MA Alumni

Tom Parnass

Tom Parnass

Department of Jewish Thought

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Subject: ’Community and Cosmos: Kabbalah, Halakhah and Occultism in R. Hayyim Vital’s Damascene Circle’

Supervisor: Prof. Jonathan Garb

Abstract: In my doctoral thesis I focus on the work of R. Haim Vital and his circle of students in Damascus, to which Vital immigrated from Safed in the end of the sixteenth-century. Vital was a senior student of Rabbi Yitzhak Luria (1572-1534) and the main editor-recorder of his teachings, which became the most important form of esoteric knowledge in early modern Jewish culture. In my work I will discuss the Kabbalistic center that developed in Damascus after the economic and cultural decline of Safed, and I will analyze the writings of Vital and his students against the religious and social background of the Jewish world during this period, as well as its ties to the Muslem environment of Ottoman Damascus. Through Vital's circle, my research will carefully examine the emergence of the Lurianic Kabbalistic tradition as a dominant intellectual and spiritual force in early modern Jewish cultures, while attempting to explain its attraction for many among the elite in this period.
In a broader perspective, I wish to critically examine how esoteric knowledge, usually understood as trying to express timeless truths, takes shape as a result of the changing needs of those who use it and give it practical expression in everyday life.

Bio: I have B.A. from the History Department and the school of History Honors’ Program, and an M.A. from the History Department. I pursue my doctoral studies in the Jewish Thought department.
My area of study is Jewish intellectual history in the early modern period, with specific foci on Kabbalah, early modern science and magic. I dedicated my M.A. was dedicated to the eighteenth-century Sabbatean thinker Nehemiah Hayon, a leading figure in this fascinating messianic movement. Through my study of Hayon’s intellectual world and social milieu, I aimed at examining the social and ideological changes that the Sabbatian faith went through in the eighteenth century, its relation to the interpretation of Kabbalistic literature in this period and its relations with trends of religious criticism in early modern Europe.

Publications:

2024: ''The Key of Faith': Nehmiyya Hayoun's Self-perception and Ideology in the Light of Sabbatean Succession Struggles in the Eighteenth-century', El Prezente: Journal for Sephardic Studies (Forthcoming). [Hebrew]

2017: 'Between Pietism and the Enlightenment: Christian Thomasius and the Secularization of Knowledge in Halle University at the early eighteenth-century', Hayo Haya: Student Journal of History 12 (2017), pp. 51-73. [Hebrew]

President's Scholarship 2022/2023

MA Honors Program 2016/2017

 

 

 

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Ido Rivlin

Ido Rivlin

Cognitive science

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Subject: Conscious vs. Unconscious Processing of Dynamic Stimuli

Supervisor: Prof. Ran Hassin

Abstract: Recent evidence which suggests many cognitive functions can operate in two manners, with and without consciousness, raises questions regarding the differences and similarities between the conscious and unconscious strategies for executing the same functions. In three experiments, I compared between generating predictions consciously and unconsciously in order to find strategic differences between the conscious and unconscious usage of the stimuli. Objective and subjective measures were used to verify participants were not consciously aware of the dynamic stimuli during the unconscious phases. Results do not verify that there are strategic differences between the conscious and unconscious prediction, yet preliminary findings demonstrate that cue validity affects these functions differently. The current study suggests that movement processing has multiple theoretical implications; also, my findings can be used to ameliorate comparisons between conscious and unconscious functions in general and specifically using dynamic stimuli.

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barak

Barak Rom

Department of Philosophy

 

Topic: The phenomenology of awareness to the 'self' and of the experience of joy and suffer:  existential implications.

dina

Dina Sender

Department of Hebrew Language

Department of Hebrew Language

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Subject: Hebrew Spoken by Haredi Litaim (Litvish-Yeshivish) in Israel: A Linguistic Description

Supervisors: Prof. Yochanan Breuer (Hebrew University) and Dr. Dalit Asulin (University of Haifa)

Bio: Dina Sender completed her B.A. and M.A. studies (summa cum laude) in the Hebrew Linguistics department at the Hebrew University. Her M.A. thesis focuses on a linguistic phenomenon, Ashkenazi pronunciation, that characterizes Haredi Hebrew, aiming to examine it from multiple angles: to map the lexical sources of the linguistic forms with Ashkenazi pronunciation, to analyze its phonological characteristics, to trace grammatical changes that occur in forms with Ashkenazi pronunciation, and to discuss the pragmatic functions that this pronunciation serves. This work was written under the supervision of Prof. Yochanan Breuer (the Hebrew University) and Dr. Dalit Asulin (University of Haifa).

Dina is currently a PhD student in the Hebrew Linguistics department at the Hebrew University. Her research aims to describe comprehensively the Haredi Litai community’s unique linguistic repertoire, and to enrich this examination with a sociolinguistic analysis of the links between the speakers' linguistic choices and their ideology, values, and group affiliation.

Publications:

"Hebrew as a Language of Speech and Yiddish as a Language of Emotion among the Ultra-Orthodox in Israel," Language Studies (in Hebrew, forthcoming)

"Ashkenazi Pronunciation in Spoken Haredi Hebrew in Israel: Grammar and Pragmatics," Leshonenu (in Hebrew, forthcoming)

 

President Scholarship 2020/2021

MA Honors Program 2016/2017

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Efrat Shamir

Efrat Shamir

History, Philosophy and Sociology of Sciences

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Subject; An investigation of ethical aspects of distributive justice from an economic-philosophical perspective

Supervisor: Dr. ittay nissan-rosen

 

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Shira Tal

Dr. Shira Tal

Cognitive Science

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Subject: Pre-Lexical Processing of the Passive Voice in Hebrew

Supervisor: Inbal Arnon

Abstract: Human language contains an enormous amount of information at numerous different levels (phonologically, morphologically, semantically, etc.). One of the biggest questions in cognitive language research is how this linguistic knowledge is represented, i.e., what information speakers are sensitive to. According to usage-based approaches to language, human beings learn and process language with domain general learning skills, and are sensitive to recurring structures in all levels of the linguistic environment. Hebrew morphology serves as an interesting case study for this theory. All Hebrew verbs are comprised of seven possible verb templates (Binyanim), that systematically encode information regarding the verb, e.g., voice and verb argument, thereby creating statistical relations between certain forms (e.g., huCCaC) and certain grammatical-semantic functions (e.g., passivity). This study is designed to check whether the mere processing of a verb template's form will create  predictions regarding the information this form carries for the Hebrew speaker. This question was tested with regards to the passive voice: using a masked priming paradigm, unconscious processing of Hebrew verbs was examined, enabling us to check whether Hebrew speakers are sensitive to the passive information encoded in the passive verb patterns based only on their orthographic-phonological characteristics. The findings of the experiments do not allow us to determine whether Hebrew readers are sensitive to this information in early stages of processing. The reasons for this and the possible outcomes of the results on the existing theories of language processing are discussed.

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