Machshevet Yisrael (Jewish Thought): 3 credits -- Philosophy / Political Theory
We begin by learning key Jewish texts and various disciplinary concepts, tools, and methods. We engage each of these first for their own sake, attending closely to them and seeking to understand them in and of themselves. Then, we use them as lenses through which to analyze current issues, questions, and problems in Jewish political thought.
This course will build on the First Semester's Chaburot course, and its overarching objective will be to develop an understanding, or perhaps a set of possible understandings, of Jewish political thought in text and in history prior to the establishment of the modern State of Israel, and to what extent this tradition(s) can and ought to inform policy and law in the modern State. An initial, brief, and incomplete list of topics to be considered would include monarchy, judges and local versus central authority, tribal allotments (and these vis-à-vis current understandings of federalism), factionalism in the Second Temple period (and this vis-à-vis the sectors/camps in present-day Israel), notions of individual and collective sovereignty and responsibility, and the historical "Hebrew republic" concept (and this vis-à-vis today's Jewish state / democratic state conversation).
By applying what they have learned, students progress to a more advanced understanding of all of the material, integrating it and solidifying their grasp on it. They come to know it more thoroughly and from additional angles, they recognize how it intersects with other material, and they come to a sharpened understanding of how it is real and relevant. By using the texts and concepts to develop new questions about the issues, they come to know each of these thoroughly, deeply, and from the inside out.
In addition to providing academic credit for disciplinary and/or distribution requirements, this course also fulfills various institutions' requirements for writing-intensive courses (i.e. courses, regardless of their primary discipline, that emphasize writing assignments and that approach writing as a means of thinking through the course material).
• This course meets twice weekly.
• Guest speakers will include various subject-matter experts (scholars and practitioners).
• Grading: Participation 50% + Seminar Essay 50%
• The participation grade will include in-class participation and weekly "low-stakes" writing assignments focused on inventorying and mastering the material to date: analytical summaries, detailed descriptions of selected items, "conversation charts" that diagram various ways in which the texts and ideas relate to each other, and similar tasks. These will provide a basis for the Seminar Essay.