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  "path": "/2026/05/14/a-jewish-philosopher-asks-other-jewish-philosophers-to-reflect-on-their-judaism-and-philosophy/",
  "publishedAt": "2026-05-14T12:49:31.000Z",
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    "A Jewish Philosopher Asks Other Jewish Philosophers to Reflect on Their Judaism and Philosophy",
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  "textContent": "Philosopher David Boonin (University of Colorado Boulder) is inviting other Jewish philosophers to contribute to a collection of writings he’s putting together. The idea is to ask philosophers who are Jewish, regardless of whether they consider themselves practicing or observant Jews, to reflect on the ways their Jewish background may have influenced their lives as philosophers. Professor Boonin writes: Many years ago, I was invited to have dinner with some Jewish undergraduates as part of a Hillel program in which Jewish faculty came and talked about how their Jewish background had influenced their professional development. I initially declined the invitation and explained that I wouldn’t have anything to say because I don’t teach or write about Jewish philosophy. But the Hillel people encouraged me to think about it a bit more before making a final decision and I was glad I did. Among other things, I remember thinking about some of my experiences growing up Jewish and about some of the features I take to be at least somewhat distinctive of Jewish history, tradition, and culture, and finding it more plausible than I had initially expected to think of ways these may well have played a role in my being attracted to philosophy in general, and to certain topics and questions within philosophy, and perhaps even to certain particular philosophical views and methodological approaches. I ended up going to that dinner and it resulted in some genuinely fruitful conversation. In the years since, I’ve occasionally asked other philosophers who are Jewish this question about the possible connections between their Jewish background and their lives as philosophers and have always found the results rewarding. Even when, perhaps especially when, they’re initially inclined to think they’ll have nothing interesting to say, they end up having something interesting to say. Now I want to invite more people to join this conversation, so I’m compiling an on-line anthology of reflections on this question that Justin Weinberg has kindly offered to publish on Daily Nous. There’s no minimum or maximum word count. And while I’ve put together a set of suggested prompts for those who might find them useful, contributors are free to address the question in whatever way they find most productive. If you’re a..\n\nThe post A Jewish Philosopher Asks Other Jewish Philosophers to Reflect on Their Judaism and Philosophy first appeared on Daily Nous.",
  "title": "A Jewish Philosopher Asks Other Jewish Philosophers to Reflect on Their Judaism and Philosophy"
}