id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 14657 Bentwich, Norman Philo-Judæus of Alexandria .txt text/plain 68239 3732 68 Greek culture, and Philo finds a symbol of their place in life in the world's wisdom at Alexandria in his day; and Philo, like the other nations should go up there together, to do worship to the One God. Sparse as are the direct proofs of Philo's connection with Palestinian intellect, the works of Philo, like the rest of the Hellenistic-Jewish interpretation of Jewish law for the Greek world, and also an ideal the day he sets the law of life that God revealed to His greatest Philo's life-aim, as we have seen,[187] was to see God in all things philosophical treatment of Jewish tradition, just as Philo's legal Jewish conception of man's relation to God. The religious preconceptions of Philo drew him to Plato above all philosophy was banned from Jewish thought, and Philo's works are not world Philo was "the Jew"; to his own people, "the Alexandrian." Greek philosophers, Philo's relation to, 48, 52; ./cache/14657.txt ./txt/14657.txt