| | The Talmud and the Internet: A Journey Between Worlds |  | Author: Jonathan Rosen Publisher: Farrar, Straus & Giroux Category: Book
Buy Used: $2.52
Avg. Customer Rating: 20 reviews
Media: Unbound Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 112
ISBN: 0374700605 EAN: 9780374700607 ASIN: 0374700605
Publication Date: 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: GOOD CONDITION, COVERS HAVE SOME MINOR WEAR,NO WRITINGS. (STOCK#: NOENN-0*E1)
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| Customer Reviews: Read 15 more reviews...
Everything is hyperlinked May 20, 2008 A short, pleasing essay on the different strands that inform our lives, which we weave into our consciousness. Rosen speaks often of personal things, but stays more on the philosophical level in his overall writing. The reader comes away knowing more about his analytical tendencies than his own history.
I agree with the author that the Internet is a powerful metaphor for the interconnectedness of life. The Talmud, in its turn, may indeed be the original "hyperlinked" document, and I smile in wonder at the thought of trying to bring the full complexity of life to a sheaf of written pages, as (I hear) the Talmud aspires to do. In these days, can we all create our own Talmuds from the Internet, interconnected references to explain our lives? But if they are all individual, then what culture remains in common? Rosen addresses these questions briefly and with grace.
More Talmud please. February 22, 2007 Mr. Rosen's book has little to do with the internet and only a bit more to do with the talmud, but is an excellent discussion of his own philosophy. I found his ideas interesting and often provocative. It would be a better book if Rosen had drawn more from the vast treasure of stories, ideas, arguments and discussions from the talmud and less on his personal life.
a Talmud for the rest of us January 4, 2005 No, Rosen is not really trying to explain the Talmud to us Gentiles, and he would only deserve a grade of "C+" if this were his meager attempt to demonstrate some heuristic connection between the Talmud and the Internet. Fortunately, neither is the case here. Rosen is grappling with the same angst, sadness, and threatening unsettledness that all of us encounter with that first realization of finitude when confronted with the loss of a close friend or family member. His descriptions of these first-time feelings and fears are vivid and grounded in real life everyday people, places, and things. The outside possibility of lost hope in all our lives is material enough for a genuine horror story. Fortunately, the book is short, the reading is easy, and the ending is worth waiting for. Rosen makes magnificent use of the Talmud and the Internet to weave a tale that can't help but touch the most hardened heart - even a techno-challenged Gentile like myself!
A thought provoking essay- memoir December 15, 2004 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This is a very thought -provoking essay-memoir. Rosen connects Talmud and Internet as ways of reading hypertext, of skipping back and forth, of placing commentary against commentary, of finding diverse worlds in the text. This comparison on one level works while on a deeper one does not. The Internet is easy and children can manage to work on it. Talmudic Study is extremely difficult, tremendously challenging intellectually, requires a very practiced and sharp mind. I learn in a Daf Yomi shiur in which we study each day one page of the Talmudic text. I find tremendous difficulty in even understanding what is going on, much less contributing meaningfully to the discussion. I use the Internet all the time, without much difficulty. I read articles on all kinds of subjects and find understanding no great problem. Rosen uses his comparison as many Amazon reviewers pointed out to help him get into and tell his own family story. He does this in a moving and interesting way. On this level the book truly works. Also his interest in Judaism and knowledge of it is considerable .The problem is he taking the Internet as model tends to use one historical stage of Jewish existence the stage of exile and wandering as Ideal. This is of course in total contradiction with the Tradition itself, whose ideal is not scattering but rather ingathering. Return to Israel, Ingathering, fulfilling the Biblical Covenant are the Ideals Jews held through the centuries and those given in the Tradition. Rosen's private definition of Jewish being everywhere and nowhere at once connects with other such historical definitions such as Neitzsche's about Jews being ' the first Europeans'. But it does not really speak to the Tradition. Another point about the Internet. The Internet enables everyone in the world to say anything they want to say. This is in one sense a miracle and a great realization of human dreams. On the other hand it enables the worst elements - the Evil, the Haters, the Jihadists, Nazis,- all those who diminish our Humanity to have their say. The Talmud on the other hand is a religious text sanctified in its learning. The moral difference between the two kinds of text and activity is night and day. And here I should make the point that the Internet too can and is used for noble purposes. However so far as I know it is not primarily a sacred text. Again this is a thought - provoking and interesting work. Very highly recommended.
Void and Unformed April 27, 2004 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
A tip of the old hat to Keith Leverberg who expressed my thoughts almost exactly with his title, although I judge Rosen a little less harshly. This book is carelessly constructed, with such screamers as, at page 130, "The Talmud that my wife and I study from together belonged to her grandfather, who immigrated to Palestine, thanks to the Balfour Declaration, in 1924, was wounded in the 1948 War of Independence and devoted the rest of his life to the study of Talmud." Or something like that. Read it with a grain of salt, and buy it at your peril.
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