
A Jewish Philosophy of Man (E4): Judaism’s View of Man as a Lonely Being
A Lecture Series by Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik
Lecture 4: Delivered December 18, 1958
Judaism rejects the Classical view of Man as a universal, as a mere representative of the whole, but it also rejects the modern individualistic view. The Jewish view should be reconstructed from halakhic sources, from rules and laws which are uniquely Jewish, and not from medieval Jewish philosophical sources which too often fell under the influence of Aristotle and do not reflect a genuinely Jewish view. Judaism claims that Man is a lonely, solitary, singular being. This is not the same as the modern individualistic view which, although it prioritizes the individual over the community, sees all individuals as identical, interchangeable, and replaceable. This experience of separateness and estrangement, says the Jewish view, divides Man both from the rest of Creation in general and also from fellow individuals. This loneliness, though it remains a source of distress, is not a destructive emotion but rather an ennobling experience, a source of Man’s greatness and dignity. This singularity of Man is the meaning of Man’s being created in God’s image, for it reflects God’s singularity and loneliness. This loneliness is the heart of Jewish prayer, which emphasizes the petition over the hymn, distress over comfort. Judaism opposes the family pew in order to make prayer a solitary experience. Too much emphasis on peace of mind, comfort and success shuts out God. The essence of human loneliness is an inwardness that cannot be observed by the outsider, and cannot be fully communicated in words. Man has a depth existence, not just a surface existence. All other objects in the world have only a surface existence. There is more to Man than his works and his surface accomplishments. But Man also has a surface existence. These two sides of Man are reflected in contradictions between the first two chapters of Genesis regarding the Creation story. The incommunicable side of Man is called numinous Adam, and the relatable side is called kerygmatic Adam.
Jump to:
00:01:15 Two modern theories of man’s relationship to the community
00:13:38 Reconstructing a genuinely Jewish view from the Halakhah
00:16:46 Man as a lonely being
00:23:23 Man’s loneliness and uniqueness reflecting God’s loneliness and uniqueness
00:44:48 Loneliness and Jewish prayer
01:10:35 Audience questions and responses
01:17:46 The definition of loneliness as having a depth-existence
01:50:26 Man’s dualism derived from the first two chapters of Genesis
Access lecture summaries and course materials at www.TraditionOnline.org/JPM
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