“Faith, Reason, Politics: Essays in the History of Jewish Thought brings together several penetrating studies of the relationship between faith and reason in the history of Jewish thought. Gottlieb writes with rigor and cogency about the medieval thinkers Judah Halevi and Moses Maimonides and the modern tradition beginning with Baruch Spinoza and Moses Mendelssohn, and highlights the diversity and complexity of approaches to the relationship between reason, faith, morality, mysticism, and religious practice. The essays offer probing and novel analyses and methodological insights; the volume ends with a passionate defense of the contemporary significance of religious rationalism. Gottlieb’s historical and philosophical investigations are astute, his writing lucid and engaging. The volume is a superb contribution to the analysis of the Jewish philosophical tradition.”—Diana Lobel, Boston University|"With Faith and Freedom: Moses Mendelssohn's Theological Political Thought, Michah Gottieb has established himself as a top scholar of modern Jewish philosophy. The current collection of essays is another superb contribution to the field."—Yitzhak Y. Melamed, Johns Hopkins University|“This is an excellent collection of essays by a learned and perceptive young scholar. Michah Gottlieb's insights into the relation between medieval and modern Jewish philosophy are fascinating and thought-provoking.”—Warren Zev Harvey, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem