Judaism and the Shape of Power Examining the censorship of philosophical discourse in the medieval university from the perspective of Jewish-Christian relations
Judaism and the Shape of Power Examining the censorship of philosophical discourse in the medieval university from the perspective of Jewish-Christian relations
Abstract
The development of the medieval university, particularly in Paris, is inextricable from
the surrounding Jewish-Christian relationships. This is because disputation, in all its forms,
played a definitive role in shaping the investigational, educational, and evaluational functions
of the university; and its development, too, is inextricably linked to the Jewish-Christian
polemical tradition. Through its interactions with papal and monarchical authorities, the
University of Paris, as the locus of medieval Latin intellectual culture, acted as the medium in
which the consolidation of a papal-royal-academic censorial power unfolded. The narrative
surrounding the development of the university, and the intellectual cultural of the High
Middle Ages as a whole, has often been discussed from the perspective of Christian-Muslim
interaction. This paper offers an alternative reading of this history by considering the
development of the University of Paris from a perspective of Jewish-Christian relations. An
examination of the events leading up to the Trial of the Talmud in Paris in 1240 from this
vantage point offers a fresh perspective on the development of philosophical inquiry in the
Latin west during the subsequent centuries.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
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Date
2024-04-29Author
Zozaya, Dustin
Keywords
Ancient and Medieval Philosophy and Classical Philology, Master thesis
Publication type
H2
Language
eng