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The Annual Lecture in Memory of Martin Buber took place on November 7th 2017 at the Israel Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Jerusalem. Prof. Jonathan Israel is Professor of Dutch History and Institutions at University College London. He was one of the permanent faculty at the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, from 2001 to 2016. He spoke about "Jewish Emancipation in the Western World (1780–1860): What Kind of Enlightenment Made It Possible". For more information about the event: https://academy.ac.il/Index/Entry.asp... For past Buber Lectures: https://www.academy.ac.il/Lectures/En... Summary: This lecture seeks to answer the questions: To what extent can the Western Enlightenment be said to have opened the door to a new kind of Jewish intellectual secularism, and is there, or is there not, such a thing as an enlightened Jewish secularism that can survive as a distinct cultural tendency and national tradition in the twenty-first century? The uniquely powerful attraction of the figure and philosophy of Spinoza in the tradition of nineteenth and early twentieth century Jewish secularism was in part based on a pervasive myth that is no longer viable. But certain elements in Spinoza’s mature outlook more solidly and genuinely contributed to the ground-plan for a secular Jewishness in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, allowing us to assert – contrary to the aspersions of the philosopher Hermann Cohen in his late phase – that Spinoza can in a sense be seen as the West’s prototype of a secular Jew and a ‘revolutionary Jew’. Spinoza opposed a universal ethics of justice and charity, the preserve of an almost invisible sect, to the prevailing (despotic, wasteful and oppressive) order among humanity. He also believed that an underground fraternity based not on dogma but on argument, persuasion and demonstration, and on a universalist secular ethics, can function effectively and not just resist but at some level even penetrate and defeat the ignorance and blindness of the unknowing majority. Spinoza’s blend of ethics, reformism and intellectual activism comprises genuine elements of a Jewish secularist (and secularized Marrano) identity that can still have life and relevance today. #MartinBuberLecture #Jonathanisrael #history #jews #enlightenment #emancipation #princetonuniversity #spinoza