Prognostication in Medieval Jewish Law and Legal Thought
Date
2020
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
De Gruyter
YU Faculty Profile
Abstract
The three major codes of Jewish law composed during the medieval period, Mishneh Torah by Maimonides (d. 1204, in Egypt), Arba’ah Turim by Jacob ben Asher (d. ca. 1340, in Spain), and Shulḥan ‘Arukh by Joseph Karo (d. 1575, in Israel), all discuss the halakhic status of prognostication as it emerges from biblical verses and talmudic and rabbinic sources. Virtually all forms of prognostication are prohibited according to these highly authoritative authors, although there are differences in the specific texts which they cite to undergird their positions, and in the ways that the prohibitions themselves are formulated.
Description
Scholarly book chapter
Keywords
medieval Jewish philosophy, Medieval Jewish history, Jewish studies
Citation
Kanarfogel, E. (2020). Prognostication in Medieval Jewish Law and Legal Thought. In Matthias Heiduk, Klaus Herbers, Hans Christian Lehner (eds.) "Prognostication in the Medieval World: A Handbook, Volume 2". Berlin: De Gruyter, 944-947.