FOUR KINDS OF HOKHMAH
Rambam opens the last chapter of the Guide
with a discussion of the word hokhmah, wisdom, which he
sees as possibly having four meanings-- coming to understand
deep truths (those that lead to a better understanding of God),
learning any art (or skill), becoming moral, or knowing how to
develop strategies for accomplishing any goal (whether good or
evil). Of those four kinds of hokhmah, only two are
provided by the Torah, the first and the third (rational truths
and moral virtues).
That means, in case anyone thought otherwise,
that Rambam does not accept the claims that Torah can teach (by
itself) such skills as medicine or engineering. The Torah is
about moral and intellectual improvement and it teaches only
those kinds of wisdom. Furthermore, the Torah teaches those two
kinds of wisdom in a traditional way, meaning that it just
teaches certain facts, rather than engaging the student in
speculation or intellectual consideration.
While that does not lessen the validity of
the wisdoms taught by the Torah, it leaves room for a broader
(or deeper) wisdom, even in these realms. Having learned wisdom
in a traditional way, one can then verify and perhaps deepen it
by means of thought and study. Thus, for example, I can be wise
in the sense that the Torah teaches me the immorality of murder
(or theft or various kinds of inappropriate sexual
relationships), but I can deepen that wisdom by coming to my own
understanding of the principles that underlie these truths
taught by tradition.
Rambam, to stress the difference between
traditional and speculative wisdom, points to a statement about
Moshe Rabbenu, in which the Talmud calls him "father in
wisdom, father in Torah, and father among the prophets (a
forerunner to "first in war, first in peace, first in the
hearts of his countrymen"?)." The statement makes two
important points for Rambam, that wisdom is clearly separate
from Torah and yet that Moshe Rabbenu (not Solomon, for example)
was first in that as well. That means, then, that true wisdom
involves knowing the traditional truths of the Torah and then
deepening that knowledge by thinking through those traditional
truths until one has fully understood them.
PRELIMINARY REMARKS?
Rambam calls his discussion of the meanings
of wisdom and of Moshe Rabbenu preliminary remarks. He is about
to go on to a discussion of four different kinds of perfection,
the last of which will be intellectual perfection. At that
point, he will come back to this discussion, so that it is
preliminary in the sense that we will not be able to understand
his point there unless we keep this definition of wisdom in
mind.
Let me add a preliminary remark of my own.
Even more than the rest of the Guide, this last section has
sparked many, many interpretations. The one I will present here
is my own, although there are a small group of academics who
agree with it (most do not). In addition, I am summarizing,
rather than going through the whole thing, because I wish to be
certain that we finish this week.
FOUR PERFECTIONS
Rambam says that the philosophers have
identified four types of human perfection, which I remember
hearing both Prof. Twersky ztllh"h and Prof. Avi
Ravitsky (le-havdil bein hahayyim u-vein hahayyim) say
that these perfections were sequential, meaning that the later
ones could not be achieved without the earlier ones. (Prof.
Twersky actually wondered about whether they had to be fully
sequential or whether one could advance in a few of them at the
same time, an issue he raised regarding the various areas of
Torah study as well, where Rambam also refers to Torah, Mishnah,
and Talmud as sequential areas of study). I do not, however,
remember how they knew this, nor do I find it in rereading the
chapter.
The four perfections are: monetary, physical,
moral, and intellectual. Monetary perfection involves having
possessions and/or money (Rambam mentions being a great king as
a monetary perfection, so that he presumably includes prestige,
political power and influence, and so on, as monetary
perfections). This is the least of the perfections, since it is
not a function of the person in any way (does anybody recall the
movie Trading Places?); it may be a function of their position
in life, or the possessions they have accumulated, but it is not
who they essentially are.
Physical perfection for Rambam implies a
perfection of physical skills, such as being able to break thick
animal bones or to carry a heavy load. This is, clearly, a part
of the person, and yet only part of their ephemeral physical
self-- not their essential, eternal self.
The third perfection, the moral, involves
treating others in a moral manner in all ways. This too,
according to Rambam, is not an inherent perfection, since it
only governs how we act towards others (Rambam apparently does
not envision a morality towards oneself); a man without a
society (Robinson Crusoe, as Prof. Twersky said) would have no
need of morality I grant the possibility of arguing that
morality is not only interpersonal, but that is how Rambam sees
it.
The final perfection, which Rambam sees as
most essentially human since it is part of the intellect, which
Rambam sees as what makes us human, is intellectual.
Intellectual perfection involves developing one's rational
capacities as fully as possible-- which for Rambam means using
them to understand issues of the Divine (as we've seen numerous
other times). This would involve learning the traditional truths
of the Torah (as well as deepening one's wisdom about those
issues) as fully as possible, so that the person will have
developed a sense of God that is as close as he/she can get to a
real understanding.
AL YITHALEL ASHIR, ETC.
Rambam sees a verse in Yirmiyah (that we read
in the haftarah for fast days) as making this point. The prophet
warns against three types of people taking pride in their
accomplishments, the rich man, the hero, and the wise man.
Rambam interprets each category as one of the above named
perfections-- monetary, physical, and moral (wise here would
mean wise in morality, one of the meanings of wisdom Rambam had
carefully postulated in his preliminary remarks). When the verse
continues, "Ki im be-zot yithalel hamithallel, haskel
ve-yado`a oti, but in this it is permissible to glory (a
loose translation), developing one's intellect to know Me,"
it says exactly what Rambam wants-- that the first three
perfections are not meaningful in the context of true
perfection.
A somewhat side note. Prof. Twersky noted
that the three categories that we are discussing-- monetary,
physical, and moral-- are also referred to in the first Mishnah
of the fourth chapter of Avot, where Ben Zoma redefines wealth,
heroism, and wisdom as satisfaction with one's lot, control of
one's desires, and learning from all people. Prof. Twersky
wondered aloud (he did not actually take a position) whether
Rambam might have thought of each of those as the standard of
perfection in those areas-- might it not have been that monetary
perfection meant a state of having all of one's monetary needs
fulfilled, regardless of how much actual wealth that involved.
(Economists have shown that people's sense of wealth depends
less on what they actually have than on what they have in
relation to their peers, suggesting that competition and
jealousy govern their sense of wealth as much as objective
need). For all his description of those perfections, then, he
might have been aiming at our understanding the true way to
prepare for intellectual perfection.
HOW MUCH OF AN INTELLECTUAL WAS HE?
The next section of the chapter is crucial to
understanding Rambam's view of human perfection. While Rambam is
studiedly casual about what he writes in these last couple of
paragraphs-- he says that since he has mentioned a verse, he'll
finish its interpretation-- it should be clear to all of us that
he was never that casual, particularly not in the closing words
of his great work.
Rambam notes that the verse in Yirmiyah
(9;23) does not end with the words "haskel ve-yado`a oti,"
which would have meant that knowing God was the highest level
for which to strive. Rather, the verse continues "ki ani
Hashem, oseh hesed, mishpat, u-tsedakah ba'arets, that I am
the Lord, Who does kindness, judgement, and righteousnes in the
land." Rambam interprets this to mean that it is not enough
to know God, but we must know Him in His attributes of action,
meaning the way He affects the world. As a mark of that, Rambam
says, the perfect person will always imitate these actions of
God's, attempting to mimic God's performance of acts of
kindness, etc.
Scholars have long debated what Rambam means
by this last piece, since he seems to retreat from the perfect
intellectualism that he had advocated. Some believed that he
gave up on intellectual perfection (for complicated
philosophical reasons we need not elaborate), some believed that
he saw this last piece as a voluntary act of imitatio Dei (imitating
God) that had no relevance to human perfection (perfection was
purely intellectual, but such a person would nevertheless choose
to act as God did). My own belief-- for reasons that would take
many pages to explain-- is that Rambam thought that intellectual
perfection itself could never be purely intellectual-- since the
most direct knowledge of God we have is from the world He
created (and runs, in some way), the only way to fully
understand Him is by trying to imitate His ways of running the
world.
As righteous people try (and succeed, to
greater or lesser extents) to perform acts of righteousness,
etc., in the same balance as will successfully set the world on
the proper path, that person also learns more about God's world
and, by extension, the Creator Himself. I think that is also the
best understanding of the verse--we should glory in knowing that
God Who does such acts in the land.
Pines closes his translation with four lines
that do not appear in the medieval Hebrew version of the Guide,
that read as follows: God is near to everyone who calls,
If he calls truly and has no distractions,
He is found by every seeker who searches for
Him,
If he marches toward Him and goes not astray.
I hope we have engaged in such seeking
together, that my summaries of Rambam have gone not astray in
representing what the master would have wanted us to know about
the true service of God, and that we have together moved
ourselves closer to the true perfection of human beings. Shabbat
Shalom.