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Alexander Altmann (April 16, 1906 – June 6, 1987) was an Orthodox Jewish scholar and rabbi born in Kassa, Austria-Hungary, today Košice, Slovakia. He emigrated to England in 1938 and later settled in the United States, working productively for a decade and a half as a professor within the Philosophy Department at Brandeis University. He is best known for his studies of the thought of Moses Mendelssohn, and was indeed the leading Mendelssohn scholar since the time of Mendelssohn himself (Arkush 1989). He also made important contributions to the study of Jewish mysticism, and for a large part of his career he was the only scholar in the United States working on this subject in a purely academic setting (Fine 1989). Among the many Brandeis students whose work he supervised in this area were Elliot Wolfson, Arthur Green, Heidi Ravven, Lawrence Fine, and Daniel Matt. [edit] BiographyAlexander Altmann was the son of the Chief Rabbi of Trier, one of the oldest Jewish communities in Germany. Altmann received his Ph.D. in philosophy from the University of Berlin in 1931, writing his dissertation on the philosophy of Max Scheler, and was ordained rabbi by the Hildesheimer Rabbinical Seminary of Berlin in the same year. From 1931 to 1938 he served as rabbi in Berlin and professor of Jewish philosophy at the Seminary. After fleeing Nazi Germany in 1938, Altmann served as communal rabbi in Manchester, England from 1938 to 1959. There, in addition to his responsibilities as a community leader, he continued to independently pursue his scholarly studies, publishing in 1946 a translation and commentary of Saadia's Beliefs and Opinions. His scholarly activities ultimately led him to found and direct the Institute of Jewish Studies from 1953 to 1958, which at the time was an independent institution. He there edited the Journal of Jewish Studies and Scripta Judaica and authored his work on Isaac Israeli. After securing the future of the Institute of Jewish Studies by bringing it under the auspices of the University College London, in 1959 he left England to join the faculty of Brandeis University in Waltham, MA. Aged 53 at this time and the author of almost 100 publications, the Brandeis appointment was for Altmann his first university position (Mendes-Flohr 1998). He served at Brandeis as the Philip W. Lown Professor of Jewish Philosophy and History of Ideas beginning in 1959 and until his promotion to Professor Emeritus and subsequent retirement in 1976. According to Ivry (1989), Altmann was also a major force in acquiring for Brandeis the complete Vatican Hebraica collection on microfilm. From 1976 to 1978 he was a visiting professor at Harvard and at Hebrew University, and from 1978 until his death he was an Associate at the Harvard University Center for Jewish Studies. During his entire residence in the Boston area (Newton Centre, to be precise), he always made his home a meeting place for Jewish scholars and students (Ivry 1998), often hosting them for Sabbath meals. Altmann's thirst for new knowledge never abated, even in his later years. Fine (1989) tells of attending a class on Coptic language given at Brandeis University in the early seventies, only to find there—as a fellow student—the 65-year-old Alexander Altmann, eager to acquire a new skill. [edit] WorksIn his long academic career, Altmann produced a number of important works in German, English, and Hebrew, some of which are listed below. For a brief period of time in his early career he involved himself with the construction of a Jewish theology, but this work was left unfinished, and his primary interests turned to medieval Jewish philosophy and mysticism, and particularly the work of the iconoclastic Jewish philosopher Moses Mendelssohn. Among his goals in undertaking his work on Mendelssohn were the restoration to this important Jewish figure his rightful recognition as an original philosopher and profound reasoner, not just a popularizer of Enlightenment thought (Arkush 1989). His work on Isaac Israeli, the first medieval Jewish philosopher, likewise rescued this thinker from undeserved obscurity (Ivry 1989). In his Maimonides on the Intellect and the Scope of Metaphysics (1986) he differed with Shlomo Pines' 1979 interpretation of Maimonides as a philosophical skeptic, arguing that Maimonides saw genuine value in the philosophical enterprise, and believed it could yield genuine truths (Ivry 1989). A complete bibliography of his nearly 250 published works is presented in Altman (1998). Some of the most popular are listed below:
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See also: Altmann Categories: 20th-century rabbis | Hungarian Orthodox rabbis | British Orthodox rabbis | American Orthodox rabbis | Jewish American writers | Harvard University faculty | Brandeis University faculty | Hungarian expatriates in Germany | German Jews | British people of Hungarian descent | Austro-Hungarian Empire immigrants to the United Kingdom | British Jews | Austro-Hungarian Empire immigrants to the United States | Hungarian-American Jews | Hungarians of German descent | People from Košice | 1906 births | 1987 deaths |
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