Week Five

Moses Maimonides, Guide of the Perplexed

Depiction of Maimonides teaching students about the “measure of man” in an illuminated manuscript.

What is the relationship between faith and reason?

Can the two be harmonized?

Rabbi Moshe ben Maimon (1135-1204), or Maimonides, is one of the great religious geniuses of Judaism. (His work the Mishneh Torah, is still an authoritative reference for Talmudic interpretation.) He came up in the distinctive culture of the Islamic West (North Africa and Spain), having been born in Cordoba. The Guide of the Perplexed (written in Arabic around 1190) is his attempt to harmonize Aristotle with the Hebrew Bible. A pious Jew, as al-Ghazali was a pious Muslim, Maimonides (a contemporary of the philosopher Averroes) differs from al-Ghazali in holding to the compatibility of faith and philosophy. His work influenced Aquinas.

An introduction to the life and legacy of Moses Maimonides.