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11Most scholarship treats Cohen’s themes — universal ethics, law, monotheism, messianism, sin, atonement — in isolation. My paper does the opposite: it braids them into one continuous argument showing how each domain (ethics → law → monotheism → messianism → repentance) expresses a single “messianic imperative.”
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104Drawing on Hegel’s notion of “tarrying with the negative,” I interpret exposure and response prevention (ERP) as a practical enactment of dialectical transformation: by remaining with anxiety and contradiction rather than fleeing through ritual, the sufferer gradually reclaims agency and dissolves the illusion of an alien threat. This therapeutic process is embedded within a broader reshaping of habits — the creation of a “second nature” — through which the self becomes more flexible, rational, …Read more
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166The experience of obsessive–compulsive disorder is often described in clinical terms — as a pattern of intrusive thoughts and ritualized behaviors — but such descriptions rarely capture the deeper structure of the suffering involved. Beneath the symptoms lies a form of consciousness caught in a struggle with itself, animated by a demand for certainty that cannot be satisfied and yet cannot be relinquished. Hegel’s account of the “Unhappy Self” in The Phenomenology of Spirit offers a strikingly p…Read more
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677My study unfolds across several intertwined themes: Historical Frankism — Frank’s biography, his antinomian revolt against rabbinic Judaism, his conversions, his authoritarian charisma, and the traumatic dynamics of the Frankist community. I show how his movement destabilized Jewish–Christian boundaries and reshaped Polish religious imagination.“Only to wipe out all laws, all religions, did I come to Poland…” Frank and Sade — A comparative exploration of libertine transgression. While both inhab…Read more
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170My paper explores why Jacob Frank and the Frankist movement imagined Poland, rather than Israel, as the decisive terrain of redemption. Drawing on Frank’s own teachings, I show that Poland became a mythic Edom—the land of Esau—where the final reconciliation between Judaism and Catholic Europe would unfold. As the document states, Frank taught that “If you will be worthy to come to Poland, to Esau… the living God himself will rejoice” (§72). I trace how Frank reinterpreted biblical and rabbinic t…Read more
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282Jacob Frank and Georges Bataille articulate two of the most radical materialisms in the history of religious and philosophical thought. Their work invites us to reconsider the metaphysical hierarchies that structure Western understandings of spirit and flesh, purity and impurity, law and transgression. More importantly, it suggests that any attempt to think the sacred today must reckon with the dark, excessive, and often destabilising force of matter itself — a force that both Frank and Bataille…Read more
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430The article explores the provocative parallels and decisive divergences between Jacob Frank, the eighteenth‑century Jewish antinomian leader, and the Marquis de Sade, the notorious French libertine. Drawing on Shmuel Feiner’s comparison of Frank as a “Jewish version” of Sade, the essay situates both figures within a broader libertine counter‑world that operated on the margins of European society and sought to scandalize established religious and moral norms.
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626My paper traces the turbulent life of Jacob Frank (1726–1791) — a figure who oscillates between messianic pretender, radical heretic, political opportunist, and manipulative cult leader — and situates him as the final, fevered mutation of the Sabbatean heresy.
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422"Language Speaks for Itself" explores the idea that language is not merely a human tool but an autonomous, living force. Drawing on thinkers from Jewish mysticism to Nietzsche, Heidegger, Benjamin, Derrida, Burroughs, and others, the essay argues that language precedes, shapes, and even controls human thought and existence. It is at once creative, parasitic, viral, and rhetorical—an organism that speaks itself into being and speaks us into being human.
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173In the form of an extended poem I wonder aloud whether Herman Melville, author of Moby Dick, split in half his 'writing self', with one part identifying with Ahab, a character who attributes to the white whale a metaphysical evil, and whose obsessive quest ends in self-defeating failure; and the other part identifying (belatedly) with Ishmael, whose open-minded and non-committal personality helps him survive Ahab's mania; and that in the end Melville sees the act of writing as a mock-heroic acti…Read more
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236What happens to the ontological status of Spinoza's finite modes between his Short Treatise and Ethics?
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286I take a look at Bob Dylan’s unapologetic support for Zionism on his 1983 album, Infidels, in particular the song ‘Neighborhood Bully’. I do this through the lens of Baruch Spinoza’s comments on Jewish nationhood in Theological-Political Treatise and his notions of “reciprocal contact” and endeavour/virtue in Ethics. I also use Spinoza’s study of ‘affects’ to help explain the enduring prejudice of anti-Semitism and Israelophobia.
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292Complete version of Wittgenstein's Willing Subject: How the Happy Life Is the Only Right Life.
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200What happens to the humble conjunction 'and' in poetic titles when viewed under the lens of Alfred Jarry's 'Pataphysics?
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201Concluding part of a series on ethics, aesthetics and identity in Wittgenstein's Notebooks 1914-1916.
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234Part Three of a series focusing on ethics, aesthetics and identity in Wittgenstein's Notebooks 1914-1916.
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187Part Two of a series focusing on ethics, aesthetics and identity in Wittgenstein's Notebooks 1914-1916.
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163Part One of a series focusing on ethics, aesthetics and identity in Wittgenstein's Notebooks 1914-1916.
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1327It is a popular misconception that Spinoza was a pantheist or even an atheist. He was not. Like the medieval Kabbalists, Spinoza was a panentheist.
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1195In 1936, Shestov was invited by the Histadrut — the Jewish trade‑union federation — to deliver a series of lectures in the Land of Israel. His appearances in Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and Haifa drew enthusiastic audiences, and he was celebrated as a major Jewish thinker. For Shestov, the visit carried a deep personal significance: it fulfilled a lifelong dream, bound up with the memory of his grandfather, who was buried on the Mount of Olives.
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1056There is only one and unique substance in existence, a substance that is infinite, self-caused, and eternal. This substance is the spatio-temporal world. But it is also God, says Baruch Spinoza, the Sephardi Jew from Amsterdam excommunicated by the Talmud Torah congregation.
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1259The purpose of this essay is to make the case for a heterodox reading of Leibniz’s The Monadology (published 1720) through the lens of Professor John Wheeler’s hypothesis of the one-electron universe (proposed in 1940). My conjecture is this: That there exists in the knowable universe only one monad; that this monad traverses time in both directions, eventually criss-crossing the entire past and future history of the universe; and that this singular monad interacts with itself countless times, t…Read more
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712Anticipating Martin Buber, Hermann Cohen said we must recognize the living, breathing individual as a “Thou,” and not just as a generic example of humanity. As significant as the universal ethical ideal is for Cohen, he recognized that ethics is concerned with individuals only insofar as they are members of humanity as a whole. Ethics can’t always deal with individual moral feelings or with sin. In other words, it is religion -- rather than ethics -- that concerns itself with the sin of the indi…Read more
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860Hermann Cohen made a distinction between the logic of science and the ideal of ethics, and noted that the natural world and the world of ethics are perceived very differently. This is because the order of the physical world is unchangeable (e.g, the sun sets in the west, night follows day, etc), while in the ideal world ethical rules can be accepted or rejected. It seems there should be one explanation for science, which is empirically self-evident, and another for ethics, which is something tha…Read more