann. [Google Scholar]
- Behm, Britta L. 2002b. Moses Mendelssohn und die Transformation der jüdischen Erziehung in Berlin. Münster, New York, München and Berlin: Waxmann, pp. 144–54. [Google Scholar]
- Bril [Löwe], Joel. 1785. Geneigte Leserinnen. In Sefer Hagadah Shel Pessach. Berlin: Chevrat Chinuch Ne’arim, pp. 5–8. [Google Scholar]
- Büschenthal, Lippmann Moses. 1817. An die Religion. In Jedidja: Eine Religiöse, Moralische und Pädagogische Zeitschrift. Berlin: Maurer, pp. 3–16, 34–37. [Google Scholar]
- Ciafardone, Raffaele. 1990. Die Philosophie der deutschen Aufklärung. Stuttgart: Reclam, p. 13. [Google Scholar]
- Cohen, Salomon Jacob Cohen. 1802. Plan to improve religious instruction. 390–91. [Google Scholar]
- Davies, Martin L. 1995. Identity or History? Marcus Herz and the End of the Enlightenment. Detroit: Wayne State Univ. Press. [Google Scholar]
- Dietrich, Peter. 1778. Die Rolle des preußischen Staates bei der Reform des jüdischen Schulwesens. Handlungsstrategien der preußischen Verwaltung gegenüber der jüdischen Freischule in Berlin (1778–1825) und der Königlichen Wilhelmsschule in Breslau (1791–1848). In Jüdische Erziehung und aufklärerische Schulreform. Analysen zum späten 18. und 19. Jahrhundert. Edited by Britta L. Behm, Uta Lohmann and Ingrid Lohmann. Münster, New York, München and Berlin: Waxmann, pp. 167–212. [Google Scholar]
- Euchel, Isaak. 1787. Preface. HaMeassef 4. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fehrs, Jörg H. 1993. Von der Heidereutergasse zum Roseneck. Jüdische Schulen in Berlin 1712–1942. Berlin: Edition Hentrich, pp. 48–52. [Google Scholar]
- Feiner, Shmuel. 2004. The Jewish Enlightenment. Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press. [Google Scholar]
- Fischer, Bernd. 2016. Ein anderer Blick: Saul Aschers politische Schriften. Wien, Köln and Weimar: Böhlau. [Google Scholar]
- Freudenthal, Max. 1893. Die ersten Emancipationsbestrebungen der Juden in Breslau. Nach archivalischen und anderen Quellen dargestellt. Monatsschrift für Geschichte und Wissenschaft des Judentums 37: 335. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1786. Vorerinnerung. In Gebete der Juden auf das ganze Jahr. Berlin: Chevrat Chinuch Ne’arim, pp. 267–70. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1788a. Schreiben an meine Mit-Brüder in Deutschland, eine in hebräischer Sprache gedruckte moralische Rede betreffend. Berlín: Waxmann, pp. 278–92. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1788b. Über den besten Gebrauch der h. Schrift, in pädagogischer Rücksicht. In Der Prediger. Berlin: Friedrich Maurer, pp. 61–81. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1788c. Haftarah leShacherit Jom haKipurim. Berlin: Chevrat Chinuch Ne’arim. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1790. Haftarot mikol haShanah. Berlin: Chevrat Chinuch Ne’arim. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1799. Sendschreiben an Seine Hochwürden, Herrn Oberconsistorialrath und Probst Teller zu Berlin, von einigen Hausvätern jüdischer Religion. Berlin: August Mylius. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1814. Einleitung. In Moses Mendelssohn: Phädon Oder über die Unsterblichkeit der Seele, 5th ed. Berlin: Nicolai, p. X. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1817a. Rede über Psalm 19. Jedidja 1: 373–383. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1817b. Religion und Vernunft. Berlin: C.A. Stuhr. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1817c. Über Aufklärung in der Religion. Berlin: C.A. Stuhr. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 1818. Unterhaltung mit Mendelssohn, aus der Erinnerung nieder geschrieben. Jedidja 2: 143–76. [Google Scholar]
- Friedländer, David. 2013. Ausgewählte Werke. Edited by Uta Lohmann. Köln, Weimar and Wien: Böhlau. [Google Scholar]
- Gaiser, Konrad. 1998. Platos ungeschriebene Lehre. Studien zur systematischen und geschichtlichen Begründung der Wissenschaften in der Platonischen Schule. Stuttgart: Klett-Cotta. [Google Scholar]
- Grill, Tobias, ed. 2018. Jews and Germans in Eastern Europe. Shared and Comparative Histories. Berlin, München andBoston: De Gruyter-De Gruyter Oldenbourg. [Google Scholar]
- Hecht, Louise. 2008. Ein jüdischer Aufklärer in Böhmen. Der Pädagoge und Reformer Peter Beer (1758–1838). Wien, Köln and Weimar: Böhlau. [Google Scholar]
- Heinemann, Jeremias. 1817a. Einleitung. Jedidja 1: 1–4. [Google Scholar]
- Heinemann, Jeremias. 1817b. Nachricht von einer unter höherer Auctorität [!] zu errichtenden neuen Erziehungs- und Lehranstalt für israelitische Knaben. Jedidja 1: 5–22. [Google Scholar]
- Hinske, Norbert. 1990. Die tragenden Grundideen der deutschen Aufklärung. Versuch einer Typologie. In Aufklärung und Haskala in jüdischer und nichtjüdischer Sicht. Edited by Karlfried Gründer and Nathan Rotenstreich. Heidelberg: Schneider, pp. 67–100. [Google Scholar]
- Hiscott, William. 2017. Saul Ascher. Berliner Aufklärer. Eine philosophiehistorische Darstellung. Hannover: Wehrhahn. [Google Scholar]
- Itzig, Isaak Daniel, and David Friedländer. 2001. Programm der Freischule von 1783. In Chevrat Chinuch Nearim. Die jüdische Freischule in Berlin (1788–1825) im Umfeld preußischer Bildungspolitik und jüdischer Kultusreform. Edited by Ingrid Lohmann. Münster, New York, München and Berlin: Waxmann. [Google Scholar]
- Itzig, Isaak Daniel. 1803. Nachricht von dem gegenwärtigen Zustande der jüdischen Freischule in Berlin. Berlin: Joh. Wilh. Schmidt, pp. 392–402. [Google Scholar]
- Kennecke, Andreas, ed. 2001. Isaak Euchel. Vom Nutzen der Aufklärung. Schriften zur Haskala. Düsseldorf: Parerga. [Google Scholar]
- Kennecke, Andreas. 2007. Isaac Euchel. Architekt der Haskala. Göttingen: Wallstein. [Google Scholar]
- Leder, Christoph Maria. 2007. Die Grenzgänge des Marcus Herz. Beruf, Haltung und Identität eines jüdischen Arztes gegen Ende des 18. Jahrhunderts. Münster: Waxmann. [Google Scholar]
- Leonard, Miriam. 2012. Socrates and the Jews. Hellenism and Hebraism from Moses Mendelssohn to Sigmund Freud. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, pp. 17–64. [Google Scholar]
- Lohmann, Uta. 2002. ‘Auf den Namen einer Bürgerschule Ansprüche machen‘—Religionsunterricht und staatliche Klassifizierung der Berliner Freischule. In Jüdische Erziehung und aufklärerische Schulreform. Analysen zum späten 18. Und frühen 19. Jahrhundert. Edited by Britta L. Behm, Uta Lohmann and Ingrid Lohmann. Münster, New York, München and Berlin: Waxmann, pp. 137–65. [Google Scholar]
- Lohmann, Uta. 2011. David Friedländer und Moses Mendelssohn. Eine Freundschaft zwischen äußeren Erwartungen und innerer Überzeugung. Mendelssohn Studien 17: 71–98. [Google Scholar]
- Lohmann, Uta. 2013. David Friedländer. Reformpolitik im Zeichen von Aufklärung und Emanzipation—Kontexte des preußischen Judenedikts vom 11. März 1812. Hannover: Wehrhahn. [Google Scholar]
- Lohmann, Ingrid, ed. 2014. Naphtali Herz Wessely. Worte des Friedens und der Wahrheit. Dokumente einer Kontroverse über Erziehung in der europäischen Spätaufklärung. Münster and New York: Waxmann. [Google Scholar]
- Lohmann, Uta. 2015. ‘Dem Wahrheitsforcher zur Belehrung‘. Die Herausgaben von Moses Mendelssohns Ha-nefesh (1787) und Phädon (1814–1821) durch David Friedländer: Kontexte, Adressaten, Intentionen. Mendelssohn Studien 19: 45–77. [Google Scholar]
- Lohmann, Uta. 2017. ‘edle Frauen, zärtliche Gattinnen, verständige Mütter und kluge Hauswirtinnen’—zum Weiblichkeitsideal der Berliner Haskala. In Die Kommunikations-, Wissens- und Handlungsräume der Henriette Herz (1764–1847). Edited by Hannah Lotte Lund, Ulrike Schneider and Ulrike Wels. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, pp. 71–86. [Google Scholar]
- Lohmann, Uta. 2020. Haskala und allgemeine Menschenbildung. David Friedländer und Wilhelm von Humboldt im Gespräch: Zur Wechselwirkung zwischen jüdischer Aufklärung und neuhumanistischer Bildungstheorie. Münster and New York: Waxmann, pp. 424–51. [Google Scholar]
- Lohmann, Uta. 2022. “Gottesverehrung im Tempel der Israeliten“. Israel Jacobsons Interaktion mit der (Berliner) Haskala und die Genese der emotionalen religiösen Rede. In Jews and Citizens – Juden und Bürger. Beiträge zur internationalen Konferenz zum 250. Geburtstag von Israel Jacobson. Edited by Cord-Friedrich Berghahn, Mirko Przystawik, Katrin Keßler and Ulrich Knufinke. Göttingen: Wallstein, pp. 131–53. [Google Scholar]
- Löwe, Joel. 1793. Einige Bemerkungen über Zeitwörter, vorzüglich Seyn, Haben u. Werden. Breslau: Graßische Stadt-Buchdruckerei, p. 55. [Google Scholar]
- Löwe, Joel. 1794. Etwas über Chronologie zur Jüdischen Geschichte. Breslau: Graßische Stadt-Buchdruckerei, p. 42. [Google Scholar]
- Löwe, Joel. 1796. Assaph über ächte und unächte Religiosität. Breslau: Graßische Stadt-Buchdruckerei, p. 3. [Google Scholar]
- Löwe, Joel. 2005. Eröffnungsrede. In Nachricht, von dem, unter dem Namen Wilhelms-Schule, zu Breslau errichteten Institut, zu einer verbesserten Unterweisung der Kinder dasiger Juden-Gemeinde. Newly edited in “Lerne Vernunft!” Jüdische Erziehungsprogramme zwischen Tradition und Modernisierung. Quellentexte aus der Zeit der Haskala, 1760–1811. Edited by Uta Lohmann and Ingrid Lohmann. Münster, München and Berlin: Waxmann, pp. 428–31. [Google Scholar]
- Löwe, Joel, and Aaron Wolfssohn. 1790. Vorrede. In Jeremiahs Klagegesänge. Berlin: Maurer, pp. III–XXIV. [Google Scholar]
- Mendelssohn, Joseph. 1843. Moses Mendelssohn’s Lebensgeschichte. Leipzig: F.A. Brockhaus, p. 48. [Google Scholar]
- Mendelssohn, Moses. 1782. Anmerkungen zu Abbts freundschaftlicher Correspondenz. Edited in Moses Mendelssohn: Gesammelte Schriften. Jubiläumsausgabe. Berlin: Bey Friedrich Nicolai, vol. 6.1, pp. 27–65. [Google Scholar]
- Mendelssohn, Moses. 1783. Die Psalmen. Berlin: Maurer. [Google Scholar]
- Mendelssohn, Moses. 2007. Appendix to the Third Edition of Phädon, 1769. In Phädon or On the Immortality of the Soul. Translated by Patricia Noble. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, p. 152. [Google Scholar]
- Mendelssohn, Moses. 2011. Jerusalem or On Religious Power and Judaism. In Moses Mendelssohn. Writings on Judaism, Christianity & the Bible. Edited by Michah Gottlieb. Translated by Allan Arkush. Waltham: Brandeis University Press, pp. 92–93. [Google Scholar]
- Mendelssohn, Moses. 2018. Or Li-Netivah, in: Moses Mendelssohn’s Hebrew Writings. Translated by Edward Breuer. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, p. 276. [Google Scholar]
- Pelli, Moshe. 1979. The Age of Haskalah. Studies in Hebrew Literature of the Enlightenment in Germany. Leiden: Brill. [Google Scholar]
- Pelli, Moshe. 2000. The Gate to Haskalah. Hebrew: Jerusalem. [Google Scholar]
- Pleger, Wolfgang H. 1991. Der Vorsokratiker. Stuttgart: Metzler, p. 167. [Google Scholar]
- Reale, Giovanni. 2000. Zu einer neuen Interpretation Platons. Eine Auslegung der Metaphysik der großen Dialoge im Lichte der “ungeschriebenen Lehren. Paderborn, München, Wien and Zürich: Schöningh. [Google Scholar]
- Rebiger, Bill. 2017. Sceptical Strategies in Simone Luzzano’s Presentation of the Kabbalists in his Discorso. Yearbook of the Maimonides Centre for Advanced Studies 2: 51–69. [Google Scholar]
- Ruderman, David B. 2000. Jewish Enlightenment in an English Key. Princeton: Princeton University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Sadowski, Dirk. 2010. Haskala und Lebenswelt. Herz Homberg und die jüdischen deutschen Schulen in Galizien 1782–1806. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. [Google Scholar]
- Schlachter, Georg Joachim. 1818. Lückenbüßer. Jedidja 1: 44–47. [Google Scholar]
- Schulte, Christoph. 2002. Die jüdische Aufklärung. Philosophie, Religion, Geschichte. München: Beck. [Google Scholar]
- Sela, Yael. 2023. Songs of the Nation: Sefer Zemirot Yisra’el by Joel Bril (Berlin, 1791). A Bilingual Edition with Commentary. Boston and Leiden: Brill. [Google Scholar]
- Sorkin, David. 2000. The Berlin Haskalah and German Religious Thought. Orphans of Knowledge. London and Portland: Vallentine Mitchell. [Google Scholar]
- Stern, Josef. 2019. What is Maimonidean Scepticism? In Sceptical Paths. Enquiry and Doubts from Antiquity to the Present. Edited by Giuseppe Veltri, Racheli Haliva, Emidio Spinelli and Stephan Schmid. Berlin and Boston: Walter De Gruyter, pp. 97–125. [Google Scholar]
- Strauss, Jutta. 1994. Aaron Halle-Wolfssohn: A Trilingual Life. An Exemplary Life for the Interplay of Hebrew, German and Yiddish among 18th Century German Jewry. Doctoral dissertation, Bodleian Library Oxford, Oxford, UK. [Google Scholar]
- Strauss, Ze’ev. 2018. The Ground Floor of Judaism: Scepticism and Certainty in Moses Mendelssohn’s Jerusalem. Yearbook of the Maimonides Centre for Advanced Studies 3: 179–206. [Google Scholar]
- Wolf, Joseph. 1806a. Inhalt, Zweck und Titel dieser Zeitschrift. Sulamith. Eine Zeitschrift zur Beförderung der Cultur und Humanität unter den Israeliten 1: 1–11. [Google Scholar]
- Wolf, Joseph. 1806b. Über das Wesen, den Charakter und die Nothwendigkeit der Religion. Sulamith 1: 207–14. [Google Scholar]
- Wolfssohn, Aaron, and Joel Bril. 1838. Vorbericht der jüdischen Herausgeber. In Moses Mendelssohn‘ s sämmtliche Werke. Ausgabe in einem Bande als National-Denkmal. Wien: Schmidt und Klang. [Google Scholar]
- Zunz, Leopold. 1817. Predigt über Religiosität, gehalten in dem Kreise einiger Freunde. Jedidja 1: 17–25. [Google Scholar]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2023 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Lohmann, U. “On Enlightenment in Religion”—Skepticism and Tolerance in Educational and Cultural Concepts within the Berlin and Breslau Haskalah. Religions 2023, 14, 326. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14030326
Lohmann U. “On Enlightenment in Religion”—Skepticism and Tolerance in Educational and Cultural Concepts within the Berlin and Breslau Haskalah. Religions. 2023; 14(3):326. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14030326
Chicago/Turabian StyleLohmann, Uta. 2023. "“On Enlightenment in Religion”—Skepticism and Tolerance in Educational and Cultural Concepts within the Berlin and Breslau Haskalah" Religions 14, no. 3: 326. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14030326
APA StyleLohmann, U. (2023). “On Enlightenment in Religion”—Skepticism and Tolerance in Educational and Cultural Concepts within the Berlin and Breslau Haskalah. Religions, 14(3), 326. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14030326