Menachem Kellner

Menachem Kellner (born 1946) is an American-Israeli academic and Jewish scholar of medieval Jewish philosophy with a particular focus on the philosophy of Maimonides. He is a retired Professor of Jewish Thought at the University of Haifa and is the founding chair of the Department of Philosophy and Jewish Thought at Shalem College in Jerusalem. He has taught courses in philosophy, religious studies, medieval and modern Jewish philosophy at Washington University in St. Louis, the College of William & Mary, the University of Virginia, and the University of Haifa. He is probably best known for his book Must A Jew Believe Anything?, which was a Koret Jewish Book Award finalist.

Biography
Kellner was born in Albany, New York in 1946, and studied at the Hebrew Theological College in Skokie, Illinois and Yeshiva Mercaz HaRav in Jerusalem, Israel. He studied Western philosophy and Jewish philosophy at Washington University in St. Louis, receiving a B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. His Ph.D dissertation was directed by Steven Schwarzschild. In 1980 he made aliyah to Israel.

Books

 * Dogma in Medieval Jewish Thought: From Maimonides to Abravanel (1986)
 * Maimonides on Human Perfection (1990)
 * Maimonides on Judaism and the Jewish People (1991)
 * Maimonides on the "Decline of the Generations" and the Nature of Rabbinic Authority (1996)
 * Must A Jew Believe Anything? (1999)
 * Maimonides Confrontation with Mysticism (2006)
 * Science in Bet Midrash: Studies in Maimonides (2009)
 * Torah in the Observatory: Gersonides, Maimonides, Song of Songs (2010)
 * Reinventing Maimonides in Contemporary Jewish Thought (2019)

Translations

 * He is the translator of Isaac Abravanel’s Principles of Faith, Gersonides’ Commentary on Song of Songs, and Maimonides’ Book of Love.