<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><item href="/philosophy/people/martin-yaffe.html" dsn="people"><first_name>Martin</first_name><last_name>Yaffe</last_name><prefixes/><pronouns/><post_nominals/><title-1>Professor</title-1><title-2/><title-3/><title-4/><department>Philosophy and Religion</department><type>Faculty</type><email>Martin.Yaffe@unt.edu</email><phone>940-565-2266</phone><image><img src="/philosophy/images/philosophy.unt.edu/files/images/people/photos/yaffe_0_0.gif" alt="Martin Yaffe"/></image><office>ENV 310N</office><address/><office-hours/><types><type>Faculty</type></types><departments><department>Philosophy and Religion</department></departments><main-content>UNT Faculty Profile

Ph.D., Claremont Graduate School (1968)

MARTIN D. YAFFE, Professor of Philosophy and Religion, earned a B.A. from University of Toronto and a Ph.D. from Claremont Graduate University. He has taught at University of North Texas since 1968, and at Tel Aviv University in 1971-72. His research interests include political philosophy and Jewish thought. His book publications include: Shylock and the Jewish Question (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997); Leo Strauss on Moses Mendelssohn (University of Chicago Press, 2012); Judaism and Environmental Ethics: A Reader (Lexington Books, 2001); and a translation of Benedict Spinoza's Theologico-Political Treatise of 1670 (Focus Philosophical Library/Hackett, 2004), the philosophical founding document of both modern scientific biblical criticism and modern liberal democracy. He is currently at work on a translation (from the Latin) of Francis Bacon's New Organon of 1620, the philosophical founding document of modern science and technology; and a co-translation (from the German) of Gotthold Ephraim Lessing's Nathan the Wise of 1779, a dramatic probing of the question of religious toleration.</main-content></item><!-- Migrated using XML Migration 2024-04-25 14:46:32 -->