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This should not be! Kabbalah is not the only manifestation of Jewish mysticism. An automatic redirect from Jewish mysticism to Kabbalah might also suggest that Kabbalah is a standard part of mainstream Judaism, which is not the case. This should be a disambiguation page. --
Ori Livneh (
talk..
contribs)
17:26, 4 July 2006 (UTC)reply
Yes, but: Nowadays, the only followed forms of Jewish mysticism are 1 Kabbalah and 2 Hasidic Judaism, which is based on Kabbalah (you could call it "Hasidic Kabbalah"). See the full present-ongoing discussion of this
Jewish mysticism page development issue at
Talk:Kabbalah#Development of Jewish mysticism article (begun February 2013, in case it becomes archived in the future). N.B. You said, "An automatic redirect from Jewish mysticism to Kabbalah might also suggest that Kabbalah is a standard part of mainstream Judaism, which is not the case." - why is "Jewish mysticism" more mainstream itself than Kabbalah? It seems just as mainsteam/heterodox itself. However, I do think that Kabbalah is mainstream to Judaism: Before the Haskalah, it's theology in
Lurianic Kabbalah was basically universal. Since the Haskalah, and with the modern culture of personal autonomy/choice, it remains an equally valid, and equally mainstream personal option in Jewish theology to a) a ressurgent Maimonidean Medieval
Jewish philosophy Orthodox Judaism rationalism, or 2) a Non-Orthodox Judaism modern
Jewish philosophy rationalism, or 3) a
Neo-Hasidic Non-Orthodox Judaism Reform/Reconstructionist non-fundamentalist Kabbalism.
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If ya google this wikipedia entry, the first thing that pops up is a rather antisemitic picture
Indeed there is a strange pic there, which is copied from a Youtube video produced by somebody called Kalman Bland PhD. You can blame Google and that guy, but not wikipedia. we had nothing to do with it. -
Roxy, the dog.barcus15:27, 11 August 2018 (UTC)reply
Is there a reason why an article about Jewish tradition is using /Christian/ dating rather than its secular equivalents? Even in academic scholarly works, Jewish authors and some non-Jewish but culturally respectful secular academics use CE (Common Era) and BCE (Before the Common Era).
It is jarring to use Jesus Christ as a dating reference point in an article about a Jewish cultural phenomenon (AD = Anno Domino = In the year of our Lord, Lord = Christ; BC = Before Christ) when there is a perfectly good academically accepted and secular equivalent.
2A02:ED0:6DD1:1400:DD87:F77D:3F52:6958 (
talk)
08:34, 23 June 2021 (UTC)reply