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MANUEL JOEL (1826–189o)

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Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 430 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MANUEL JOEL (1826–189o)  , Jewish philosopher and preacher . After teaching for several years at the Breslau rabbinical semi-nary, founded by Z . Frankel, he became the successor of Abraham Geiger in the rabbinate of Breslau . He made important contributions to the
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history of the school of Aqiba (q.v.) as well as to the history of Jewish philosophy, his essays on
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Ibn Gabirol and
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Maimonides being of permanent worth . But his most influential
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work was connected with the relations between Jewish philosophy and the
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medieval
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scholasticism . He showed how Albertus Magnus derived some of his ideas from Maimonides and how Spinoza was indebted to the same writer, as well as to Hasdai Crescas . These essays were collected in two volumes of Beitrdge zur Geschichte der Philosophic (1876)3 while another two volumes of Blicke in die Religionsgeschichte (188o–1883) threw much
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light on the development of religious thought in the early centuries of the Christian era . Equally renowned were Joel's pulpit addresses . Though he was no orator, his
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appeal to the reason was effective, and in their published form his three volumes of Predigten (issued posthumously) have found many readers . (I .

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