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Salomon Maimon

Salomon Maimon (/ˈmmɒn/; German: [ˈmaɪmoːn]; Lithuanian: Salomonas Maimonas; Hebrew: שלמה בן יהושע מימון‎; 1753 – 22 November 1800) was a philosopher born of Lithuanian Jewish parentage in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania, present-day Belarus. Some of his work was written in the German language.

Salomon Maimon
Salomon Maimon
Born
Shlomo ben Joshua[1]

1753
Zhukov Borok near Mir, Lithuania, Poland-Lithuania
Died22 November 1800
Era18th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolGerman idealism
German skepticism[2]
Main interests
Epistemology, metaphysics, ethics
Notable ideas
Critique of Kant's quid juris and quid factis,[1] the Doctrine of Differentials (die Lehre vom Differential),[1] the Principle of Determinability (der Satz der Bestimmbarkeit)[1][3]
Influences
Influenced

Biography

Early years

Salomon Maimon was born Shlomo ben Joshua[1] in the town of Zhukov Borok near Mir in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania (present-day Belarus), where his grandfather leased an estate from a Prince Karol Stanisław "Panie Kochanku" Radziwiłł. He was taught Torah and Talmud, first by his father, and later by instructors in Mir. He was recognized as a prodigy in Talmudic studies. His father fell on hard times, and betrothed him to two separate girls in order to take advantage of their dowries, leading to a bitter rivalry. At the age of eleven he was married to one of the two prospects, a girl from Nesvizh. At the age 14 he was already a father and was making money by teaching Talmud. Later he learned some German from books and walked all the way to Slonim, where he met a rabbi named Shimshon ben Mordechai of Slonim who had studied in Germany. He borrowed German books on physics, optics and medicine from him. After that he became determined to study further.

Interest in Kabbalah

Maimon describes how he took an interest in Kabbalah, and made a pilgrimage to the court of the Maggid of Mezritch around 1770.[6] He ridiculed the Maggid's adherents for their enthusiasm, and charged the Maggid with manipulating his followers.[7]: 30  He also wrote that the Maggid's ideas are "closer to correct ideas of religion and morals" than those he was taught in cheder.[7]: 30 "

In Germany

In his mid-twenties Maimon left his home area in the direction of the German-speaking lands. His first attempt to take up residence in Berlin in 1778 failed. He was expelled for possession of a draft of a commentary on the Moreh Nebukhim of Maimonides. A later attempt to convert to Protestantism in Hamburg failed due to admitted lack of belief in Christian dogma.[8] His second attempt to settle in Berlin in 1780 succeeded; he established a close connection with Moses Mendelssohn and entered the circles of the Haskalah (the Jewish Enlightenment movement) in Berlin.[6] Mendelssohn introduced him to some wealthy Jews in Berlin, upon whom Maimon relied for patronage while he pursued his studies. He devoted himself to the study of philosophy along the lines of Leibniz, Wolff and Mendelssohn.

In 1783, Mendelssohn asked Maimon to leave Berlin due to Maimon's open Spinozism. After a journey to Hamburg, Amsterdam and then back to Hamburg, he started attending the Gymnasium Christianeum in Altona. During his stay there he improved his knowledge of the natural sciences and his command of German. In 1785, Maimon left for Berlin (where he met Mendelssohn for the last time), then moved to Dessau, and then settled in Breslau, where he attempted to study medicine but eventually took up the position of a tutor.

After many years of separation, Maimon's wife, Sarah, accompanied by their eldest son, David, managed to locate him in Breslau. She demanded that he either return to their home in Lithuania or give her a divorce. Maimon eventually agreed to the divorce.

It was not until 1787 in Berlin that Maimon became acquainted with Kantian philosophy, and in 1790 he published the Essay on Transcendental Philosophy (Versuch über die Transcendentalphilosophie), in which he formulated his objections to Kant's system.[9] Kant seems to have considered Maimon one of his most astute critics.[6] Maimon published a commentary on the Moreh Nebuchim [מורה נבוכים] of Maimonides in 1791 (Gibeath Hamore [גבעת המורה], The Hill of the Guide). In 1792/3 he published his Autobiography (Lebensgeschichte).

In Silesia

In 1795, Maimon found a peaceful residence in the house of Count von Kalckreuth (1766-1830),[9][10] a young Silesian nobleman, and moved to the latter's estate in Siegersdorf, near Freistadt in Niederschlesien (Lower Silesia). Maimon died there at the age of 48 from apparent alcoholism.[11][12]

Philosophical work

Thing-in-itself

He seizes upon the fundamental incompatibility of a consciousness which can apprehend, and yet is separated from, the thing-in-itself. That which is object of thought cannot be outside consciousness; just as in mathematics   is an unreal quantity, so things-in-themselves are ex hypothesi outside consciousness, i.e. are unthinkable. The Kantian paradox he explains as the result of an attempt to explain the origin of the given in consciousness. The form of things is admittedly subjective; the mind endeavours to explain the material of the given in the same terms, an attempt which is not only impossible but involves a denial of the elementary laws of thought. Knowledge of the given is, therefore, essentially incomplete. Complete or perfect knowledge is confined to the domain of pure thought, to logic and mathematics. Thus the problem of the thing-in-itself is dismissed from the inquiry, and philosophy is limited to the sphere of pure thought.[9]

Application of the categories

The Kantian categories are demonstrable and true, but their application to the given is meaningless and unthinkable. By this critical scepticism Maimon takes up a position intermediate between Kant and Hume. Hume's attitude to the empirical is entirely supported by Maimon. The causal concept, as given by experience, expresses not a necessary objective order of things, but an ordered scheme of perception; it is subjective and cannot be postulated as a concrete law apart from consciousness.[9]

Doctrine of differentials

Whereas Kant posed a dualism between understanding and sensibility, or between concepts and the given, Maimon refers both these faculties back to a single source of cognition. Sensibility, in Maimon's view, is therefore not completely without conceptual content, but is generated according to rules that Maimon calls differentials. In calling them this, Maimon is referring to the differentials from the calculus, which are entities that despite being neither qualitative nor quantitative, can nevertheless give rise to a determinate quantity and quality when related to other differentials. The operations of the faculty of sensibility are for Maimon therefore not principally different from those of mathematical intuition: seeing the color red is the same procedure as drawing a geometrical figure such as a line in a circle in thought. The reason that qualities are nevertheless 'given' is that it is only an infinite understanding that can grasp the rules for the generation of qualities in the way that a human understanding can grasp the rules for drawing a circle.

Kant's comments

Kant had received the first chapter of Maimon's book in manuscript from Markus Herz. In a letter to Herz from 26 May 1789, Kant writes the following:

"I had half decided to send the manuscript back in its immediately .... But one glance at the work made me realize its excellence and that not only had none of my critics understood me and the main questions as well as Herr Maimon does but also very few men possess so much acumen for such deep investigations as he..."[13]

Nevertheless, Kant does not agree with Maimon's assessment. For Kant, the question of the relationship of the faculties is adequately answered by the Transcendental Deduction, in which Kant argues that the categories make experience possible. Furthermore, as an explanation of the harmony of the faculties, Kant offers the Leibnizian account of a pre-established harmony.

Bibliography

Collected works in German

  • Maimon, Salomon. Gesammelte Werke, edited by Valerio Verra, 7 volumes, Hildsheim: Olms, 1965–1976.

English translations

  • Maimon, Salomon. The Autobiography of Salomon Maimon with an Essay on Maimon's Philosophy, Introduction by Michael Shapiro, Translated by J. Clark Murray, Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2001 (original edition: London, Boston : A. Gardner, 1888).
  • Solomon Maimon’s Autobiography, translated by Paul Reitter. Edited and introduced by Yitzhak Y. Melamed and Abraham P. Socher (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2019). [This is the first complete English translation of Maimon's autobiography].
  • Maimon, Salomon. Essay on transcendental philosophy. Translated by Nick Midgley, Henry Somers-Hall, Alistair Welchman, and Merten Reglitz, London, New York: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2010, ISBN 978-1-4411-1384-9.
  • Maimon, Salomon. Essay Towards a New Logic or Theory of Thought, Together Letters of Philaletes to Aenesidemus in: G. di Giovanni, H.S. Harris (eds.), Between Kant and Hegel: Texts in the Development of Post-Kantian Idealism, Indianapolis, IN: Hackett, 2001, pp. 158–203.
  • Maimon, Salomon. Essay on Transcendental Philosophy. A Short Overview of the Whole Work, translated by H. Somers-Hall and M. Reglitz, in Pli: The Warwick Journal of Philosophy 19 (2008), pp. 127–165.
  • Maimon, Salomon. The Philosophical Language-Confusion in: Jere Paul Surber, Metacritique. The Linguistic Assault on German Idealism, Amherst:Humanity Books, 2001, pp. 71–84

Notes and references

  1. ^ a b c d e Kelley, Andrew. "Solomon Maimon (1753—1800)". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  2. ^ Bransen, Jan. The Antinomy of Thought: Maimonian Skepticism and the Relation between Thoughts and Objects. Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1991.
  3. ^ The Principle of Determinability is the thesis that we can distinguish between the subject and the predicate of a given synthesis.
  4. ^ "Maimon, Solomon", The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  5. ^ "Gilles Deleuze", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, Metaphysics Research Lab, Stanford University, 2020.
  6. ^ a b c Thielke, Peter (2021). Salomon Maimon. Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  7. ^ a b Socher, Abraham P. (2006). The Radical Enlightenment of Solomon Maimon: Judaism, Heresy, and Philosophy. Stanford University Press. ISBN 0804751366.
  8. ^ Solomon Maimon: An Autobiography, trans. J. Clark Murray, University of Illinois Press, 2001.
  9. ^ a b c d   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Maimon, Salomon". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  10. ^ Variant spellings: (1) Count von Calckreuth (2) Count von Kalkreuth (12 December 1766 - 27 March 1830). His full name is usually given as Heinrich Wilhelm Adolf (or Adolph), Graf (Count) von Kalckreuth, but he was also known as Hans Wilhelm Adolf (or Adolph), Graf von Kalckreuth. He was a Prussian diplomat and author. He wrote books on taxation, law, and on various philosophical topics, including the philosophy of law. For a list of some of his writings see: https://www.worldcat.org/wcidentities/viaf-269163381
  11. ^ Elon, Amos. The pity of it all. A portrait of the German-Jewish Epoch, 1743–1933. Picador, A metropolitan book. NY, Henry Holt and Company, 2002, p. 59.
  12. ^ Maimon, Solomon. Solomon Maimon: An autobiography, Introduction by Michael Shapiro, Translated by J. Clark Murray, Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2001.
  13. ^ Kant, Immanuel. Correspondence. Translated and edited by A. Zweig. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999, pp. 311-311.

Further reading

  • Atlas, Samuel. From Critical to Speculative Idealism: The Philosophy of Solomon Maimon. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff, 1965.
  • Bergmann, Samuel, Hugo. The Philosophy of Salomon Maimon. Translated from the Hebrew by Noah J. Jacobs. Jerusalem: The Magnes Press, 1967.
  • Herrera, Hugo Eduardo. Salomon Maimon's Commentary on the Subject of the Given in Immanuel Kant's Critique of Pure Reason, in: The Review of Metaphysics 63.3, 2010. pp. 593–613.
  • Elon, Amos. The pity of it all. A portrait of the German-Jewish Epoch, 1743–1933. Picador, A metropolitanan book. NY, Henry Holt and Company, 2002. pp. 54–59.

External links

  •   Media related to Salomon Maimon at Wikimedia Commons
  • Thielke, Peter; Melamed, Yitzhak Y. "Salomon Maimon". In Zalta, Edward N. (ed.). Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
  • Entry from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • Salomon Maimon Society
  • Works by Solomon Maimon at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Salomon Maimon at Internet Archive
  • “Spinozism, Acosmism and Hasidism”. Session with prof. Yitzhak Y. Melamed and Dr. José María Sánchez de León at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem

salomon, maimon, german, ˈmaɪmoːn, lithuanian, salomonas, maimonas, hebrew, שלמה, בן, יהושע, מימון, 1753, november, 1800, philosopher, born, lithuanian, jewish, parentage, grand, duchy, lithuania, present, belarus, some, work, written, german, language, bornsh. Salomon Maimon ˈ m aɪ m ɒ n German ˈmaɪmoːn Lithuanian Salomonas Maimonas Hebrew שלמה בן יהושע מימון 1753 22 November 1800 was a philosopher born of Lithuanian Jewish parentage in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania present day Belarus Some of his work was written in the German language Salomon MaimonSalomon MaimonBornShlomo ben Joshua 1 1753Zhukov Borok near Mir Lithuania Poland LithuaniaDied22 November 1800Siegersdorf near Freystadt in Schlesien Silesia Habsburg monarchyEra18th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolGerman idealismGerman skepticism 2 Main interestsEpistemology metaphysics ethicsNotable ideasCritique of Kant s quid juris and quid factis 1 the Doctrine of Differentials die Lehre vom Differential 1 the Principle of Determinability der Satz der Bestimmbarkeit 1 3 Influences Maimonides Kant Reinhold Hume Leibniz Wolff SpinozaInfluenced Reinhold Fichte 4 Deleuze 5 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early years 1 2 Interest in Kabbalah 1 3 In Germany 1 4 In Silesia 2 Philosophical work 2 1 Thing in itself 2 2 Application of the categories 2 3 Doctrine of differentials 2 4 Kant s comments 3 Bibliography 3 1 Collected works in German 3 2 English translations 4 Notes and references 5 Further reading 6 External linksBiography EditEarly years Edit Salomon Maimon was born Shlomo ben Joshua 1 in the town of Zhukov Borok near Mir in the Grand Duchy of Lithuania present day Belarus where his grandfather leased an estate from a Prince Karol Stanislaw Panie Kochanku Radziwill He was taught Torah and Talmud first by his father and later by instructors in Mir He was recognized as a prodigy in Talmudic studies His father fell on hard times and betrothed him to two separate girls in order to take advantage of their dowries leading to a bitter rivalry At the age of eleven he was married to one of the two prospects a girl from Nesvizh At the age 14 he was already a father and was making money by teaching Talmud Later he learned some German from books and walked all the way to Slonim where he met a rabbi named Shimshon ben Mordechai of Slonim who had studied in Germany He borrowed German books on physics optics and medicine from him After that he became determined to study further Interest in Kabbalah Edit Maimon describes how he took an interest in Kabbalah and made a pilgrimage to the court of the Maggid of Mezritch around 1770 6 He ridiculed the Maggid s adherents for their enthusiasm and charged the Maggid with manipulating his followers 7 30 He also wrote that the Maggid s ideas are closer to correct ideas of religion and morals than those he was taught in cheder 7 30 In Germany Edit In his mid twenties Maimon left his home area in the direction of the German speaking lands His first attempt to take up residence in Berlin in 1778 failed He was expelled for possession of a draft of a commentary on the Moreh Nebukhim of Maimonides A later attempt to convert to Protestantism in Hamburg failed due to admitted lack of belief in Christian dogma 8 His second attempt to settle in Berlin in 1780 succeeded he established a close connection with Moses Mendelssohn and entered the circles of the Haskalah the Jewish Enlightenment movement in Berlin 6 Mendelssohn introduced him to some wealthy Jews in Berlin upon whom Maimon relied for patronage while he pursued his studies He devoted himself to the study of philosophy along the lines of Leibniz Wolff and Mendelssohn In 1783 Mendelssohn asked Maimon to leave Berlin due to Maimon s open Spinozism After a journey to Hamburg Amsterdam and then back to Hamburg he started attending the Gymnasium Christianeum in Altona During his stay there he improved his knowledge of the natural sciences and his command of German In 1785 Maimon left for Berlin where he met Mendelssohn for the last time then moved to Dessau and then settled in Breslau where he attempted to study medicine but eventually took up the position of a tutor After many years of separation Maimon s wife Sarah accompanied by their eldest son David managed to locate him in Breslau She demanded that he either return to their home in Lithuania or give her a divorce Maimon eventually agreed to the divorce It was not until 1787 in Berlin that Maimon became acquainted with Kantian philosophy and in 1790 he published the Essay on Transcendental Philosophy Versuch uber die Transcendentalphilosophie in which he formulated his objections to Kant s system 9 Kant seems to have considered Maimon one of his most astute critics 6 Maimon published a commentary on the Moreh Nebuchim מורה נבוכים of Maimonides in 1791 Gibeath Hamore גבעת המורה The Hill of the Guide In 1792 3 he published his Autobiography Lebensgeschichte In Silesia Edit In 1795 Maimon found a peaceful residence in the house of Count von Kalckreuth 1766 1830 9 10 a young Silesian nobleman and moved to the latter s estate in Siegersdorf near Freistadt in Niederschlesien Lower Silesia Maimon died there at the age of 48 from apparent alcoholism 11 12 Philosophical work EditThing in itself Edit He seizes upon the fundamental incompatibility of a consciousness which can apprehend and yet is separated from the thing in itself That which is object of thought cannot be outside consciousness just as in mathematics 1 displaystyle sqrt 1 is an unreal quantity so things in themselves are ex hypothesi outside consciousness i e are unthinkable The Kantian paradox he explains as the result of an attempt to explain the origin of the given in consciousness The form of things is admittedly subjective the mind endeavours to explain the material of the given in the same terms an attempt which is not only impossible but involves a denial of the elementary laws of thought Knowledge of the given is therefore essentially incomplete Complete or perfect knowledge is confined to the domain of pure thought to logic and mathematics Thus the problem of the thing in itself is dismissed from the inquiry and philosophy is limited to the sphere of pure thought 9 Application of the categories Edit The Kantian categories are demonstrable and true but their application to the given is meaningless and unthinkable By this critical scepticism Maimon takes up a position intermediate between Kant and Hume Hume s attitude to the empirical is entirely supported by Maimon The causal concept as given by experience expresses not a necessary objective order of things but an ordered scheme of perception it is subjective and cannot be postulated as a concrete law apart from consciousness 9 Doctrine of differentials Edit Whereas Kant posed a dualism between understanding and sensibility or between concepts and the given Maimon refers both these faculties back to a single source of cognition Sensibility in Maimon s view is therefore not completely without conceptual content but is generated according to rules that Maimon calls differentials In calling them this Maimon is referring to the differentials from the calculus which are entities that despite being neither qualitative nor quantitative can nevertheless give rise to a determinate quantity and quality when related to other differentials The operations of the faculty of sensibility are for Maimon therefore not principally different from those of mathematical intuition seeing the color red is the same procedure as drawing a geometrical figure such as a line in a circle in thought The reason that qualities are nevertheless given is that it is only an infinite understanding that can grasp the rules for the generation of qualities in the way that a human understanding can grasp the rules for drawing a circle Kant s comments Edit Kant had received the first chapter of Maimon s book in manuscript from Markus Herz In a letter to Herz from 26 May 1789 Kant writes the following I had half decided to send the manuscript back in its immediately But one glance at the work made me realize its excellence and that not only had none of my critics understood me and the main questions as well as Herr Maimon does but also very few men possess so much acumen for such deep investigations as he 13 Nevertheless Kant does not agree with Maimon s assessment For Kant the question of the relationship of the faculties is adequately answered by the Transcendental Deduction in which Kant argues that the categories make experience possible Furthermore as an explanation of the harmony of the faculties Kant offers the Leibnizian account of a pre established harmony Bibliography EditCollected works in German Edit Maimon Salomon Gesammelte Werke edited by Valerio Verra 7 volumes Hildsheim Olms 1965 1976 English translations Edit Maimon Salomon The Autobiography of Salomon Maimon with an Essay on Maimon s Philosophy Introduction by Michael Shapiro Translated by J Clark Murray Urbana University of Illinois Press 2001 original edition London Boston A Gardner 1888 Solomon Maimon s Autobiography translated by Paul Reitter Edited and introduced by Yitzhak Y Melamed and Abraham P Socher Princeton Princeton University Press 2019 This is the first complete English translation of Maimon s autobiography Maimon Salomon Essay on transcendental philosophy Translated by Nick Midgley Henry Somers Hall Alistair Welchman and Merten Reglitz London New York Continuum International Publishing Group 2010 ISBN 978 1 4411 1384 9 Maimon Salomon Essay Towards a New Logic or Theory of Thought Together Letters of Philaletes to Aenesidemus in G di Giovanni H S Harris eds Between Kant and Hegel Texts in the Development of Post Kantian Idealism Indianapolis IN Hackett 2001 pp 158 203 Maimon Salomon Essay on Transcendental Philosophy A Short Overview of the Whole Work translated by H Somers Hall and M Reglitz in Pli The Warwick Journal of Philosophy 19 2008 pp 127 165 Maimon Salomon The Philosophical Language Confusion in Jere Paul Surber Metacritique The Linguistic Assault on German Idealism Amherst Humanity Books 2001 pp 71 84Notes and references Edit a b c d e Kelley Andrew Solomon Maimon 1753 1800 Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Bransen Jan The Antinomy of Thought Maimonian Skepticism and the Relation between Thoughts and Objects Dordrecht Kluwer 1991 The Principle of Determinability is the thesis that we can distinguish between the subject and the predicate of a given synthesis Maimon Solomon The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Gilles Deleuze The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Metaphysics Research Lab Stanford University 2020 a b c Thielke Peter 2021 Salomon Maimon Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy a b Socher Abraham P 2006 The Radical Enlightenment of Solomon Maimon Judaism Heresy and Philosophy Stanford University Press ISBN 0804751366 Solomon Maimon An Autobiography trans J Clark Murray University of Illinois Press 2001 a b c d One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Maimon Salomon Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Variant spellings 1 Count von Calckreuth 2 Count von Kalkreuth 12 December 1766 27 March 1830 His full name is usually given as Heinrich Wilhelm Adolf or Adolph Graf Count von Kalckreuth but he was also known as Hans Wilhelm Adolf or Adolph Graf von Kalckreuth He was a Prussian diplomat and author He wrote books on taxation law and on various philosophical topics including the philosophy of law For a list of some of his writings see https www worldcat org wcidentities viaf 269163381 Elon Amos The pity of it all A portrait of the German Jewish Epoch 1743 1933 Picador A metropolitan book NY Henry Holt and Company 2002 p 59 Maimon Solomon Solomon Maimon An autobiography Introduction by Michael Shapiro Translated by J Clark Murray Urbana University of Illinois Press 2001 Kant Immanuel Correspondence Translated and edited by A Zweig Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1999 pp 311 311 Further reading EditAtlas Samuel From Critical to Speculative Idealism The Philosophy of Solomon Maimon The Hague Martinus Nijhoff 1965 Bergmann Samuel Hugo The Philosophy of Salomon Maimon Translated from the Hebrew by Noah J Jacobs Jerusalem The Magnes Press 1967 Herrera Hugo Eduardo Salomon Maimon s Commentary on the Subject of the Given in Immanuel Kant s Critique of Pure Reason in The Review of Metaphysics 63 3 2010 pp 593 613 Elon Amos The pity of it all A portrait of the German Jewish Epoch 1743 1933 Picador A metropolitanan book NY Henry Holt and Company 2002 pp 54 59 External links Edit Media related to Salomon Maimon at Wikimedia Commons Thielke Peter Melamed Yitzhak Y Salomon Maimon In Zalta Edward N ed Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Entry from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Salomon Maimon Society Works by Solomon Maimon at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Salomon Maimon at Internet Archive Spinozism Acosmism and Hasidism Session with prof Yitzhak Y Melamed and Dr Jose Maria Sanchez de Leon at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Salomon Maimon amp oldid 1140506426, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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