Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Is Scripture the Origin of Halakhah? – Jacob Neusner The Talmud: Law, Theology, Narrative: A Sourcebook – Jacob Neusner Theology of Normative Judaism: A Source Book – Jacob Neusner The Vitality of Rabbinic Imagination: The Mishnah against the Bible and
View through CrossRef
Book reviewed: Is Scripture the Origin of Halakhah?, Jacob Neusner, University Press of America 2005 (0‐7618‐3117‐7), xiv + 217 pp., pb $34.00 The Talmud: Law, Theology, Narrative: A Sourcebook, Jacob Neusner, University Press of America 2005 (0‐7618‐3115‐0), xxxiv + 251 pp., pb $39.00 Theology of Normative Judaism: A Source Book, Jacob Neusner, University Press of America 2005 (0‐7618‐3116‐9), vi + 156 pp., pb $26.00 The Vitality of Rabbinic Imagination: The Mishnah against the Bible and Qumran, Jacob Neusner, University Press of America 2005 (0‐7618‐3118‐5), xxxiv + 226 pp., pb $35.00
Title: Is Scripture the Origin of Halakhah? – Jacob Neusner
The Talmud: Law, Theology, Narrative: A Sourcebook – Jacob Neusner
Theology of Normative Judaism: A Source Book – Jacob Neusner
The Vitality of Rabbinic Imagination: The Mishnah against the Bible and
Description:
Book reviewed: Is Scripture the Origin of Halakhah?, Jacob Neusner, University Press of America 2005 (0‐7618‐3117‐7), xiv + 217 pp.
, pb $34.
00 The Talmud: Law, Theology, Narrative: A Sourcebook, Jacob Neusner, University Press of America 2005 (0‐7618‐3115‐0), xxxiv + 251 pp.
, pb $39.
00 Theology of Normative Judaism: A Source Book, Jacob Neusner, University Press of America 2005 (0‐7618‐3116‐9), vi + 156 pp.
, pb $26.
00 The Vitality of Rabbinic Imagination: The Mishnah against the Bible and Qumran, Jacob Neusner, University Press of America 2005 (0‐7618‐3118‐5), xxxiv + 226 pp.
, pb $35.
00.
Related Results
Talmud and Philosophy
Talmud and Philosophy
“Talmud” means in Tannaitic Hebrew “learning,” “study,” or more precisely “expounding.” From the Middle Ages and on, the term came to refer to two corpora of rabbinic literature fr...
The Transformation of Judaism
The Transformation of Judaism
Jacob Neusner describes, analyzes, and interprets the transformation of one system of the Israelite social order by a connected but autonomous successor-system. He characterizes th...
Tractate Avodah Zarah (in the Talmud)
Tractate Avodah Zarah (in the Talmud)
“Avodah Zarah” literally means “strange worship,” the worship of deities other than the God of Israel. The term has also been translated accurately (albeit nonliterally) as “forbid...
From Constitutional Comparison to Life in the Biosphere
From Constitutional Comparison to Life in the Biosphere
From Constitutional Comparison to Life in the Biosphere is a monograph that argues for a fundamental reorientation of constitutional law around the realities of biospheric interdep...
Vitality Analysis Algorithm in the Study of Plant Individuals and Populations
Vitality Analysis Algorithm in the Study of Plant Individuals and Populations
Background:
The article presents an algorithm of the vitality analysis of plant individuals in the populations that enables the assessment of the prospects for the ...
Rabbinic Law
Rabbinic Law
Rabbinic law contains legal rulings and analysis, and deals with both practical and theoretical issues. It includes ritual, civil, criminal, and marital law. Its sources include ra...
Rabbinic Literature
Rabbinic Literature
The literary activity of the rabbis of antiquity, the formers of what has come to be known as “Rabbinic Judaism,” spans from the destruction of the Second Temple (70 ce) to the Mos...
Pirke Avot ca. 200 CE
Pirke Avot ca. 200 CE
Pirke Avot, or “The Sayings of the Fathers,” is one of the sixty-three tractates of the Mishnah, the oldest document of classical Jewish (rabbinic) literature, which was composed a...

