The Undivided Heart: Law, Morality, Human Nature, and Ethical Theory in Ancient Israel and Second Temple Judaism
The Undivided Heart presents a history of legal and moral thought in Jewish civilization from the earliest times until 200 CE. It discusses Israelite wisdom literature, biblical law collections, the prophets, works of the Hellenic Jewish Diaspora, the apocrypha, apocalypses, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the Mishnah, and it compares the moral teaching of the Pharisees/tannaim, the Essenes, and Jesus of Nazareth. Among the book's important insights is that ancient Israel experienced a fundamental moral change, from people esteeming qualities and conduct having competitive value to people esteeming qualities and conduct having cooperative value. These newly esteemed qualities and conduct were, moreover, not originally justified as being commanded by God but as promoting the nation's well-being. Another important insight concerns Jeremiah's belief that human beings would not be righteous until given a "single heart." Although Jeremiah is typically understood as envisioning the end of free will, this book argues that Jeremiah was actually envisioning the integration of human desires and emotions, and that a "single heart" is better translated an "undivided heart." The notion of an undivided and a divided heart was used throughout the Second Temple period to explain, respectively, moral rectitude and moral failure.
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The Undivided Heart: Law, Morality, Human Nature, and Ethical Theory in Ancient Israel and Second Temple Judaism
The Undivided Heart presents a history of legal and moral thought in Jewish civilization from the earliest times until 200 CE. It discusses Israelite wisdom literature, biblical law collections, the prophets, works of the Hellenic Jewish Diaspora, the apocrypha, apocalypses, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the Mishnah, and it compares the moral teaching of the Pharisees/tannaim, the Essenes, and Jesus of Nazareth. Among the book's important insights is that ancient Israel experienced a fundamental moral change, from people esteeming qualities and conduct having competitive value to people esteeming qualities and conduct having cooperative value. These newly esteemed qualities and conduct were, moreover, not originally justified as being commanded by God but as promoting the nation's well-being. Another important insight concerns Jeremiah's belief that human beings would not be righteous until given a "single heart." Although Jeremiah is typically understood as envisioning the end of free will, this book argues that Jeremiah was actually envisioning the integration of human desires and emotions, and that a "single heart" is better translated an "undivided heart." The notion of an undivided and a divided heart was used throughout the Second Temple period to explain, respectively, moral rectitude and moral failure.
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The Undivided Heart: Law, Morality, Human Nature, and Ethical Theory in Ancient Israel and Second Temple Judaism

The Undivided Heart: Law, Morality, Human Nature, and Ethical Theory in Ancient Israel and Second Temple Judaism

by Zachary Alan Starr
The Undivided Heart: Law, Morality, Human Nature, and Ethical Theory in Ancient Israel and Second Temple Judaism

The Undivided Heart: Law, Morality, Human Nature, and Ethical Theory in Ancient Israel and Second Temple Judaism

by Zachary Alan Starr

Paperback

$48.00 
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Overview

The Undivided Heart presents a history of legal and moral thought in Jewish civilization from the earliest times until 200 CE. It discusses Israelite wisdom literature, biblical law collections, the prophets, works of the Hellenic Jewish Diaspora, the apocrypha, apocalypses, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the Mishnah, and it compares the moral teaching of the Pharisees/tannaim, the Essenes, and Jesus of Nazareth. Among the book's important insights is that ancient Israel experienced a fundamental moral change, from people esteeming qualities and conduct having competitive value to people esteeming qualities and conduct having cooperative value. These newly esteemed qualities and conduct were, moreover, not originally justified as being commanded by God but as promoting the nation's well-being. Another important insight concerns Jeremiah's belief that human beings would not be righteous until given a "single heart." Although Jeremiah is typically understood as envisioning the end of free will, this book argues that Jeremiah was actually envisioning the integration of human desires and emotions, and that a "single heart" is better translated an "undivided heart." The notion of an undivided and a divided heart was used throughout the Second Temple period to explain, respectively, moral rectitude and moral failure.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798385244225
Publisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers
Publication date: 07/31/2025
Pages: 414
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.85(d)

About the Author

Zachary Alan Starr is the author of Toward a History of Jewish Thought: The Soul, Resurrection and the Afterlife (2020) and Associate Professor of Philosophy and Jewish Thought at the State University of New York, Suffolk. He studied philosophy, religion, Jewish thought, and the history of ideas at Colgate University, the Hebrew University, Brandeis University, the University of Pennsylvania, and the Reconstructionist Rabbinical College. Starr also holds a law degree from Hofstra University School of Law.
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