Spanish Jewish philosopher and rabbi (c.1050–1120)
Not to be confused with Bahya ben Asher.
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Bahya ben Joseph ibn Paquda (also: Pakuda, Bakuda, Hebrew: בחיי אבן פקודה, Arabic: بهية بن فاقودا), c. 1050–1120,[1] was a Jewish philosopher and rabbi who lived at Zaragoza, Al-Andalus (now Spain). He was one of two people now known as Rabbeinu Behaye, the other being Bible commentator Bahya ben Asher.
^Menahem Mansoor, "Arabic sources on Ibn Pakuda's Duties of the Heart", Proceedings of the World Congress of Jewish Studies, Volume III, Division C, p. 81 (1973)
Bahya ben Joseph ibnPaquda (also: Pakuda, Bakuda, Hebrew: בחיי אבן פקודה, Arabic: بهية بن فاقودا), c. 1050–1120, was a Jewish philosopher and rabbi...
other being philosopher BahyaibnPaquda. Bahya was a pupil of Rabbi Shlomo ibn Aderet (the Rashba). Unlike the latter, Bahya did not publish a Talmud...
attributes, and similar theological problems. Like Saadia Gaon and BahyaibnPaquda, though more precisely and more systematically, Joseph proves the creation...
which is preceded in Abraham ibn Daud's system by the doctrine of the negative attributes, already accepted by BahyaibnPaquda. and by Judah ha-Levi from...
battle, quoting BahyaibnPaquda's popular treatise Chovot HaLevavot. In the Judeo-Arabic original version of that book, BahyaIbnPaquda refers to both...
not widely studied in Judaism, it has many points in common with BahyaibnPaquda's very popular[citation needed] work Chovot HaLevavot, written in 1040...
needed] BahyaibnPaquda characterized two types of fear as a lower "fear of punishment" and a higher "fear of [divine awe] glory." Abraham ibn Daud differentiated...
Abraham ben Meir Ibn Ezra (Hebrew: ר׳ אַבְרָהָם בֶּן מֵאִיר אִבְּן עֶזְרָא ʾAḇrāhām ben Mēʾīr ʾībən ʾĒzrāʾ, often abbreviated as ראב"ע; Arabic: إبراهيم...
extensively in studies. Influenced by Aristotle, Al-Farabi, Ibn Sina, and his contemporary Ibn Rushd, he became a prominent philosopher and polymath in both...
work after Moses Ibn Ezra for a competition, sparking recognition for Halevi’s aptitude as a poet as well as a close friendship with Ibn Ezra. As an adult...
the Mishnah Meir of Rothenburg, 13th century German rabbi and poet BahyaibnPaquda, (Hovot ha-Levavot), 11th century Spanish philosopher and moralist...
Jewish philosophy. Abarbanel is quoted as saying that he counted Joseph ibn Shem-Tov as his mentor. At 20 years old, he wrote on the original form of...
number three thousand. Among his numerous students were Yom Tov Asevilli and Bahya ben Asher. A manuscript purporting to be a certificate of indebtedness,...
Musar literature include: Chovot ha-Levavot ('Duties of the Heart') by BahyaibnPaquda. Ma'alot ha-Middot by Yehiel ben Yekutiel Anav of Rome. Orchot Tzaddikim...
Gottheil, Stephen S. Wise, Michael Friedländer, "Ibn Gabriol, Solomon ben Juday (Abu Ayyub Sulaiman Ibn Yaḥya Ibn Jabirul), known also as Avicebron" Archived...
Rabbi Abraham ibn Ezra, particularly regarding ibn Ezra's negative attitude towards Kabbalah. Nevertheless, he had tremendous respect for ibn Ezra, as is...
(see Shema Yisrael) informs the understanding of divine simplicity. BahyaibnPaquda (Duties of the Heart 1:8) points out that God's Oneness is "true oneness"...
138–41. BaḥyaibnPaquda, Chovot HaLevavot, section 1, chapter 10, in, e.g., Bachya ben Joseph ibnPaquda, Duties of the Heart, translated by Yehuda ibn Tibbon...
Another neoclassical Jewish proponent of self-limited omniscience was Abraham ibn Daud. "Whereas the earlier Jewish philosophers extended the omniscience of...
Abraham bar Hiyya BahyaibnPaquda Judah Halevi Abraham ibn Daud Joseph ibn Tzaddik Abraham ibn Ezra Maimonides Nachmanides Samuel ibn Tibbon Joseph ben...
therefore it was as if he stood in front of the Shekhinah."[citation needed] Bahya ben Asher comments on the verse "And Moses took the tent and pitched it...
exponent of the via negativa." Maimonides - along with Samuel ibn Tibbon - draws on BahyaibnPaquda,[citation needed] who shows that our inability to describe...
Lobel (2006), A Sufi-Jewish Dialogue: Philosophy and Mysticism in BaḥyaIbnPaqūda's Duties of the Heart, p. 24, University of Pennsylvania Press, ISBN 0-8122-3953-9...
interested also in philosophy. According to Yehudah ibn Tibbon, whom he encouraged to translate BahyaibnPaquda's Al-Hidayah ila Fara'id al-Qulub (Chovot ha-Levavot)...