Two Kinds of Intelligence
To be fully
educated and human we must study a range of disciplines--humanities and
sciences, secular and Judaic.
By Rabbi Bradley Shavit Artson
The following article
is reprinted with permission from University of
Judaism.
Pharaoh has endured a night of
terrible dreams. To make matters worse, neither he nor any of his ministers
understood what the dreams were about. The only person able to interpret those
dreams is a Hebrew prisoner in an Egyptian jail. That person is Joseph.
After hearing the dreams described,
Joseph announced that Egypt would enjoy seven years of plenty, followed by
seven years of universal famine. In advance, Joseph argues that Pharaoh should
appoint someone "navon ve-hakham,"
discerning and sage, who will store enough food to ensure the survival of the
population.
Why did Joseph use both words,
discerning and sage? Wouldn't either one have sufficed to describe what type of
person was needed? Our traditions regard each word of the Torah as necessary.
Any apparent redundancy must be there to teach a specific lesson. Each of these
words, our Rabbis taught, refers to two different kinds of knowledge.
Rabbi Moses ben Nahman, the Ramban (13th Century Spain) comments
that the two types of knowledge apply in different spheres of learning.
"Discerning" refers to knowing "how to support the people of
Egypt from his hand with bread" and "how to accumulate wealth and
money for Pharaoh."
In other words, the first category
of knowledge pertains to social policy. A government official must understand
how to develop programs that will actually accomplish their stated goals
(without bankrupting the government in the process). Discerning, in this case,
reflects the ability to match goals with the appropriate means of achieving
those goals.
Good intentions are not enough;
nor are mere pronouncements. A vision of how to relate policy with purpose is
the key qualification for any level of leadership.
The second
category--"sage"--refers to knowledge of "how to preserve the
produce so that it should not rot." According to this standard, the
prospective bureaucrat had to know more than just how to govern. He also had to
have an expertise in his field--in this case, how to store the grain for seven
years without any loss of grain during the intervening years.
To lead a people, one must know
about more than simply power. The realities of human life--the concerns that
fill their daily schedules and plague their nights--these must be familiar to
anyone who would represent a community and seek to direct their affairs.
A broader approach to these
categories builds upon the understanding of the Ramban. The first category
applies to human learning and human structures, and the second category applies
to natural phenomena and properties. To be considered "discerning and
sage" requires education in the humanities and the social sciences, and in
the natural sciences as well. A fully educated human being must know not only
about ourselves and our communities, but also about the world around us.
A third understanding is possible
as well. Perhaps the two categories refer to the importance of both Jewish and
gentile learning. Many Jews today know the writings of Shakespeare, Freud and
Hawkings, but are unfamiliar with the works of Yehudah Ha-Levi, Moses
Maimonides and Abraham Joshua Heschel.
That form of illiteracy--ignorance
of Jewish thought and religion--limits us to an impoverished and anemic
relationship to Judaism. Similarly, to only know Jewish sources--Torah, Talmud
and Midrash--represents no less a shortcoming than not knowing them at all.
In the words of the Talmud itself,
if you only have Torah, then you don't even have Torah. Learning--both Jewish
and general, both about natural reality and about human society and
personality--is an essential ingredient in becoming fully human, in becoming
discerning and sage.
Rabbi Bradley Shavit
Artson is the Dean of the Ziegler School of Rabbinic Studies at the University
of Judaism in Los Angeles. He is the
author of The Bedside Torah: Wisdom, Dreams, & Visions (McGraw Hill). For a free subscription to his weekly email
Torah commentary, please send an email request to bartson@uj.edu.