- Bahyā ibn Pāqudā (Bahya ben
Joseph ibn
Pakuda, Pekudah, Bakuda; Judeo-Arabic: בחיי אבן פקודה, Arabic: بهية بن فاقودا), c. 1050–1120, was a
Jewish philosopher...
- Love of God is
accentuated as the
highest incentive of
action by Baḥya ibn
Paḳuda, in "Ḥobot ha-Lebabot" (see Jew. Encyc. ii. 454). In
Duties of the Heart...
-
Jewish philosophy in the
Middle Ages By
Colette Sirat "Bahya Ben
Joseph Ibn
Paḳuda". JewishEncyclopedia.com.
Retrieved 2012-10-22. Or Adonai, ch. i. Stroumsa...
- l'Ame de Baḥya ben
Joseph ibn
Pakuda," Paris, 1894 "Torat ha-Nefesh": "Réflexions sur l'Ame de Baḥya ben
Joseph ibn
Pakuda,"
translated from the Arabic...
- philosophy:
Philo Isaac Israeli Emunot v'Dayyot
Guide to the
Perplexed Bachya ibn
Pakuda Sefer ha-Ikkarim Book of the Wars of the Lord Or
Adonai Jewish mysticism...
-
Moreh Nebukim of
Moses Maimonides and the Ḥobot ha-Lebabot of Baḥya ibn
Paḳuda, and
especially his
large Hebrew commentary to the
whole Bible, evidence...
-
recourse to the
parable to
illustrate their meaning, such as
Bachya ibn
Pakuda in his "Chovot ha-Levavot –
Duties of the heart" (ii. 6, iii. 9), Judah...
-
leading philosophers of the
period are Ibn
Gabirol (Avicebron) and
Bahya ibn
Pakuda — the
former standing upon a
purely philosophical platform, the
latter upon...
-
philosophical work,
wherein he
develops on the
works of
Saadia Gaon,
Bahya ibn
Pakuda, and
Solomon ibn Gabirol.
Berechiah was also the
author of an
ethical treatise...
- Journal.
April 12, 1973. p. 7 – via Newspapers.com.
Bahya Ben
Joseph Ibn
Pakuda (1973). The Book of
Direction to the
Duties of the Heart.
Translated by...