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UID:MEC-85c4ef2f7a943600c97b5903247567b7@maimonides.eu
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20220505T193000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Berlin:20220505T210000
DTSTAMP:20220303T122241Z
CREATED:20220303
LAST-MODIFIED:20220501
PRIORITY:5
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SUMMARY:Leader & leadership: Medieval Jewish & Islamic Thought
DESCRIPTION:Workshop with Jun.-Prof. Dr. Racheli Haliva\nThe figure of the ultimate leader plays an important role in both traditions: the Judeo-Islamic and the Christian. Determining the character traits of the leader is to a large extent determining the character of the religion itself. In the Middle Ages the two traditions deviate from one another due to the sources they were influenced by: while in the Judeo-Islamic tradition rests upon Plato’s thought, the Christian tradition is influenced by Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics and Politics.\nThe Judeo-Islamic thought was mainly shaped according to the thought of Abu Naṣr al-Fārābī (d. 950), the great Muslim philosopher. Al-Fārābī listed the prerequisites that the perfect legislator must possess. Among these prerequisites al Fārābī includes qualities that the leader must possess such as healthy body and ability to apprehend things as they are.\nWhile for the Jewish and Muslim thinkers, the ultimate leader is the prophet – for the Jews it was Moses, and for the Muslims it was Muhammad or generally the Imam, the Christian thinkers tended to view political figures such as king Solomon and king David as the perfect ruler.\nThe current workshop will focus on the sources by which Medieval Jews, Christians, and Muslims were influenced. We will discover what the similarities and differences between the three Abrahamic religions are.\n\nJun.-Prof. Dr. Racheli Haliva is Co-Direktor of Maimonides Centre of Advanced Studies in Hamburg.\n
URL:https://maimonides.eu/veranstaltung/leader-and-leadership-in-medieval-jewish-and-islamic-thought/
ORGANIZER;CN=Maimonides Bildungswerk:MAILTO:
CATEGORIES:Veranstaltungsreihe "Unerzählte Geschichten"
LOCATION:Grebenstraße 24, 55116 Mainz
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://maimonides.eu/wp-content/uploads/2022/02/Racheli-Haliva-quadrat-300-px.jpg
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