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Amos Funkenstein

Amos Funkenstein
Born9 March 1937 Edit this on Wikidata
Jaffa Edit this on Wikidata
Died1995 Edit this on Wikidata (aged 57–58)
OccupationPhilosopher, university teacher Edit this on Wikidata
Awards


Amos Funkenstein (1937-1995) was an American-Jewish historian of Jewish history.[1] Funkenstein's work encompassed several disciplines.[2]

Biography

Funkenstein was born into an Orthodox family in pre-state Israel and was childhood friends with Adin Steinsaltz.[1] Funkenstein declared his atheism as a child in religious school in Jerusalem.[3] Funkenstein, like Baruch Spinoza, was considered heretical.[4][3][5]

In 1967, he started his career as a history professor at UCLA, where David Biale was among his graduate students and teaching assistants,[1] and later taught at Tel Aviv University, Stanford and UC Berkeley.[6] Biale recalled that Funkenstein favored originality, preferring to be "bold and wrong" than "boring and right."[7]

Funkenstein wrote 7 books in English, German, Hebrew and French, and over 50 articles, and was said to have a photographic memory, reciting lengthy passages memorized in Greek and Latin from books he had long ago read. He died of lung cancer in November 1995 at age 58, survived by his wife Esti and two children, Jakob and Daniela.[1]

Publications

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Renaissance man Amos Funkenstein dies at age 58". J. 1995-11-17. Retrieved 2023-11-05.
  2. ^ Westman, Robert S.; Biale, David, eds. (2008). Thinking Impossibilities: The Intellectual Legacy of Amos Funkenstein. University of Toronto Press. doi:10.3138/9781442689404. ISBN 978-0-8020-9795-8. JSTOR 10.3138/9781442689404.
  3. ^ a b Biale, David (1999). "The Last German-Jewish Philosopher: Notes Toward an Intellectual Biography of Amos Funkenstein". Jewish Social Studies. 6 (1): 1–5. doi:10.2979/JSS.1999.6.1.1. ISSN 1527-2028. S2CID 162285846.
  4. ^ "The Life of Amos Funkenstein - Tablet Magazine".
  5. ^ Moyn, Samuel (2003). "Amos Funkenstein on the Theological Origins of Historicism". Journal of the History of Ideas. 64 (4): 639–657. doi:10.2307/3654225. ISSN 1086-3222. JSTOR 3654225.
  6. ^ "Amos Funkenstein; Jewish History Scholar". Los Angeles Times. 1995-11-14. Retrieved 2023-11-05.
  7. ^ Biale (2023-09-26). "My Path in Jewish Studies: Memoirs of a Counter-Historian". Jewish Review of Books. Retrieved 2024-09-09.