Title page of the anonymously-published first edition of Sefer Ḥeshbon Ha-nefesh, Lemberg/Lviv, 1808
1843 edition of Sefer Ḥeshbon Ha-nefesh handwritten in Eastern Europe
Benjamin Franklin’s Influence on Mussar Thought and Practice: a Chronicle of Misapprehension
Review of Rabbinic Judaism 22:2 (September 2019), pp. 228–276
Benjamin Franklin’s ideas and writings may be said to have had an impact on Jewish thought and practice. This influence occurred posthumously, primarily through his Autobiography and by way of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Lefin’s Sefer Cheshbon ha-Nefesh (Book of Spiritual Accounting, 1808), which introduced Franklin’s method for moral perfection to a Hebrew-reading Jewish audience.
This historical development has confused Judaic scholars, and Franklin specialists have been largely oblivious to it. Remedying the record on this matter illustrates how even within the presumably insular world of Eastern European rabbinic Judaism — far from the deism of the trans-Atlantic Enlightenment — pre-Reform, pre-Conservative Jewish religion was affected by broader currents of thought.