Isaac ben Joseph ibn Pulgar
Isaac ben Joseph ibn Pulgar or Isaac ben Joseph ibn Polkar or Isaac Polqar was a Spanish Jewish philosopher, poet, and controversialist, who flourished in the first half of the fourteenth century.
Life
Where he lived is not known, for though "Avilla" is given at the end of his translation of Al-Ghazali's Maqasid, the town-name as well as the date is probably the copyist's. He was a warm defender of Isaac Albalag, and continued his translation of Al-Ghazali's-work. It seems from his Ezer ha-Dat that he had been a friend of Abner of Burgos; but when the latter, after conversion, sent him one of his anti-Jewish writings, he replied in a stinging satirical poem.Works
Ibn Pulgar wrote the following:- Hebrew translation of the third book of Al-Ghazali's Maqasid
- Ezer ha-Dat, the most important of his writings, a polemical work in five books, in the form of dialogues, and interspersed with verse;
- Iggeret ha-Ḥarfit, a refutation of Abner of Burgos' Minhat Kena'ot
- a refutation in Spanish of astrology
- verse.
Of Ezer ha-Dat, the first book, in eight chapters, is a demonstration of the superiority of the Jewish religion, in which Ibn Pulgar attacks both apostates and Christians. The second book attacks infidels and skeptics. The third attacks astrologers. The fourth attacks those who explain the Bible in a strictly literal sense and those who, like the Christians, interpret it in a figurative and allegorical sense. The fifth attacks those who do not believe in the immortality of the soul.
The second book, a dialogue between an aged partisan of Talmudic Judaism and a youthful philosopher, has been printed in Eliezer Ashkenazi's "Ta'am Zekenim". Ibn Pulgar's object here was to prove the superiority of philosophical Judaism; but his arguments are more clearly expressed in the fourth book, in which he attacks kabbalists, sorcerers, and false philosophers. His diatribes against the first two classes have been published by Isidore Loeb. The complete work was published by George S. Belasco.