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Joseph ibn Shem-Tov



 
 
Joseph ibn Shem-Tov (15th century) was a prolific Judćo-Spanish writer born in Castile
Castile (historical region)

A former Kingdom of Castile, Castile , gradually merged with its neighbors to become the Crown of Castile and later the Kingdom of Spain with the Crown of Aragon and the Crown of Navarre....
. He lived in various cities of Spain
Spain

Spain or the Kingdom of Spain , is a country located in Southern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula.The Spanish constitution does not establish any official denomination of the country, even though Espa?a , Estado espa?ol and Naci?n espa?ola are used interchangeably....
: Medina del Campo de Leon (1441); Alcalá de Henares
Alcalá de Henares

Alcal? de Henares, meaning Castle on the river Henares, is a Spain city, whose historical centre is one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites, and one of the first bishoprics founded in Spain....
 (1451); Segovia
Segovia

Segovia is a city in Spain, the capital of the province of Segovia in Castile and Leon. It is situated north of Madrid, and can be reached by bullet train in 35 minutes from Madrid at ....
 (1454).

Though it is not known precisely what office he held at court, he occupied a position which brought him in contact with distinguished Christian
Christian

A Christian is a person who adheres to Christianity, a Monotheism#Christian view religion centered on the life and teachings of Jesus and interpreted by Christians to have been prophesied in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament....
 scholars. According to the custom of the time, he held public disputations with them in the presence of the court; this probably led him to study the polemical literature of the Jews.






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Joseph ibn Shem-Tov (15th century) was a prolific Judćo-Spanish writer born in Castile
Castile (historical region)

A former Kingdom of Castile, Castile , gradually merged with its neighbors to become the Crown of Castile and later the Kingdom of Spain with the Crown of Aragon and the Crown of Navarre....
. He lived in various cities of Spain
Spain

Spain or the Kingdom of Spain , is a country located in Southern Europe on the Iberian Peninsula.The Spanish constitution does not establish any official denomination of the country, even though Espa?a , Estado espa?ol and Naci?n espa?ola are used interchangeably....
: Medina del Campo de Leon (1441); Alcalá de Henares
Alcalá de Henares

Alcal? de Henares, meaning Castle on the river Henares, is a Spain city, whose historical centre is one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites, and one of the first bishoprics founded in Spain....
 (1451); Segovia
Segovia

Segovia is a city in Spain, the capital of the province of Segovia in Castile and Leon. It is situated north of Madrid, and can be reached by bullet train in 35 minutes from Madrid at ....
 (1454).

Though it is not known precisely what office he held at court, he occupied a position which brought him in contact with distinguished Christian
Christian

A Christian is a person who adheres to Christianity, a Monotheism#Christian view religion centered on the life and teachings of Jesus and interpreted by Christians to have been prophesied in the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament....
 scholars. According to the custom of the time, he held public disputations with them in the presence of the court; this probably led him to study the polemical literature of the Jews. In the preface to his commentary on Profiat Duran
Profiat Duran

Profiat Duran , also known as Efodi ; also known as Isaac ben Moses ha-Levi; was a physician, philosopher, grammarian, and controversialist in the 14th century....
's Al-Tehi ka-Aboteka, he recounts a disputation with a Christian scholar concerning the doctrine of the Trinity
Trinity

In Christianity doctrine, the Trinity is the unity of God the Father, God the Son, and Holy Spirit as three persons in monotheism. The doctrine states that God is the Triune God, existing as three persons, or in the Greek hypostasis , but one being....
. He seems to have elaborated this disputation and to have used it later in various anti-Christian writings. In 1452 he was sent by the Prince of Asturia, Don Enrique, to Segovia to prevent an outbreak of popular rage at Easter
Easter

Easter is the most important religious feast in the Christianity liturgical year.Christians believe that Jesus was Resurrection of Jesus from the dead three days after his Crucifixion of Jesus, and celebrate this resurrection on Easter Day or Easter Sunday , two days after Good Friday....
 against the Jews. He speaks occasionally in his writings of great sufferings which drove him from place to place, and of passing through a severe illness. Graetz (Gesch. viii. 422) has discovered, from a quotation in Joseph Jaabez's Or ha-ayyim, that Ibn Shem-ob died a martyr. The year of his passing was 1480.

Ibn Shem-ob's numerous writings, a list of which was compiled by Munk and supplemented by Beer and Steinschneider, are divisible into (a) independent works and (b) commentaries.

Original Works

  • Hanhagat ha-Bayit, treatise on economics, written in his youth (see his En ha-ore); nothing further is known concerning it. According to Steinschneider, it may be a revision of Aristotle
    Aristotle

    Aristotle was a Greeks philosopher, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great. He wrote on many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, Poetics , theater, music, logic, rhetoric, politics, government, ethics, biology and zoology....
    's Economics.


  • En ha-ore, the only medieval scientific Hebrew homiletical work extant. The book is very rich in quotations from both Christian and Islam
    Islam

    Islam is a Monotheism, Abrahamic religion originating with the teachings of the Prophets of Islam Muhammad, a 7th century Arab religious and political figure....
    ic authors. It treats systematically of the science of homiletics, defines the limitations of exegesis, and expresses itself in regard to the fundamental aim of Jewish preaching. It contains frequent references to Aristotle's Ethics, Ibn Shem-?ob's favorite work.


  • Kebod Elohim, on the summum bonum and the aim of life; written in 1442, printed at Ferrara
    Ferrara

    Ferrara is a city in Emilia-Romagna, northern Italy, capital city of the Province of Ferrara.It is situated 50 km north-northeast of Bologna, on the Po di Volano, a branch channel of the main stream of the Po River, located 5 km north....
     in 1555.


  • Da'at 'Elyon, a refutation of a fatalistic writing of the baptized Jew Abner of Burgos
    Abner of Burgos

    Abner of Burgos was a Jewish philosopher, a convert to Christianity and polemical writer against his former religion. Known after his conversion as Alfonso of Valladolid....
     (Wolf, Bibl. Hebr. iii. 428; the Oppenheim MS. cited by Wolf is no longer to be found in the collection at Oxford).


Commentaries

  • Commentary on Jedaiah ha-Penini's Beinat 'Olam.


  • Commentary on his father's Sefer ha-Yesodot, known only through a citation in En ha-ore. Just as Sefer ha-Yesodot is, probably, only another title of his father's Sefer ha-Emunot, so is this commentary, according to Steinschneider, probably identical with the Sefer Kebod Elohim.


  • Commentary on the anti-Christian letter of Profiat Duran
    Profiat Duran

    Profiat Duran , also known as Efodi ; also known as Isaac ben Moses ha-Levi; was a physician, philosopher, grammarian, and controversialist in the 14th century....
    , Al-Tehi ka-Aboteka, edited and printed together for the first time at Constantinople
    Constantinople

    Constantinople was the empire capital of the Roman Empire , the Byzantine Empire , the Latin Empire , and the Ottoman Empire . Strategically located between the Golden Horn and the Sea of Marmara at the point where Europe meets Asia, Byzantine Constantinople had been the capital of a Christendom empire, successor to ancient ancient Greece...
    , 1577; reprinted, by A. Geiger in obez Wikkuim, Breslau, 1844.


  • Biul 'Iere ha-Noerim, a Hebrew translation of and commentary on Hasdai Crescas
    Hasdai Crescas

    Hasdai ben Abraham Crescas was a Jewish philosopher and a renowned halakhist . Along with Rambam, Ralbag, and Joseph Albo, he is known as one of the major practitioners of the rationalism approach to Jewish philosophy, and his positions on issues of natural law and free will in Or Hashem can be seen as precursors to those of Spinoza....
    ' refutation, in Spanish
    Spanish language

    Spanish or Castilian is a Romance languages that originated in northern Spain, and gradually spread in the Kingdom of Castile and evolved into the principal language of government and trade....
    , of the chief dogmas of Christianity
    Christianity

    Christianity is a Monotheistic religion #Christian view religion centered on the life and teachings of Jesus as New Testament view on Jesus' life....
    . It was written at Alcala di Henares in 1451, and published anonymously at Salonica in 1860. The original work by Crescas and its title have been lost (Steinschneider, Hebr. Uebers. p. 462). These last two commentaries were in accord with the anti-Christian polemical spirit prevailing in the Jewish religio-philosophic literature of the time.


  • Commentary on Lamentations
    Lamentations

    Lamentations may refer to:*The Book of Lamentations*Lamentations of Jeremiah the Prophet and Genre of the Lamentations, two articles on the music for Tenebrae...
    , written at Medina del Campo
    Medina del Campo

    Medina del Campo is a small town located in the middle of the Spanish Geography of Spain#The Meseta Central and Associated Mountains, in Castile-Leon....
     in 1441, after the author had recovered from an illness (Parma, De Rossi MSS. No. 177).


  • Commentary on the Isagoge of Porphyry
    Porphyry

    Porphyry may refer to:*Porphyry , a plutonic rock with large crystals in a fine-grained matrix*Porphyry , a Neoplatonic philosopher*Porphyrio, also known as Pomponius Porphyrio, a Latin grammarian, fl....
    , after Averroes
    Averroes

    Abu 'l-Walid Mu?ammad ibn A?mad ibn Rushd , better known just as Ibn Rushd , and in European literature as Averroes , was an Al-Andalus-Arab Muslim polymath: a master of early Islamic philosophy, Islamic theology, Maliki Sharia and Fiqh, Logic in Islamic philosophy, Psychology in medieval Islam, Arabic music theory, and the Scien...
    , of which no manuscript has yet been found (see Steinschneider, Cat. der Hebr. Handschriften in der Stadtbibliothek zu Hamburg, p. 106; idem, Hebr. Uebers. p. 86).


  • Commentary on Averroes
    Averroes

    Abu 'l-Walid Mu?ammad ibn A?mad ibn Rushd , better known just as Ibn Rushd , and in European literature as Averroes , was an Al-Andalus-Arab Muslim polymath: a master of early Islamic philosophy, Islamic theology, Maliki Sharia and Fiqh, Logic in Islamic philosophy, Psychology in medieval Islam, Arabic music theory, and the Scien...
    ' treatise on the possibility of union with the active intellect (Sekel ha-Po'el), after Moses Narboni's translation, with a long introduction (Steinschneider, Cat. der Hebr. Handschriften Berlin, No. 216; Zotenberg
    Hermann Zotenberg

    Hermann Zotenberg was an orientalist and Arabist.He worked for the Biblioth?que nationale de France in Paris. His most celebrated work is his edition of the Chronique de Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari ...
    , l.c. No. 885). Ibn Shem-?ob made a short extract from this voluminous commentary, which he finished at Segovia in 1454 (Neubauer, Cat. Bodl. Hebr. MSS. No. 1253; see Steinschneider in Monatsschrift, xxxii. 459 et seq.; idem, Hebr. Uebers. pp. 194 et seq.).


  • Commentary on part of Averroes
    Averroes

    Abu 'l-Walid Mu?ammad ibn A?mad ibn Rushd , better known just as Ibn Rushd , and in European literature as Averroes , was an Al-Andalus-Arab Muslim polymath: a master of early Islamic philosophy, Islamic theology, Maliki Sharia and Fiqh, Logic in Islamic philosophy, Psychology in medieval Islam, Arabic music theory, and the Scien...
    ' "large commentary" on the De Anima of Aristotle
    Aristotle

    Aristotle was a Greeks philosopher, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great. He wrote on many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, Poetics , theater, music, logic, rhetoric, politics, government, ethics, biology and zoology....
    , cited in Ibn Shem-ob's commentary on Aristotle's Ethics (Steinschneider, l.c. p. 150).


  • Short commentary on Maimonides
    Maimonides

    Moses Maimonides, also known as Rabbi Moses ben Maimon , the Rambam, and Musa ibn Maymun , was born in C?rdoba, Spain, Spain on March 30, 1135, and died in Egypt on December 13, 1204.....
    ' Moreh, ii. 68, cited in his son's commentary on the same work. Nothing further concerning it is known.


  • Commentary on the Sidra Bereshit, cited by him in the En ha-ore, and a commentary on Deut. xv. 11, cited in his commentary on the Nicomachcan Ethics (according to Steinschneider these two may be only sermons).


  • Commentary, containing minute and diffuse explanations of words and subject-matter, on the Hebrew translation of the Nicomachean Ethics of Aristotle
    Aristotle

    Aristotle was a Greeks philosopher, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great. He wrote on many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, Poetics , theater, music, logic, rhetoric, politics, government, ethics, biology and zoology....
     (Sefer ha-Middot). Finished at Segovia in 1455, this was probably the last and most extensive of his works; he worked upon it for one hundred days continuously in order that no interruption might hinder him from an understanding of the text. The commentary exists in many manuscripts and was widely circulated in the Middle Ages
    Middle Ages

    File:Karl 1 mit papst gelasius gregor1 sacramentar v karl d kahlen.jpgThe Middle Ages of European history are a period in history which lasted for roughly a millennium, commonly dated from the fall of the Roman Empire in the 5th century to the beginning of the Early Modern Period in the 16th century, marked by the division of Western Christi...
    . It has been made use of in Isaac Satanow
    Isaac Satanow

    Isaac Satanow was a Polish Jewish scholar and poet....
    's edition of the Sefer ha-Middot (Berlin, 1784; Steinschneider, l.c. pp. 212 et seq.).


Ethical Views

The Kebod Elohim is Joseph's chief work. His leading ideas and principles, scattered throughout his other writings, are here brought together. In it he compares the ethical opinions of the Greeks
Greeks

The Greeks , also known as Hellenes, are a nation and ethnic group native to Greece, Cyprus and neighbouring regions, who can also be found in Greek diaspora communities around the world....
, especially of Aristotle
Aristotle

Aristotle was a Greeks philosopher, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great. He wrote on many subjects, including physics, metaphysics, Poetics , theater, music, logic, rhetoric, politics, government, ethics, biology and zoology....
, with those of Judaism
Judaism

Judaism is a set of beliefs and practices originating in the Hebrew Bible , as later further explored and explained in the Talmud and other texts....
, a thing which had not before been earnestly or thoroughly done. For this purpose he gives many extracts ("peraim") from the Ethics of Aristotle, and translates chapters ix. and x., though from a Latin
Latin

Latin is an Italic language, historically spoken in Latium and Ancient Rome. Through the Military history of the Roman Empire, Latin spread throughout the Mediterranean and a large part of Europe....
 version. In answer to the question as to man's summum bonum he concludes it to be the Torah
Torah

The term "Torah" , or Five Books of Moses or Pentateuch, refers to the entirety of Judaism's founding Halakha and ethical religious texts....
, which teaches and promises immortality, whereas the Greeks only speculate as to man's final goal. That the Torah and the philosophy of the Greeks have one and the same end, as some maintain, he denies, declaring the claim to be incompatible with the essence of positive religion; the Torah ordains the fulfilment of the 613 commandments, not the ethical teachings of Aristotle. Speculation within the bounds of the Torah is permitted, even commanded; and its province should be "the secret meanings of the Torah and of its rules, and the teachings of the Prophets." By this he probably indicates kabalistic dogmas. The divine commands are reasonable, although explanations based on reason, without the help of tradition often fail to explain the foundations of the commands.

Characterization

Joseph ibn Shem-ob was one of the most learned writers of his time. His knowledge of science and philosophy was intimate, and he had a very thorough acquaintance with Aristotle, his chief commentator Averroes, and the prominent Jewish, Mohammedan, and Christian writers. At the same time he was an independent and outspoken critic. He not only passed judgment upon Christianity and Islam, but he criticized Maimonides, with whose fundamental ideas he was not in sympathy, and maintained that the claim made by the cabalists that Shimon bar Yochai was the author of the Zohar
Zohar

The Zohar is widely considered the most important work of Kabbalah, or Jewish mysticism. It is a mystical commentary on the Torah , written in medieval Aramaic language....
 was baseless. Nevertheless, in a discussion as to the proofs of the unity of God, he prefers the arguments of the kabalists to those of the philosophers. His attitude might be termed "positive Jewish," with a remarkable mixture of rationalism and dogmatism. He would allow no obscurity or confusion of ideas, and emphatically asserted that religion and philosophy are not identical in their final aim: "The Aristotelian laws make men; Jewish laws make Jews."

In the strife then raging over the study of rationalistic sciences Ibn Shem-?ob took the following position: The Jew in possession of the divine revelation could dispense with the sciences, although their study was useful to him, since they perfected him as a human being; but their study should be deferred to an advanced age. In this he agreed with Solomon ben Adret. He thought it was the "sophistry" of "Greek wisdom," in which speculative knowledge was the chief end of life, which made materialists of so many prominent Jews, causing their defection from Judaism and the extinction of whole communities in Aragon
Aragon

Aragon is an autonomous communities of Spain of Spain. Located in northeastern Spain, the region comprises three provinces of Spain from north to south: Huesca , Zaragoza , and Teruel ....
 and Castile
Crown of Castile

The Crown of Castile, as a historic entity, is usually considered to have begun in 1230 with the third and definitive union of the two kingdoms of Kingdom of Le?n and Kingdom of Castile, or more concretely, with the union of their parliaments a few decades later....
. In other districts, he said, not affected by this spirit, there were thousands of Jews who would rather be killed than surrender their faith.

Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography

  • Heinrich Grätz, Gesch. viii. 141, 163 et seq., 178 et. seq., 421 et seq.;
  • Fuenn, Keneset Yisrael, pp. 512 et seq.;
  • Moritz Steinschneider
    Moritz Steinschneider

    Moritz Steinschneider was a Bohemian bibliographer and Orientalist. He received his early instruction in Hebrew from his father, Jacob Steinschneider , who was not only an expert Talmudist, but was also well versed in secular science....
    , Cat. Bodl. cols. 1529 et seq.;
  • idem, Jewish Literature, pp. 97, 100, 104, 127, 309, 317;
  • idem, in Ersch and Gruber, Encyc. section ii., part 31, pp. 87 et seq.;
  • M. Straschon, in Pire afon, pp. 84 et seq.;
  • Winter and Wünsche, Die Jüdische Litteratur, ii. 790, iii. 671;
  • Salomon Munk
    Salomon Munk

    Salomon Munk was a Germany-born Jewish-France Orientalist.Munk was born in Glog?w in the Kingdom of Prussia. He received his first instruction in Hebrew language from his father, an official of the Jewish community; and on the latter's death he joined the Talmud class of R....
    , Mélanges, pp. 508 et seq.;
  • Munk-Beer, Die Philosophischen Schriftsteller der Juden, pp. 118 et seq.