Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Know thyself and Thy Mesorah











In private communication with David Guttman, as well as in comments on David Guttman's blog to R. Micha, I made reference to the significance of Rambam's model of the soul in understanding the Mesorah as presented in the MT. I have been thinking about this statement of mine about the soul a lot lately. How do I illustrate what I mean, without resorting to meaningless terminology, or as my dear student RJM puts it so eloquently, heavy jargon?


Ignorance of Self
The answer lies, as it so often does, in allowing Rambam to speak for himself, without getting in the way. In Shemone Perakim, Rambam presents the issue of developing proper Middot in the soul by means of an important analogy, one which deserves our undivided attention.


ואתה יודע, שתיקון המידות הוא ריפוי הנפש וכוחותיה. וכמו שהרופא, אשר ירפא הגופים, צריך שידע תחילה את הגוף אשר ירפאהו בכלל וחלקיו - מה הם, רצוני לומר: גוף האדם, וצריך שידע אילו דברים יחלוהו וישמר מהם, ואילו דברים יבריאוהו ויכוון אליהם, כן רופא הנפש הרוצה לתקן מידות האדם, צריך שידע הנפש בכללה וחלקיה, ומה יחלה אותה ומה יבריאה


Rambam instructs us to reflect upon our educational relationship to himself as a Baal Ha-Mesorah, as being like that of the therapeutic relationship of a doctor to a patient. In so instructing us, Rambam is not interested in some feel - good, pretty words. There would be no need for an elaborate technical description of the soul to achieve a feel good experience. Rather, Rambam seems intent on fostering a certain insight into the Mesorah we otherwise would overlook. But what is this insight?


The answer is obvious in the Rambam, yet somehow mystifying to us. By virtue of telling us that the Doctor of the Soul must come to learn the nature of the soul, it is clear that most of us, do not have knowledge of our souls. This simple fact, that we need instruction by a Baal Ha-mesorah to identify our souls, implies that we do not know how to identify our very selves. 


This notion, that we do not know ourselves, is also implicit in the dictum of the great philosophers of Greece. What could "know thyself" mean, if not that we are currently ignorant of what and who we are? Clearly, wise men generally,and Rambam in particular, intend to awaken a reader who needs to first and foremost be informed that he ,in fact, does not know his own soul, that he is unaware of his very identity as a human being. It is the removal of core ignorance, the inability to identify  ourselves, that constitutes the education of Torah and Mitzvot. 


But is this not preposterous, to say that we do not know who and what we are? Not if we consider the reality of education, Jewish and Non-Jewish as we experience it today. In fact, ignorance of soul is the elephant in the room that permeates all education. Education is totally preoccupied with the results of soul -problem solving- to the absolute exclusion of considering the soul itself as a phenomenon.We all know that educators limit themselves to politely solving problems proper to the popular fields of study -the various "subjects.”  For them, the crowning glory of man lies in the ability to solve official problems about all things, other than ourselves. No wonder then that the focus of modern education lies exclusively in the issue of either which problems to present, or perhaps the proper sequence of such problems. When was the last time we saw the identification of the soul, its whole and parts, as an important issue in school? Such talk would be a disaster, it would waste so much time, we would never cover the subject matter of general and Torah subjects! No wonder we never stop to consider the best way to understand mizvot as the means by which  the soul can be given tikkun through the therapy of a Doctor.


This  failure on the part of education to isolate a natural “thought ability” underlying the act of the identifying and solving problems of particular subject areas is bizarre. Is not all of modern science founded on the notion that all things have natural principles, open to our research? Why should man, body and soul, be exempt? How does this ignorance of our very selves arise?


13 comments:

David Guttmann said...

I have two questions:

1. Is Psychology not in a way the study of the soul?

2. What if all that we call "soul" no more than a result of chemical reactions?

I think that Rambam sees the Nefesh by which man is what he is as a conceptual rather than a physical entity, the Tzura of man's soul.YH 4:7-8

לעולם אין אתה רואה גולם בלא צורה, או צורה בלא גולם. אלא לב האדם--הוא שמחלק הגוף הנמצא בדעתו, ויודע שהוא מחובר מגולם וצורה, ויודע שיש שם גופים שגולמם מחובר מארבע יסודות, וגופים שגולמם פשוט ואינו מחובר מגולם אחר. והצורות שאין להם גולם, אינן נראין לעין, אלא בעין הלב הם ידועים, כמו שידענו אדון הכול בלא ראיית עין.

יד [ח] נפש כל בשר, היא צורתו שנתן לו האל. והדעת היתרה המצויה בנפשו של אדם, היא צורת האדם השלם בדעתו; ועל צורה זו נאמר בתורה "נעשה אדם בצלמנו כדמותנו" (בראשית א,כו), כלומר שתהיה לו צורה היודעת ומשגת הדעות שאין להם גולם, עד שיידמה להן. ואינו אומר על צורה זו הניכרת לעיניים, שהיא הפה והחוטם והלסתות ושאר רושם הגוף, שזו תואר שמה


It is where R. Micha misunderstands Rambam and sees him as a pure Aristotelian while he is not. That Tzura or what I term in modern language "concept" is attached to the physical chemically reactive brain which can read it if well prepared through Torah and Mitzvot - Torah in the broader sense of all knowledge. That Tzura is the one that transfers the knowledge in the lowest level of the Sechalim Hanivdalim, the Ishim namely the sechel hapoel to the savants and the nevi'im and is what remains after death - unattached to the physical.

David Guttmann said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
David Guttmann said...

I left out this Halacha which is the most important in this context


[ט] אין צורת הנפש הזאת מחוברת מן היסודות, כדי שתיפרד להם, ואינה מכוח הנשמה, עד שתהא צריכה לנשמה כמו שהנשמה צריכה לגוף; אלא מאת ה', מן השמיים היא. לפיכך כשייפרד הגולם שהוא מחובר מן היסודות, ותאבד הנשמה מפני שאינה מצויה אלא עם הגוף וצריכה לגוף בכל מעשיה, לא תיכרת הצורה הזאת, לפי שאינה צריכה לנשמה במעשיה--אלא יודעת ומשגת הדעות הפרודות מן הגלמים, ויודעת בורא הכול, ועומדת לעולם, ולעולמי עולמים. הוא שאמר שלמה בחכמתו, "וישוב העפר על הארץ, כשהיה; והרוח תשוב, אל האלוהים אשר נתנה" (קוהלת יב,ז).

Rabbi Jonathan Sacks said...

David

I agree with your choice of quotes from Rambam that you bring from MT. However, in the interest of staying true to my purpose of avoiding the pitfall of "heavy jargon" , I will avoid discussing the issue of our self knowledge in the terms of these quotes, for now.

The notion of psychology, I will deal with in the context of the sippur ha-nevuii of Adam and Chava.

Dan said...

Rabbi,

"It is the removal of core ignorance, the inability to identify ourselves, that constitutes the education of Torah and Mitzvot".

When you say "constitutes", do you mean, that understading the soul and identifying ourselves is the knowledge which is needed for Torah to act upon? In other words, it is the prerequisite understanding that is required for Torah to have any meaning?

Rabbi Jonathan Sacks said...

Dan

Thank you for bringing out that sense of "constitute" in what I was saying. The "principles" are both what begin the society, as that awareness needed to see or identify oneself as an individual with a certain constitution (sense 2a below and 3 below) in a mesorah community.

These principles, once seen, also underly the activity or derech hachayim of the Am that they constitute,(sense 4 and 5a).

Such constitution allows meaning to Halacha or law instrumental to the derech hachayim of the nation.(4, 5a)

Main Entry: con·sti·tu·tion
1 : an established law or custom : ordinance
2 a : the physical makeup of the individual especially with respect to the health, strength, and appearance of the body [a hearty constitution] b : the structure, composition, physical makeup, or nature of something [the constitution of society]
3 : the act of establishing, making, or setting up
4 : the mode in which a state or society is organized; especially : the manner in which sovereign power is distributed
5 a : the basic principles and laws of a nation, state, or social group that determine the powers and duties of the government and guarantee certain rights to the people in it b : a written instrument embodying the rules of a political or social organization

moonlight1021 said...

Note: This article appeared in the Jewish Times/Mesora.

Dan said...

Rabbi,

I don't see why you brought community in to this discussion. It seems to confuse the main point, which is that an understading of the soul is prior to an understanding of mitzvot. Obviously that will have a fundumental impact on how a society exists, but that it doesnt belong in these first discussions of soul???

Hagyan said...

Rabbi Sacks,

Dan's last comment helped me to find the particular question that I've been confused about since you blogged this over a week ago. (Thanks, Dan!)

You're framing your discourse with the proposition that the "Rambam's model of the soul" is "significant" to coming to "[understand] the Mesorah as presented in the MT."

Is the general direction of your reasoning, and of the reflection you're advocating:

(1) from מצוות that one has to understanding those מצוות in relation to one's soul?

OR (2) from understanding one's soul, to understanding the מצוות in principle, to having מצוות?

Dan said...

Higayon,

What do you mean "having mitzvot"?

Also, I understand the progression of #2, but I don't understand how you can even have the progression of #1???

Rabbi Jonathan Sacks said...

Dan and Hagyan

Dan You asked When you say "constitutes", do you mean, that understanding the soul and identifying ourselves is the prerequisite understanding that is required for Torah to have any meaning? I meant to say yes knowledge of ourselves is a prerequisite to Torah. I also meant to explain the cause why knowing ourselves is a prerequisite. Knowledge of ourselves is a prerequisite to Torah, because Torah shows us the way to facilitate a certain process- or derech- of a real world thing in this world- ourselves. To be able to facilitate such a process in the real world, one must first be able to identify what the thing is we are talking about, differentiating it from the world of material things we see around us. Since what we are is a a social creature, to know ourselves is to know ourselves as part of a society in which we function.

Hagyan

I am speaking of knowing ourselves, in principle, as Souls that participate in the Derech Ha-olam of which we are part. Mitzvot will follow as powerful tools of facilitating this derech. hachayim.

moonlight1021 said...

Rabbi Sacks, by the way your original post has disappeared and your writing appears with lots of spaces in between and interruptions, and I can only read it partially (though you know we know the original post). So hope you figure out what happened to the "Know Thyself and Thy Mesorah" article. Here's one practical question:. What would you do: try to fix this one or repost again?

moonlight1021 said...

About blog settings--why can't this post be fixed so it can exist with the original comments? I thought it can because I had a blog too (which I closed), you can just go to the specific post and paste again the original text as long as you have the writing. In terms of philosophical aspects, that's a different matter. But copying and pasting is possible. In fact you can even change the day and time to a blog post you already posted.