John D. Brey
Well-Known Member
Yet you have yet to explain why the American citizenship laws are reasonable and logical and the Jewish identity laws are unreasonable and illogical. You keep dodging this point. As though if you keep claiming that Jews are the only illogical entities in the universe, that will somehow make the statement true, regardless whether you actually explain it or not.
German identity means you're associated in some logical or rational way to the land of Germany. Jewish identity does not mean you're associated with the land of Palestine since not only are most modern Jews not really associated with Palestine, but, more importantly, Israel became a nation before they even possessed a national plot of land to relate to.
Germans didn't become German and then take over a plot of land in the middle of western Europe and name it after the name of their identity. Israel did. That's a fundamental distinction. Germans are named after the land. Israel is named after the people. That's a fundamental distinction.
In the original thread that became the original essay (btw I just posted the addendum to that essay from the recent dialogues here) I noted a parallel relationship between Jewish monotheism and Jewish identity itself. Jewish monotheism is aniconic, and meontological, meaning there's no material representation of the Jewish God; and that descriptions of his essence must essentially be negative (i.e., describing him not by what he is, but what he is not). This meontological-negativity is symbolized for instance by writing "God" as "G-d," implying that even the label cannot materialize any real essence of the Jewish G-d.
Since Jewish identity is tied up in the Jewish God, and is not really a garden variety identity like German, or French, it can be shown that there's a "spiritual kernel" to Jewish identity that's not logical, or rational, but rather, meontological, just like the identity of the Jewish God whose identity is what gives legitimacy to Jewish identity.
John