This book gives you a pretty full picture of Maimonides life. At times it goes into great details about the lives of the people around him, like the prince he worked for and the political climate of the time. Overall, I liked the book but did not love it.
The following are some of my favorite excerpts of the book:
“It is also told that Maimonides’ first wife died young, and that his son, Abraham, was the offspring of a second wife. We know that he married late in life, circa 1173, when he was about thirty-five, and Abraham was born 1186, when he was forty-eight. Biographers surmise that this could not have been his first wife.” – pg. 7
“Furthermore, I suffered many well-known calamities in Egypt, including sickness, financial loss and the attempt by informers to have me killed.
The worst disaster that struck me of late, worse than anything I have ever experienced from the time I was born until this day, was the demise of that upright man (may the memory of the righteous be a blessing) [his brother David], who drowned in the Indian Ocean while in possession of much money belonging to me, to him and to others, leaving a young daughter and his widow in my care.
For about a year from the day the evil tidings reached me, I remained prostrate in bed with severe inflammation, fever and mental confusion, and well nigh perished.
From then until this day, that is, about eight years, I have been in a state of disconsolate mourning. How can I be consoled? For he was my son; he grew up upon my knees; he was my brother, my pupil. It was he who did business in the market place, earning a livelihood, while I dwelled in security.
…And were it not for the Torah, which is my delight, and for scientific matters, which let me forget my sorrow, I would have perished in my affliction [Ps. 119:92.]” – pgs. 255-256
“Moreover, the Karaites observed the Sabbath strictly, prohibiting lights in the house, heating warm food, and sexual relations. The Karaites prohibited entry into Rabbanite synagogues illuminated by lamps on the Sabbath.” – pg. 274
“The sensible course is for a man first to choose an occupation that will give him a livelihood, then buy himself a home; and after that, take a wife…” – pg. 337
“But it is beyond human mind to fathom the designs of the Creator; for our ways are not his ways, neither are our thoughts his thoughts. All these matters relating to Jesus of Nazareth and the Ishmaelite [Muhammad] who came after him, only serve to clear the way for King Messiah, to prepare the whole world to worship G-d with one accord, as it is written, At that time I will change the speech of the people to a pure speech, that all of them may call on the name of the Lord and serve him with one accord [Zeph 3:9]. Thus the messianic hope, the Torah, and the commandments have become familiar topics – topics of conversation [among the inhabitants] of the far isles and many peoples, uncircumcised of heart and flesh. They are discussing these matters and the commandments of the Torah.” – pg. 354
“Likewise, Spinoza claimed that “if men were born free, that is, guided only by reason, they would form no conception of good and evil.” Maimonides and Spinoza held that knowledge of good and evil is conventional, that it depends on the consensus of society, whereas knowledge of true and false is understanding of what is necessary.” – pg. 378
“Maimonides begins the chapter with a parable about a king in his palace and people who are at a distance from the palace or approaching it. It is a lengthy and difficult journey from the walls of the city to the center of the palace, but the reward is great when one reaches the inner sanctum of the king’s palace.
The ruler is in his palace and his subjects are within the city and outside the city. There are seven levels:” – pg. 399
[See pages 399 and 400 for details of the seven levels of acquiring wisdom or levels of growth that different people are at different times.]
“Maimonides then described his daily schedule.
I dwell in Fustat while the king resides in Cairo, and between the two places there are two Sabbath limits [400 cubits = slightly more than one mile]. I have a very difficult assignment with the king. I must see him daily at the beginning of the day. When he is weak, or when one of his sons or concubines is ill, I do not leave Cairo, and most of my day I spend in the King’s palace. And I must attend to the king’s officers every day. One or two officials is invariably ill, and I must administer their medical treatment.
In sum, every day, I go up to Cairo early in the morning, and if there is no mishap or incident, I return to Fustat after midday in any case. As soon as I arrive, in a state of hunger, I find all the vestibules [of my home] filled with gentiles, noble and common, judges and magistrates, a mixed multitude, who know the time of my return. I dismount from my riding animal, wash my hands, and go out to them to persuade them to wait for me while I have a light repast, which I do from time to time. I then go out to heal them and write [prescriptions] for them. They come in and out sometimes until night, and at times, by faith in the Torah, until the end of two hours into the night [around 8:00 pm]. I speak with them while lying down because of great fatigue. When night falls I am utterly exhausted that I cannot speak.
The result is that no Israelite can speak with me or meet with me except on the Sabbath. Then they all come after the prayer, and I direct the community concerning what they should do all week. …This is my daily schedule, and I have only told some of what you would see, with the help of G-d (may He be exalted).
In an earlier letter to Jonathan of Lunel, depicting an illness he had written:
Most of the day I lie in bed, and the yoke of the gentiles is on my neck regrading medical matters, which have sapped my strength, and have not left me one hour, neither day or night. But what can I do now that my reputation has reached most countries?” – pgs. 440-441
“But as for other compositions, such as the books of Empedocles, the books of Pythagoras, the books of Hermes, and the books of Porphyry – all these are ancient philosophers on which it is not worth wasting one’s time.
The discourse of Plato, the teacher of Aristotle, in his books and compositions, contain enigmas and parables and are also superfluous for an intelligent man; for the books of his pupil Aristotle cover all that was composed previously. His opinion – I mean to say, the opinion of Aristotle – is the ultimate of human opinion, save for those who received divine overflow, so that they attained the rank of prophecy, which is the highest rank.” – pg. 443
“Because of this, I do not find an hour for studying anything of the law, and I only study Scripture on the day of the Sabbath. As for the rest of the sciences, I do not find time to study any of them. I am deeply aggrieved by this.” – pg. 445
“Like the philosophical schools in late antiquity, Maimonides taught that a main cause of disorder and suffering were the passions, unregulated desires and exaggerated fears. Philosophy or the law is a therapeutic of the passions, a transformation of the person’s mode of seeing and being.
The training that Maimonides prescribed, like Stoic training, required exercising the soul to be unmoved by passions. The goal is a life of virtue, equanimity, and imperturbability. In living this kind of life, we are not subservient to the play of chance that affects us when we seek physical pleasure or material things, for wisdom and virtue depend upon ourselves alone.” – pg. 463