Commentators:R. Levi b. Gershom (Ralbag, Gersonides)/0

From AlHaTorah.org
Jump to navigation Jump to search

R. Levi b. Gershom (Ralbag, Gersonides)

This page is a stub.
Please contact us if you would like to assist in its development.
Ralbag
Name
R. Levi b. Gershom, Gersonides
ר' לוי בן גרשום, רלב"ג
Dates1288-1344
LocationProvence
Influenced byIbn Ezra, Rambam
WorksBiblical commentaries, Milchamot Hashem, math, astronomy
Exegetical CharacteristicsRationalist, philosophical
Impacted onRan, Akeidat Yitzchak, Abarbanel

Life

R. Levi b. Gershom was born in 1288 and died in 1344. He lived in Provence and came from a family of Torah scholars.1 In addition to being a Torah scholar, he was also a known philosopher, mathematician, and astronomer.2

Influenced by

Major Influences

Citations

Unattributed Influences

Works

Ralbag wrote commentaries on Torah, Nevi'im Rishonim, and most of Ketuvim. These commentaries were completed between 1325 and 1338.3 In addition, he wrote a philosophy work called Milchamot Hashem and astronomy charts called Luchot HaTekhunah. He also invented Jacob's Staff, a tool for measuring distances between celestial objects. In the field of mathematics, he wrote Ma'aseh Choshev (first edition 1321, second edition 1322), commentary on Euclid (early 1320s), De Sinibus, Chordis, et Arcubus,4 De Numeris Harmonicis,5 and others. Ralbag writes in his introduction to Torah that he planned to write a Sefer Hamitzvot and a commentary on the Talmud,6 but it is unknown whether he ever began these projects.

Characteristics

Structure

Ralbag's commentaries on Bereshit, Shemot, Iyyov, and Kohelet follow a tripartite structure, in which he employs three modes of exegesis in interpreting each unit:7

Most of Ralbag's other commentaries also contain Toalot,8 but they combine the lexical definitions and the explanations of the storyline into one section.9

Rationalist

Use of Science and Realia

Halakhah

Impacted on

Ralbag's works met with a mixed reception. Some admired his commentary and works, while others boycotted them and called his Milchamot Hashem (Battles of Hashem) Milchamot im Hashem (Battles with Hashem).10 Ralbag's positions had an influence on several subsequent commentators from Christian Spain: