This classic work by early-20th-century Jewish humanist and scholar
Isaac Heinemann surveys the crucial phases of Jewish thought concerning
correct conduct as codified in the commandments. Heinemann provides his
own systematic insights about the intellectual, emotional, pedagogical,
and pragmatic reasoning advanced by the major Jewish thinkers. This
volume covers Jewish thinkers from the Bible, rabbis and Hellenistic
philosophers through the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, including
Saadiah, Halevi, Maimonides, Albo, and many others. Heinemann addresses
such questions as: "What were the Biblical, rabbinic, medieval, and
modern rationales offered for the commandments in the course of Jewish
thought?"