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2000-2001 | Israel Institute for Advanced Studies

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2000-2001

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Eli Keshet

FELLOW
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Eli is a professor in the Department of Molecular Biology at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
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Benjamin Geiger

FELLOW
The Weizmann Institute of Science
Benjamin is a professor in the Department of Molecular Cell Biology at the Weizmann Institute of Science.
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Anthony Burgess

FELLOW
The Ludwig Institute for Cancer
Anthony is a professor in the Ludwig Institute for Cancer, Melbourne. His research interests are: The molecular mechanisms of signal transduction on the EGF receptor. Within this frame of interest the three dimensional stucture of the EGF receptor ligand TGF has been solved.

Molecular Medicine in the Service of Mankind: Towards the 2000s

[RG #82] Molecular Medicine in the Service of Mankind: Towards the 2000s

November 1, 2000 - January 31, 2001

Organizer:

Alexander Levitzki (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

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The group on molecular medicine focused on the role of the new developments in molecular biology and biochemistry in the revolution in medicine which is now taking place. These new developments, including the publication of the human genome, create new opportunities for the improvement of human health. The group's work will concentrate on the ramifications of these technological revolutions for new approaches to the treatment of various cancers and other diseases in which cellular communications fail. 

The group will focus primarily on the molecular mechanisms of cell signaling, that is, how cells communicate between themselves and how cells transmit information into the cell. The group will also explore ways to remedy the aberrations in these communication networks which occur in the course of disease. The knowledge of how cell communication works will allow the development of novel therapies.

 

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Israel Yuval

FELLOW
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Israel is a professor in the Department of the History of the Jewish People at The Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research interests are: history of Jews in medieval Germany; relations between Jews and Christians; the language of rituals.
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Steven Wasserstrom

FELLOW
Reed College
Steven is a professor in the Department of Religion at Reed College. His research interests are: Jewish-Muslim relations under early Islam; Jewish-Isma'ili relations in the 11th-12th centuries; historiography of 20th century history of religions.
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Alexander Patschovsky

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University of Konstanz
Alexander is a professor in the Department of History at the University of Konstanz. His research interests are: medieval heresies; Hussitism; eschatology, especially Joachim of Fiore; medieval Jewish history.
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Bernard McGinn

FELLOW
University of Chicago
Bernard is a professor in the Divinity School in the University of Chicago. His research interests are: history of theology, especially in the Middle Ages; apocalyptic traditions in Christiantiy; history of mysticism and spirituality.
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Ora Limor

FELLOW
The Open University of Israel

Ora is a professor in the Department of History at the Open University of Israel. Her research interests are: Jewish-Christian polemics and dialogue; cultural encounters in the Middle Ages; sacred tradition and scared space in the Holy Land; pilgrimage: Christian Jewish-Moslem.

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Jeremy Cohen

FELLOW
Tel Aviv University
Jeremy is a professor in the Department of Jewish History at Tel Aviv University. His research interests are: Jews and Judaism in medieval European Christendom; inter-religious polemic and Christian anti-Judaism; history of biblical interpretation.

Millennial Pursuits - Apocalyptic Traditions and Expectations of the End among Medieval Jews and their Neighbors

[RG #83] Millennial Pursuits - Apocalyptic Traditions and Expectations of the End among Medieval Jews and their Neighbors

November 2000 - February 2001

Organizers:

Jeremy Cohen (Tel Aviv University)
Ora Limor (The Open University of Israel)

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Our group originated in the conviction that a community's expectations of the end constitute a vital sign -- perhaps one of its most potent agents of social change -- and that the continuing role of religious tradition in nourishing those beliefs warrants scholarly attention. We took our point of departure from the premise that the history of Judaism, Christianity, and Islam from late antiquity until the end of the Middle Ages affords a singularly instructive context for the study of eschatology and its socio-cultural significance. This period is proverbially known as the "age of faith" in the annals of Western and Mediterranean civilization, when membership in society was defined first and foremost by one's religious affiliation, and when the prophetic ideals pervading the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament, and the Quran undergirded virtually all expressions of cultural creativity. Talmudic and medieval Jews, perennially obsessed with their displacement in galut, diaspora, cultivated numerous permutations of the messianic idea as a basis for persevering in Christian and Muslim societies; as Gershom Scholem aptly noted, they lived their lives largely "in deferment", finding fulfillment in hope for the future rather than in the realities of the present.

Eschatological creativity, however, was not limited to an alienated Jewish minority. Apocalyptic literature and spirituality flowered in patristic and medieval Christianity, among the empowered and the orthodox who identified with the prevailing establishments, as well as among the disenchanted who could not find a satisfying niche in prevailing social structures and institutions. Though often overlooked in recent scholarship, Muslim apocalyptic proved consequential, as well, and eschatological differences highlighted the rift between Sunni and Shi'ite communities. In the worldview shared by the Jews with the Christian and Muslim majorities around them, eschatology provided the basis for a comprehensive reading of history; in its longing for future, it imbued both past and present with significance. So deeply embedded was messianic expectation in the fabric of medieval experience that cultural historian Georges Duby, in his provocative book, An 1000, An 2000, 1995, has sought to unravel our modern premillennial predicament in the terms of its medieval precedents.

Our research will study the messianic expectations of Jews, Christians, and Muslims in Europe and the Middle East from the conversion of Constantine to the Sabbatean messianic movement (4th-17th centuries). While the modern study of eschatology and millennialism has progressed fruitfully within numerous academic disciplines, our group will provide a forum for historical research and conversation, incorporating historians of religion, ideas, and art.

 

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