RT Article T1 Modern Shia Islamic and Jewish Political Theosophy: An Elective Affinity? JF Religions VO 14 IS 2 A1 Tzfadya, Ezra David LA English PB MDPI YR 2023 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1832641392 AB The present study will focus on core parallels and nodes of theopolitical exchange between the two most politically and theologically consequential jurist “theosophers” of the twentieth century, the Religious Zionist founding father, the Jewish Rav Avraham Yitzchak Hacohen Kook (1865–1935), and the Shia Islamic Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini (1900–1989). Unquestioned masters of the tradition of both medieval philosophy and mysticism, as well as the theosophies of the early-modern and modern eras, both Kook and Khomeini attempted to embed the rhetoric of theosophy within revolutionary notions of both clerical religious authority and the necessity of their respective nomoi to assume political form. The study will also correlate contemporary Shia reformist theosophies undergirded with anti-theocratic exoteric postures with pre-WW2 German-Jewish “existence philosophies” as represented by Franz Rosenzweig, noting a common appreciation for what the study will term “theopolitical risk”. It argues that the retrieval of medieval Judeo-Islamic political philosophy for the successful negotiation of reason and revelation in modernity against both theocratic juridical extremism and the iron cages of positivistic-realist secularism must be rethought in light of the theopolitics coursing through Iran and Israel, two states at the geographic periphery though fully within the horizons of the Modern West. K1 Leo Strauss K1 Islamic Philosophy K1 Jewish Philosophy K1 Rosenzweig K1 Soroush K1 Khomeini K1 Rav Kook K1 Zionism K1 Shia Islam K1 Islam K1 Judaism K1 Theosophy K1 LEGAL PHILOSOPHY K1 Political Philosophy K1 Political Theology DO 10.3390/rel14020176