Perpetual Chanukah in the West
Philosophical violence in
the Judeo-Christian
Hyphen
David Porush
Siyum HaSefer
Sotah
Emek Beracha
Palo Alto, CA
May 25, 2014
With thanks to classmates Boris Feldman, Josef Joffe,
and Sam Tramiel
Special Thanks to Rabbi Yitzchak Feldman
Why does the Talmud forbid
teaching Greek?
The last page
of Sotah
brings to a climax the apocalyptic portrait of the decline of Jewish
generations, spirit, learning and virtue after the destruction of the Temple
the Chorban
- the Yeridas HaDoros. In the middle of this lamentation, The
Talmud discusses many virtues of Jewish spirit that were lost, and many customs
which had to be abandoned, including the bridal veil and litter, and the ritual
to cleanse an unsolved murder of a body found between two cities – the eglah arufah. However, in the middle of these, the
Talmud inserts an injunction against teaching Greek which seems out of place
and somewhat mysterious. I am just
going to focus on one segment of a sentence concerning this prohibition and try
to untangle it. LetÕs pull on a little thread and see how much we can unravel.
MISHNAH:
DURING THE WAR OF TITUS [Chorban 67-70 CE] THEY [Chazal] DECREED AGAINST [THE USE OF] CROWNS WORN BY BRIDES
AND THAT NOBODY SHOULD TEACH HIS SON GREEK. ÉÉ.
What did the Sages
have in mind? They canÕt have meant Greek language, because the Rabbis were
conversant with Greek, spoke it in the streets of Jerusalem. Akiva even asked Onkelos to
translate Tanach into Greek (Targum). Indeed, in the Gemara to this page in Sotah, we
read the lament of Shimon ben Gamliel,
the great Tanna (50 CE): ÒThere
were a thousand pupils in my father's house; five hundred studied Torah and
five hundred studied Greek wisdom.Ó And in various places in the Talmud, Greek
is praised, including being characterized as the only language into which the
Torah can be elegantly translated.
The Gemara tells the Aggadah (story) of an old man inside the walls of Jerusalem
who communicated via Greek Òsecret codeÓ to betray the Pharisees of AristobulosÕs faction protecting Jerusalem and the Temple,
including the purity of its sacrificial rites, to the Hyrkanos
faction (Seleucids - Greek accommodators) who besieged them.
SOTAH
49b GEMARA: A Baraisa provides historical background:
AND THAT
NOBODY SHOULD TEACH HIS SON GREEK. Our Rabbis taught: When the kings of the Hasmonean house fought one another, Hyrcanus
(Seleucid) was outside of Jerusalem and Aristobulus
(Pharisees) was on the inside. Each day those within the city would let down
denarim
in a pouch over the city wall and Jews of the Hyrkanos
faction would in return send up for them lambs for the daily communal
sacrifice. Hayah sham zakein echad she-hayah mabir bÕchachmot yeranit - There was within Jerusalem a certain old man who was
familiar with Greek wisdom, lÕaz lachem bÕchachmat yeronit - and he
communicated surreptitiously with the besiegers in the language of Greek wisdom
- amar lochen –
saying to them, ÒKal zeman
she-oskin ba-avodah ayn nimsorin bÕyodhem
- as long as those within the Jerusalem walls engage in the sacrificial
service, they will not be delivered into your hands.Ó On the morrow, they lowered the dinarim in a pouch, but the besiegers following the advice
of the old man and, seeking to prevent the service, sent them up a swine. When
the swine reached midway along the wall and stuck out its hooves into the wall,
Eretz Yisroel quaked over
an area of four hundred parsahs (1600 square
miles). At that time, they
declared, cursed be the man who shall raise pigs and cursed be the man who
shall teach his sons Greek wisdom.Ó
[This aggadah is repeated in Bava Kamma 82B
and Menachot 64b]
These events
related by the Talmud are historically verifiable. Chanukah was 167-165 BCE. Antiochus
outlaws Judaism, defiles The Temple. Matisyahu, Judah
HaMakabi, fight and win to recapture the Temple and
purify it. We rehearse the Chanukah miracle of lights because it is an eternal
reminder of the re-assertion of Jewish kedusha over Greek corruption.
In 76-67 BCE – Hyrcanus and Aristobulus great-grandnephews of
Judah HaMakabi, split the kingdom between, Seleucid
[Greek] faction, seeking to accommodate Hellenism, and Pharisees representing the purity of Jewish ritual and the
Temple. Aristobulus seizes Jerusalem and the Temple. Hyrcanus
besieges him.
What is the
deeper meaning of this story?
Nothing in the Talmud is there by accident, so the placement of this
prohibition against Greek wisdom in the dramatic end of Sotah, the selection of this
story of the traitor who betray Judaism from within Jerusalem by means of
secret Greek wisdom, the quaking of all of Eretz Yisroel, draw our attention to deeper currents. What are
the Rabbis warning us against? What
is the historical context? What do they mean by ÒGreek wisdomÓ? Rashi [1040-1105 CE] explains that Greek
wisdom refers to Òa set of cryptic expressions of gestures understood only by
the paladin (palace dwellers), not by common people.Ó [Menachot 64b] To
what could he be referring?
Pythagoras and the Neo-Pythagorean
revival in the Talmudic Era
Pythagoras is
the father of Greek philosophy. His influence over all of Western thought, even
into our twenty-first century, has remained strong in a way I will explain in a
moment. But first, who was Pythagoras beyond the inventor of the Pythagorean
Theorem we learned in middle school?
What did he believe? And why
is his philosophy so important?
HereÕs what we
know: Pythagoras (570-490 BCE) is
the son of Greek nobility. Around 550 he travels around the Middle East and Mediterranean
for twelve years. He travels to Egypt.
On his way back, he stops at Mt. Carmel to visit ElijahÕs cave for several
weeks. He then journeys to Babylon at a time that would have coincided with the
Jewish exile. Inspired the wisdom and mysticism of these other cultures, he
returns to Greece and founds a mystic-scientific-communal brotherhood preaching
asceticism, mystical number theory, the ÒdivineÓ tetractys, and the transmigration
of souls.
Core of Pythagoreanism
Reality is ONLY that which can be
measured and understood, delved by rational numbers. Our mastery of their
secrets enable humans to become Ògods.Ó
á Invents word ÒphilosophyÓ – that is, lover of
knowledge
á Inspires PlatoÕs distinction between being and becoming: the notion that the universe is fixed and constant.
á In turn, inspires AristotleÕs rational, orderly vision
of cosmology: the universe can be
arranged and ordered into a complete, coherent, unified system. It is governed
by logic. Reason is the highest attribute
of human nature. To be rational is also to be ethical and therefore, divine.
á Cosmology: The universe is ruled by rational numbers
á Preaches ascetic dietary practices
á The mystical Tetractys seems to be an idea of numbers Pythagoras melds
with the Jewish Tetragrammaton (Four Divine Letters
of HaShem]
á First ten numbers corresponded both to pagan gods and
to ethical and physical precepts
Pythagoras instituted a dominant theory or discipline of Arithmetika theologomena, virtually equivalent to the Jewish gematria, the system of calculating Hebrew
letters as numbers to discover further meaning, HaShemÕs
intention, in the Torah. The entwinement of the two concepts is intimate; maybe
Pythagoras imported it from his contact with Judaic mysteries in Israel and
Babylon. It should also be noted, though, that the word gematria has a Greek origin: it
is a cognate of Ôgamma + triaÕ and bears etymological relationship to geometry and grammar
á Transmigration of souls – gilgulim ~ Olam Habah
á Soul is to
be freed from the Òmuddy vesture of decayÓ of the body by ascetic practices and
secret wisdom. Matter is evil.
á Contemplation of the universe from reason –
rational thought - is the highest human activity.
Pythagoreans
also communicated via a system of secret signs, numerical codes, and hand
gestures
which they used while enforcing their famous discipline of
ascetic silence. One of these
signs, in fact the only one we know of for sure that survives to today, is the
same as the split-fingered gesture of the Kohanim, which Pythagoreans used
for ÒsalutÓ (a deep concept signifying cleanliness,
purity, ethical truth, and blessing or greeting). Maybe this is precisely the
secret code the traitorous old man used to betray Jerusalem to the Greek sympathizers.
So we can see
what the Talmud is concerned about. Pythagoreanism
was a seductive and powerful philosophy, a form of secular/pagan theology that
would have been, and was, attractive to Jews, with our love of learning and
wisdom and esoteric knowledge.
Indeed,
between the second century BCE and second century CE, precisely during the era
of the Talmud, Pythagoreanism enjoys a huge revival
in Roman culture, what we now call neo-Pythagoreanism. Cicero, the famous Roman senator, and
his good friend in the Senate, Nigidius Figulus, lead the revival around 50 BCE. Nigidius
writes a 27-volume treatise of mathematics, grammar, astronomy and magic that becomes
a classic, along with CiceroÕs work, for centuries.
In the first
century CE, the sect of neo-Pythagoreans construct a Pythagorean Temple
underground, at Porto Maggiore in Rome. It combines elements of paganism and
Christianity. It is the site of
secret sacrificial rites, necromancy, and is filled with images of the Greek
gods. At the same time, it has an
apse and nave, a new architectural form built with the Pythagorean Ôgolden
meanÕ but is meant to represent the cross, the same architecture we see in the
great cathedrals of the Christian Europe and even in the humblest wooden
Baptist churches today.
But the
connection is more than architectural.
With its notion of the perfectability of man, the
notion that matter is evil and corrupt from which reason needs to be freed, you
can see that this Pythagorean Greek chochma lays the groundwork for the flowering of Christian
theology soon thereafter.
At the same
time, the allure for Jews must have been great. Here for instance, is a vow pledged by
the Roman Neo-Pythagoreans which echoes the Tetragrammaton
(the four Hebrew letters of HaShem):
A Neo-Pythagorean Oath from the 1st
c CE
"By
that pure, holy, four lettered name on high,
nature's
eternal fountain and supply,
the
parent of all souls that living be,
by
him, with faith find oath, I swear to thee."
And what was
the essence of Pythagoreanism and neo-Pythagoreanism? It can be summed up simply, in ways of
thinking that we would find very comfortable as 21st century
moderns:
á
The universe is ruled by rational numbers and logic.
á
All that is known is only that which can be touched
and measured and calculated and observed.
á
Humans can become divine by application of reason.
Because there
are so many similarities to Jewish concepts, one could see how the Seleucid
Jews would find assimilation so attractive, and why Jewish thinkers and
students could be seduced, even from within the walls of Jerusalem itself.
Indeed, the Rambam, in Guide for the Perplexed, calls Aristotle half a prophet. But which
half? Why half? Rambam
says Aristotle fell short because he equated human nature with rationality
alone. AristotleÕs Ôthinking beingÕ strives to rule the world through
subjugation and calculation; Maimonides Òpraying beingÓ can be king of the
world by elevating it. ÒWhen
there's nothing higher than intellect, intellect has no guiding light.Ó
Greek wisdom, the secret Pythagorean
code, represented the hoof of the swine touching JerusalemÕs walls and its
concomitant betrayal and defeat of Talmudic Judaism. The smallest contamination
shakes the entire foundation of Israel itself.
Perpetual Chanukah in the West
All this would be just an interesting
historical exercise -- and somewhat repugnant because it is a favorite exercise
of secular historians to show this entwinement between Greek and Talmudic
thought in order to devalue TalmudÕs religious authority -- if it werenÕt for
the fact that, in clear purity of form, Pythagoreanism
still holds sway today.
Pythagoreanism is the fundamental constant across the history of Western culture. It
connects the Hellenic culture of 5th c BCE of Plato, Socrates and Aristotle with
Roman culture. It connects Roman
philosophy that dominated in the time of the Destruction of the Temple with Christianity
in the centuries soon to follow. Pythagoreanism represents a continuous tradition of the perfectability of humans and the basis of the universe and
everything in it as reducible to rational, deterministic, unified laws.
Greek
philosophy institutes a vision of the deities who created a clockwork universe
of perfection, instituting immutable, static laws of physics and nature. The gods
set it motion and let it run. This is a scientific cosmology that still holds
sway today in the common mind. It
keeps us from awakening from the great cybernetic delusion of our last century,
that we can create an artificial intelligence, mind, or neshama through the application
of computer codes and algorithms. It still governs most of what weÕre taught in
school and our still Newtonian-Pythagorean concept of the universe. But this
conception has nuanced, though absolutely critical, differences from Jewish
metaphysics.
Contrast Greek
philosophy to our Jewish cosmology of an unfolding universe. HaShem, whose Face is always receding and hidden, creates
the cosmos. (As opposed to the Christian concept, in which Word – Logos
– becomes flesh and utterly knowable and personal.) The Divine Attention of
HaKodesh Borechu continuously
sustains an unfolding universe. Even the method of Jewish hermeneutics –
how we argue and discourse to arrive at the truth – contrasts sharply
with the Greek. You need only compare a page of any conventional Western book
with a page of the Schottenstein Talmud to get the
idea. One signifies a simple, clear
stream of letters marching in lines across the page as the story proceeds in
orderly fashion from beginning to middle to end. Open any page of the Talmud, however,
and you are plunged into a hypertextual jumble: a noisy symposium capturing voices and
commentaries and commentaries on commentaries separated by centuries and
hundreds of miles and cultures. The choppy sea of Talmud exemplifies what Plato
scorned as chaotic, subjective ÒaesthetikaÓ and ÒrhetorikaÓ as opposed to his orderly Òlogos.Ó
And if we
trace the history of this contrast between Greek and Hebrew, between Seleucids
and Pharisees, between Pythagoreanism and the Talmud even
until today, we see there is ongoing violence
in the hyphen that Chazal anticipated. Indeed,
this gemara of the betrayal of Jerusalem by Greek
wisdom and the prohibition against teaching it are prophetic. The story of the
Temple sacrifice being befouled by a swine, the story of the shaking of the
walls of Jerusalem are warnings that reach back to Chanukah and forward to all
of Western philosophy, including postmodernism today.
The subtle but
fundamental incompatibility between these two philosophies leads to what I call
Òphilosophical violence in the Judaeo-Christian hyphen.Ó As the timeline appended to this paper
suggests, with the burning of the Talmud throughout Europe and the many trials Jews
have suffered under the rule of Christianity, including the Shoah, this violence is not just
philosophical. The twentieth century begins with work by Alfred North Whitehead
and Bertrand Russell, Principia Mathematica, ÒshowingÓ that all thought can be reduced
to mathematically rigorous logic. They also say ÒModern philosophy is nothing
more than a footnote to Plato.Ó
Later, in his History of Western Philosophy
(1945), Russell declares Pythagoras the greatest of all philosophers.
Interestingly, RussellÕs last act, literally, in his life, is meant to shake Eretz Yisroel. Though a pre-State supporter of Zion,
his final political statement, read the day after his death in 1970 in Cairo, condemns
IsraelÕs aggression against Egypt in 1967 and demands retreat to pre-1967
borders.
In the 1920s, Martin
Heidegger reinserts Pythagoreanism, an updating of
the Greco-Christian Being vs. Becoming
duality, into the heart of philosophy. Without going into his extraordinary
influence over the twentieth century, including my own study of literature in
the 1970s, suffice it to say that virtually every thinker and theorist since
has to grapple with Heidegger and has been influenced by him. However, two recent works of scholarship
have exposed the truth of the TalmudÕs prophesy in Sotah. Victor Farias, in Heidegger and Nazism (1987) and Emanuel Faye in Heidegger:
The Introduction of Nazism into Philosophy (2005) show how Heidegger, who
was an unapologetic and avowed Nazi, introduced Nazi violence into the scene of
contemporary Western philosophy. His chief heir and leader of the Yale school
of deconstruction, Paul DeMan, was exposed as having
been a Nazi collaborator and writer during WWII. The monumental French thinker Jacques
Derrida, himself an Algerian Jew, rose to DeManÕs
defense in a shameful chapter in the history of postmodern thought.
Reconciliation through ÒJewish
PhysicsÓ
But let me end
on a note of reconciliation. Realizing there is violence in the hyphen paves
the road to recognizing the dead end of Pythagoreanism
philosophy. The recent works by Farias and Faye
expose the link between Nazism and empty philosophies of materialism, constructivism,
deconstruction and moral relativism that has lain at the core of Western thinking
itself, philosophies that lead to mechanization and disregard for the sanctity
of all human existence. It is the
same Greek chochma
that lies in the heart of the traitor of Jerusalem and is the source of ongoing
Jewish assimilation to Western culture.
In our newfound
skepticism about the darkness at the heart of postmodernism, there is hope for
a new deepening. This is especially true because the philosophical turn has
been accompanied by a revolution in our scientific concept of how the universe
works. Together, the two revolutions hold promise for how Jewish thinking may
influence the future of Western civilization.
For a century,
our scientific understanding of the fundamental principle of the universe has
been grappling with what we can call ÒJewish Physics.Ó In calling it this, I am
echoing the notorious propaganda of Nazis in the 1930s, who called it ÒJew
Physics.Ó (See Klaus Hentschel
and Ann Hentschel, Physics and National
Socialism. Springer, 2011). This
revolution has been led by Jews, starting with Einstein at the Institute for
Advanced Studies at Princeton in the 1920s, and includes Niels
Bohr, Eugene Wigner, James Franck, Otto Stern, I.I. Rabi, Wolfgang Pauli,
Robert Hofstadter, Richard Feynmann, Murray
Gell-Mann, Sheldon Glashow, Steven Weisenberg, Jerome
Friedman, Martin Lewis Perl, Frederick Reines, David
Gross, Adam Riess, Saul Perlmutter,
Serge Haroche, and Francois Englert. These are just half of the Jewish
winners of the Nobel Prize for Physics in the last century, and a mere fraction
of the Jews who are busy in the field of quantum mechanics and theoretical physics.
Many of them fled Nazism to seek refuge – and freedom of inquiry –
in America
Quantum
mechanics has introduced a cosmological question that shakes our understanding
of the universe itself as merely deterministic and rational. Put simply, it
brings us to a crossroads of our understanding. Either the universe splits into an
infinite chaos of uncertain and inaccessible universes every time there is a
quantum event, and all sub-atomic events are connected by unproven superstrings
of 11 or some other number of dimensions;
-or –
There is a Universal Intelligence that turns
His face to every event in the cosmos and by His Attention, creates the reality
we inhabit. This subject is obviously too broad and deep and abstruse to do
justice to here today, but let me gesture at just one small tear in the parochet between Western
science and Jewish religion: the confirmation of the existence of the Higgs
Boson - the so-called ÒG-d ParticleÓ - and its measurement at the Large Hadron Collider
at CERN (France). Suffice it to say for now, science is confronted with the
introduction of metaphysics back into physics, this time ushering in an era of
what I hope and pray will be the reassertion of Jewish metaphysics into Western
cosmology.
-
David
Porush, Mountain View, CA
dporush@yahoo.com
5774
The Continuity of Pythagoreanism through Christianity and Postmodern
Philosophy
570-490 BCE -
Pythagoras
428-348 BCE – Plato: Father of philosophy, inspired by
Pythagoras
382-322 BCE
– Aristotle: says the
philosophy of Plato closely followed the teachings of the Pythagoreans
250-120 BCE –
Statue of Pythagoras erected in Athens then torn down because it was a
challenge to the State religion
Talmud coincides with Neopythagorean Revival
50 BCE – Nigidus and Cicero
(Roman Senator) lead Roman revival of Pythagoreanism,
50 CE – Shimon ben Gamliel:
ÒThere were a thousand
pupils in my father's house; five hundred studied Torah and five hundred
studied Greek wisdom.Ó
50 CE – Pythagorean Basilica
at Porto Maggiore (Rome), underground necropolis/temple mixes Pythagorean and
Christian elements: apse, nave, paganism, numerology, astrology, pantheon of
Greek gods. Shows connection between Pythagoras and Christian theology.
70 CE – Destruction of the Temple by Titus [Chorban]
60-120 CE – Nicomachus (Jerasa, Jordan) Theology of Arithmetic: Numbers are
foundation of all reality
90-168 CE – Ptolemy
The Almagest and Geographia and Tetrabiblios:
Mathematical models of the universe, Earth, and the means of predicting the
future; inspired by Pythagoras
100 CE – Nechunia ben Hakanah, Tanna, author of The Bahir, gilgulim, Olam Habaah, theodicy – early Kabbalah (?)
200 CE – Mishnah
redacted by Rabbi Yehudah
haNasi
250 CE – Golden
Verses of Pythagoras: ÒKnow the
numerical essence of the immortal gods and immortal men/How it pervades
everything and everything is ruled by it.Ó
1180 CE
– Rambam,
Guide for the Perplexed: Aristotle
was almost a prophet.
1249-1310 - Menachem Meiri, Bet HaBechira:
ÒGreek language, as we have described
in Megilla, is one of the richest languages, yet it is prohibited to study their wisdom since
it attracts the heart of men and destroys many of the foundations of religion.Ó
1240
– Pope Gregory, Paris orders burning of Talmud
1264
– Pope Clement IV orders burning of Talmud
1431
– Talmud banned by Church Synod of Basel
1492
– Spanish Inquisition
1553
– Pope Julius III orders Talmud burned
1592
– Pope Clement II prohibits Talmud study in any form
1910-1913
– Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell: Principia Mathematica ÒWestern philosophy
is nothing more than a series of footnotes to Plato.Ó Applies mathematics to
logic (symbolic logic) and thus all that can be known
1927
– Martin Heidegger: Being and Time (1927). Brings Greek
metaphysical thought into modern philosophy, coherence from Plato to Descartes.
1945
- Bertrand Russell, A History of Western Philosophy:
Pythagoras was the greatest of all Greek philosophers. Though a pre-State
supporter of Zion, his final political statement, read the day after his death
in 1970 Condemns IsraelÕs aggression against Egypt in 1967 and demands retreat
to pre-1967 borders.
1987, 2005
- Victor Farias,
Heidegger and Nazism and Emanuel Faye, Heidegger: The Introduction of Nazism into Philosophy