Dana Hollander is an associate professor in the Department of Religious Studies at McMaster University.
Dana Hollander's superb book demonstrates the brilliance of the German-Jewish philosopher Hermann Cohen and his importance to contemporary debates about the relationship between law and ethics, Judaism and Christianity, stranger and neighbor, tolerance and love, self and society, and politics and religion. As one of the most interesting recent books in the field of Jewish thought, this is also one of the most important. - Susannah Heschel, Eli M. Black Distinguished Professor of Jewish Studies, Dartmouth College, and author of Abraham Geiger and the Jewish Jesus In this meticulously researched work, Dana Hollander shows to just what extent Hermann Cohen's theory of ethics emerges out of the law rather than more customary notions, such as rational insight or inner conviction. It is the law, she argues, that permitted Cohen to understand the genesis of ethics. It is a complex undertaking, one that she handles with aplomb, showing what connects and what disjoins Cohen's systematic philosophical writings and his 'Jewish writings.' - Aaron W. Hughes, Philip S. Bernstein Professor of Jewish Studies, University of Rochester Ethics Out of Law is a meticulous meditation on the relationship between law and ethics as it emerges from the work of Hermann Cohen. One of the virtues of this book is the nuanced interplay of historical contextualization and philosophical speculation. I am confident that this book will be of interest to philosophers as well as to scholars of religion and Jewish studies. - Elliot R. Wolfson, Marsha and Jay Glazer Endowed Chair in Jewish Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara