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Topic: Shalom Carmy


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In the News (Sun 27 Dec 09)

  
  Shalom - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Shalom (שלום) is a Hebrew language word meaning peace.
The word is often used as a shortened form of the greeting Shalom Aleichem.
Shalom is also common in Hebrew as a (usually male) given name or a surname.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Shalom   (256 words)

  
 AJHistory by Menachem Butler: Yahrzeit Shiur for Rav Kook   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Carmy began by noting that, contrary to what many incorrectly think, Rav Kook was a great Halakhist and Talmudist, in addition to his many other areas of interest.
Carmy's talk was based on R. Moshe Zvi Neriah's notes from a gemara shiur delivered by Rav Kook in 1934 - a year before the latter's death.
Carmy provided a brief overview of some of the political milieu that Rav Kook found himself in during that time, thus properly contextualizing his later comments.
ajhistory.blogspot.com /2005/09/yahrzeit-shiur-for-rav-kook.html   (454 words)

  
 Mail-Jewish Volume 13 Number 22
Lipovitz [Shalom Carmy] Sim Shalom or Shalom Rav [D.M.Wildman] Techinas [Nathan Friedman] Water Meters on Shabbat [Stephen Phillips] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Stephen Phillips Date: Fri, 20 May 1994 09:23:58 -0400 Subject: Re: Address in Orthodox Couples > Another style I noticed was one where roles are used.
If we accept that Sim Shalom always goes with Shacharit and Shalom Rav always goes with Ma'ariv, then Mechael's rule does explain the usual Ashkenazi custom that it is said with Mincha only when correlated with Birkat Cohanim, as on a fast day.
With the same assumptions about Shacharit and Ma'ariv, the Ashkenazi-Yerushalmi practice could be explained by correlating Sim Shalom with Kriyat Hatorah [reading of the Torah], a relationship that is supported by the emphasis on Torah present in Sim Shalom but absent in Shalom Rav.
www.ottmall.com /mj_ht_arch/v13/mj_v13i22.html   (1920 words)

  
 YudelLine 2.1: Debating Shalom Carmy
Shalom Carmy was contacted by a former student who confessed that he lost his belief long ago and has become a confirmed Orthoprax Jew.
One serious problem lies in the of R' Carmy's paper (confession: I have only skimmed it), which assumes that the culture of Modern Orthodoxy (aka Teaneck) is taken for granted.
He is not even considering other varieties of Orthodoxy, let alone other modes of Jewish or religious experience; Carmy assumes that his teachers have all the answers, rather than suggesting, pace R' Brill, that the drop-out emulate the Vilna Gaon and become a vegetarian.
www.shmoozenet.com /yudel/mtarchives/000134.html   (288 words)

  
 RCA Names Rabbi Shalom Carmy Editor of TRADITION - The Commentator - News   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Particularly over the last ten years, Rabbi Carmy's work for TRADITION has dovetailed with the journal's motto, "A Journal of Orthodox Jewish Thought." His work often synthesizes Western philosophy with the writings of leading Jewish philosophers of the 20th century, especially Rabbis Joseph B. Soloveitchik and Abraham Isaac Kook.
On Rabbi Carmy's ascent into the editorial position, Rabbi Shmidman noted that his "unique blend of careful and creative scholarship, masterful literary style, and judicious editorial skills" will serve the journal well in the years to come.
Rabbi Carmy credited administrators at the RCA and Yeshiva with allowing him the flexibility to negotiate his responsibilities at the respective institutions.
www.yucommentator.com /media/paper652/news/2004/11/16/News/Rca-Names.Rabbi.Shalom.Carmy.Editor.Of.Tradition-798775.shtml   (726 words)

  
 carmy_hespeid_for_wanefsky
Rabbi Carmy is an Assistant Professor at Yeshiva University
Note: This is a revised and expanded version of the eulogy delivered at the Yeshiva University Beit Midrash on 25 Iyyar, 5760, which Rabbi Carmy requested be brought to the attention of mehankhim.
If this attempt at bringing him to life is at all successful, it may have educational value for teachers and students who did not have the privilege of knowing him.
www.riets.edu /riets/idata/torah_riets/articles.asp?ID=15   (1736 words)

  
 Yeshiva University Commentator -- Volume 64 Issue 1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Professors Louis Feldman, Shalom Carmy, and Frank Felsenstein each discussed their recent works with students, faculty, deans, and university President Dr. Norman Lamm.
Rabbi Carmy made special mention of the experiential element of the work, specifically his family's suffering in the Holocaust.
In an emotional tribute, Rabbi Carmy described his love for teaching at Yeshiva University and the impact his students have continually had on his scholarship.
yuweb.addr.com /v64i1/features/booksigning.shtml   (336 words)

  
 The Lookstein Center
This interview with Rabbi Shalom Carmy appeared in Hamevaser Vol.
Shalom Carmy: Are we modern people, or modern Orthodox Jews, really more sensitive to psychological and moral complexities?
Yet explosion of verbiage, like monetary inflation, does not inevitably make one spiritually richer; it may simply cheapen the currency.
www.lookstein.org /articles/imitate_ramban.htm   (1821 words)

  
 Shalom Carmy   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Shalom Dov Baer Schneersohn - With Light and Might 2 Chassidic Discourses - 0826605338
This artikel Shalom_Carmy is licensed under the GNU free Documentation License.
This artikel Mishnah is licensed under the GNU free Documentation License.
www.isbnbookssearch.com /875863_shalom-carmy_0765760509jewishperspectivesontheexperienceofsufferingromanticisminamericanliterature.html   (1681 words)

  
 Resources | ATID
The broad scope of Jewish literature and Western thought are surveyed in the quest for the "truth that edifies." Like his teachers, and unlike many spokesmen for modern Orthodox culture, his religious orientation leads him to favor non-Jewish thinkers committed to traditional religious belief, writers like Kierkegaard, Newman, and Eliot.
These essays--just a small sample of Rabbi Carmy's writings--reveal a thinker who refuses to bifurcate between his intellectual analysis and his personal religious commitments.
The excitement of learning, the shudder of insight, the awareness of commitment to my students, and the inspiration I draw from them (including those whose path is not always smooth)--these driving feelings often seem palpable: as if the Torah were nourishment, and its transmission electric.
www.atid.org /resources/carmy.asp   (826 words)

  
 Re: Halakah & form criticism   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
His essay is a bit difficult to parse so there are two accompanying articles by Rabbi Shalom Carmy and Rabbi Shnayer Leiman that explain and critique Rabbi Breuer's presentation.
Rabbis Carmy and Leiman critique Rabbi Breuer on a few points, but mostly on his overly acceptive view of literary criticism.
These are three thought-provoking articles in what is overall a very important book on academic scholarship and the traditional Jew.
www.utj.org /Discussion/_disc/0000000c.htm   (328 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Shalom (and#1513;and#1500;and#1493;and#1501;) is a Hebrew language word meaning peace.
* Shalom is also common in Hebrew as a (usually male) given name or a surname.
I feel like composing a poem, song, play or epic tragedy from the point of view of a torn hymen, with perhaps interludes and interjections from the woman who had to bear the atrocity, climaxing in actual justifiable:
www.eliteskills.com /blog/DaemAeon   (3358 words)

  
 Who Speaks for Torah - And How?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Yes, there is some kind of halakhic source that says man ought to imitate the moral attributes of his Creator.
But it's "only" darkhe shalom and we don't want to look like Reform universalists.
The ignorant, assimilated Reform Jew, with a passing acquaintance with the assimilated Buber, is revolted.
www.wzo.org.il /en/resources/view.asp?id=1440&subject=186   (5793 words)

  
 Avodah V7 #92
On Thu, Aug 23, 2001 at 10:24:28AM -0400, Shalom Carmy wrote: : Whether physics requires causality or not does not determine whether other : disciplines, such as psychology, biology and last but certainly not least, : Halakha, require the idea of causality...
In the past, I suggested that the parallel in the pasuk: yotzeir or, uvorei choshech oseh shalom, uvorei es hara...
Since there are a number of places, such as makas choshech, in which choshech is treated as a beryah, not an absence, I chouldn't make that strong of a case for it.
www.aishdas.org /avodah/vol07/v07n092.shtml   (4510 words)

  
 FT June/July 2000: His Master's Voice
For such a reader there is no alternative to picking up Rabbi Soloveitchik’s books and experiencing his mind and spirit first—hand.
Shalom Carmy teaches Philosophy and Jewish Studies at Yeshiva University and is editor of Tradition: A Journal of Orthodox Thought, published by the Rabbinical Council of America.
This site is part of the Telling the Truth Project.
www.leaderu.com /ftissues/ft0006/reviews/carmy.html   (1633 words)

  
 Publications | Philosophy
Encompassing a tour of topics in the philosophies of science and religion, and a compelling argument for the centrality of the personal in Torah life, this pamphlet provides a sophisticated response to central questions in contemporary Jewish education.
Rabbi Shalom Carmy teaches Jewish Studies and philosophy at Yeshiva University and is Consulting Editor of Tradition.
Rabbi Carmy is an editor of the series MeOtzar HoRav: Selected writings of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, for which he recently prepared the Rav’s Worship of the Heart: Essays on Jewish Prayer.
www.atid.org /publications/carmy.asp   (221 words)

  
 Shalom Carmy
Shalom Sabar - Ketubbah : The Art of the Jewish Marriage Contract - 0847822931
name (Shalom Carmy) - it might be a namesake!
Shalom Carmy (Ed.) Modern Scholarship in the Study of Torah: Contributions and Limitations Jason Aronson, Inc.
isbnbookssearch.com /875863_shalom-carmy_0765760509jewishperspective...   (1681 words)

  
 Program in Jewish Law and Interdisciplinary Studies - University Faculty   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Shalom Carmy, Assistant Professor of Bible at Yeshiva University, holds a B.A. and M.S. from Yeshiva University and rabbinic ordination from Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary.
Professor Carmy is an expert on the interface between halakha and philosophy, biblical thought, modern Jewish thought (with an emphasis on Rabbis Soloveitchik and Kook), and Religious Zionism.
His most recent books include Worship of the Heart, Rabbi Soloveitchik's posthumous volume on prayer, The Religious Thought of Hasidism, Jewish Perspectives on the Experience of Suffering, and Modern Scholarship in the Study of Torah.
www.cardozo.yu.edu /jlis/fa_univ.html   (1037 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Description: The Name of God has received untold amounts of interest and awe since ancient times, but the oral and written forms in which it is expressed continue to evolve.
These changes have led to the point where one can question whether Jews actually share a common designation for the one God they all worship.
Aspects of Halachic Philosophy of Prayer, Rabbi Shalom J. Carmy
www.edah.org /backend/coldfusion/search/bycat.cfm?id=23   (688 words)

  
 Rabbinical Council of America (RCA) - Policies & Positions   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
A new editor, Rabbi Shalom Carmy, has assumed stewardship of the Journal, with a view to expanding its reach and depth.
Rabbi Carmy is a highly respected and admired Torah scholar, intellectual, writer, and teacher, dealing with the full spectrum of issues confronting the thinking Jew.
Under his leadership, new sections and features will be added, a revised Executive Committee will function, and new editorial policies as well as personnel have been put in place over the last several months.
www.rabbis.org /news/020405a.cfm   (245 words)

  
 Mail-Jewish Volume 14 Number 53
Harry ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Shalom Carmy Date: Wed, 27 Jul 1994 00:53:22 -0400 Subject: Begin the Talmud teacher "Who is a hero?
He who makes his foe his friend" is found in Avot d'Rabbi Nathan (Version A) ch.
Chaim ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Shalom Carmy Date: Wed, 27 Jul 1994 01:11:37 -0400 Subject: Parentheses in Rema and Yerushalmi Kodashim 1.
www.ottmall.com /mj_ht_arch/v14/mj_v14i53.html   (1726 words)

  
 Orthodoxy is Reticence
Shalom Carmy teaches Philosophy and Jewish Studies at Yeshiva University, where he is Chair of Jewish Studies Division of Yeshiva College.
Eugene Korn suggests that "Confrontation" should not be read as a halakhic responsum because it is written in English.
See Meir Soloveichik, "The Virtue of Hate" (First Things, February 2003) and S. Carmy, "Taking Forgiveness Seriously" (First Things, April 2003).
www.bc.edu /research/cjl/meta-elements/texts/center/conferences/soloveitchik/sol_carmy.htm   (1988 words)

  
 Maimonides Heritage Center   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
A student of the late Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik and a veteran teacher of Philosophy, Bible, and Jewish thought at Yeshiva University, he has published many essays on these subjects.
Rabbi Carmy is the editor of Modern Scholarship in the Study of Torah: Contributions and Limitations (Jason Aronson Inc., 1996).
David Shatz is Professor of Philosophy at Yeshiva University,co-editor of three books including Contemporary Philosophy of Religion, and author of over two dozen articles and reviews on both general and Jewish philosophy.
www.maimonidesheritagecenter.org /Commemoration.asp   (530 words)

  
 Search Results   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
'Paradox, Paradigm, and the Birth of Inwardness; On Rav Kook and the Akeda', Rabbi Shalom J. Carmy
Yehiel Winberg's Lecture on Academic Jewish Scholorship, Rabbi Shalom J. Carmy
Aspects of Relation of Ethical Philosophy and Religion, Rabbi Shalom J. Carmy
www.edah.org /backend/coldfusion/search/otherworks.cfm?authorid=171   (360 words)

  
 First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life: I-It? I-Thou?(Correspondence)(Letter to the Editor)@ ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life; 5/1/2005; Carmy, Shalom
For almost thirty-five years, it has been my privilege to be involved in what Shalom Carmy ("Orthodoxy and Reticence," February) disparagingly calls "official dialogues" between Catholics and Jews.
Because of Rav Soloveitchik's dictum, we have avoided calling these encounters "dialogues," using instead the term "ongoing consultations." Rabbi Carmy's line of reasoning does not reflect an adequate understanding of the encounters in which I have taken part.
www.highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1G1:132051845&refid=holomed_1   (220 words)

  
 Genesis: Treating God As A Character
All we know is that God chose to relate Himself to this universe, and that the Torah is not embarrassed to make available to us the story of His involvement, cloaked in humility, as it were, in the affairs of the world He created, with all its manifold joys and terrible sorrows.
* For more on the relation between philosophical categories and understanding the Bible, see Shalom Carmy and David Shatz, "The Bible as a Source of Jewish Philosophical Reflection" (in The Routledge History of Jewish Philosophy, ed.
Rabbi Shalom Carmy, Consulting Editor of TRADITION, recently edited Modern Scholarship in the Study of Torah: Contributions and Limitations (Jason Aronson, 1996)
www.torah.org /features/genesis/character.html   (1476 words)

  
 TH449 Jewish Liturgy Syllabus   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Reuven Hammer, Or Hadash: A Commentary on Siddur Sim Shalom for Shabbat and Festivals (Rabbinical Assembly, 2003) ISBN 0916219208 ($45) [OH]
Shalom Carmy (Ktav, Toras Harav, 2003) ISBN 0-88125-771-0
Other readings will be available as PDF files through WebCT, on the "Readings" page.
www2.bc.edu /~langerr/Teaching/th449syl2005.htm   (1435 words)

  
 Cain, Abel and the Fairness of God   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Reconciliation is beyond the resources of our fallen world.
Rabbi Shalom Carmy is Consulting Editor of Tradition.
He recently edited Modern Scholarship in the Study of Torah: Contributions and Limitations (Jason Aronson, 1996)
www.torah.org /projects/genesis/topic1.html   (1397 words)

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