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STRIVING TO BE HUMAN by Rabbi Leah Cohen Tenenbaum

STRIVING TO BE HUMAN

Jewish Perspectives on Twenty-First-Century Challenges

edited by Rabbi Leah Cohen Tenenbaum & Rabbi Douglas Kohn

Pub Date: Dec. 1st, 2025
ISBN: 9780881236682
Publisher: Central Conference of American Rabbis Press

Tenenbaum and Kohn edit an impressive anthology of essays that address contemporary ethical challenges through Jewish perspectives.

This new publication of the CCAR Press, the publication arm of the professional association of Reform rabbis, touches on a range of issues, from the philosophical, such as why morality is needed in addition to law in order to have a functional society, to the specific, like addressing issues ranging from reproductive technology and artificial intelligence. In probing these issues through the lens of what it means to be human, this book includes a particularly challenging essay regarding the traditional hierarchy of human life over animal life, and how people can avoid, or at least minimize, the exploitation of animals in their daily lives—something that seems more feasible in an age when there are so many alternatives to animal-based products. One of the most intriguing and hopeful works in this collection includes one on artificial intelligence, which both demystifies and lays out what AI’s real hazards are (“We have already ceded much of our agency to artificial intelligence, and we haven’t even noticed,” writes rabbi Geoffrey A. Mitelman), and another on changing communications technologies, which lays out their rewards, as well as their risks. This book features many thought-provoking essays, and most do a skillful job of making abstruse issues intelligible, although some work better than others. One essay, for instance, uses queer theory to reinterpret the biblical ben sorer u’moreh (wayward and rebellious son); it makes a good effort to address a troubling biblical passage, but ends up sounding forced in its conclusions. Also, the afterword seems like odd placement for the summary of the book’s chapters, which would have worked better as an introduction.

A thoughtful and accessible compilation that provides religious perspectives on many contemporary ethical issues.