Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-tj2md Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-20T04:45:58.156Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Introduction

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 November 2010

Leo Corry
Affiliation:
Tel Aviv University and University of California, San Diego
Tal Golan
Affiliation:
Tel Aviv University and University of California, San Diego

Extract

The history of Israeli science and technology offers a unique case study of a young and small nation that has developed an unprecedented love affair with science and technology. Unlike other nineteenth-century ideologies, Zionism was never considered to be founded on science. Nevertheless, from the very start, the Zionist movement perceived the sciences, pure and applied, as central to its program of creating a new Jewish society in the Land of Israel (Funkenstein [1985] 2003). Modern science was to provide twice for the Jews: a relief from their suffocating religion and the tools needed to recover their ancient land from its ruins. Israel would remain the people of the book, but it would be the Book of Nature, not of God, that would set it free. Sharing the universal knowledge and values of science with mankind, the Jews would finally become both normal and self-determined. Thus, already in the nineteenth century, long before the State of Israel was founded, Zionist visionaries had dreamt of it as a modern version of Francis Bacon's utopian Kingdom of Bensalem, where science and technology would provide health, wealth, and power (Elboim-Dror 1993; Herzl 1902).

Type
Introduction
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Davidovitch, Nadav and Shvarts, Shifra. 2003. “Immigration, Health and the Israeli Melting Pot.” Iyunim 13:181–20 (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Davidovitch, Nadav and Shvarts, Shifra. 2005. “Health and Zionist Ideology: Medical Selection of Jewish European Immigrants to Palestine.” In Facing Illness in Troubled Times. Health in Europe in the Interwar Years, 1918–1939, edited by Borowy, Iris and Gruner, Wolf D., 409424. Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang Verlag.Google Scholar
Davidovitch, Nadav and Seidelman, Rona. 2004. “Herzl's Altneuland: Zionist Utopia, Medical Science and Public Health.” Korot: The Israel Journal of the History of Medicine and Science 17:120.Google Scholar
Efron, Noah. 2007. Judaism & Science: An Historical Introduction. Westport CT and London: Greenwood Press.Google Scholar
Elboim-Dror, Rachel. 1993. Yesterday's Tomorrow: The Zionist Utopia. 2 vols. Jerusalem: Yad Ben-Zvi 1:160166 (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Falk, Raphael. 2006. Zionism and the Biology of the Jews. Tel Aviv: Resling (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Funkenstein, Amos. [1985] 2003. “Zionism and Science: Three Aspects.” In Spirit of the Time: A Collection of Lectures in Memory of Dr. Haim Weizmann, edited by Shapira, Anita, 718. Rehovot: Yad Weizmann.Google Scholar
Funkenstein, Amos. 1993. “Zionism, Science, and History.” In Perceptions of Jewish History, edited by Funkenstein, Amos, 338350. Berkeley: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Golan, Tal, ed. 2004. “Science, Technology and Israeli Society.” Israel Studies 9 (2).Google Scholar
Herzl, Theodor. 1902. Altneuland. Leipzig.Google Scholar
Katz, Shaul. 1986. “Sociological Aspects of the Growth of Knowledge and Its Circulation in Agriculture in Israel: The Rise of Extra-Scientific Systems for the Production of Agricultural Knowledge 1880–1940.” Ph.D. diss., Hebrew University in Jerusalem (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Katz, Shaul. 1997a. “Pure Science’ in a National University: The Einstein Institute of Mathematics and Other Research Institutes at the Hebrew University during its Formative Years.” In The History of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem: Origins and Beginnings, edited by Katz, Shaul and Heyd, Michael, 397456. Jerusalem: Magnes (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Katz, Shaul. 1997b. “On the Technological History of Palestine in the Late Ottoman Period: Three Case Studies.” In The Second Aliya: Studies, edited by Bartal, Israel, 189212. Jerusalem: Yad Ben-Zvi (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Katz, Shaul. 2004. “Berlin Roots – Zionist Incarnation: The Ethos of Pure Mathematics and the Beginnings of the Einstein Institute of Mathematics at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.” Science in Context 17:199234.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Katz, Shaul and Ben-David, Joseph. 1975. “Scientific Research and Agricultural Innovation in Israel.” Minerva 13 (2):152182.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Katz, Shaul and Heyd, Michael, eds. 1997. The History of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem: Origins and Beginnings. Jerusalem: Magnes (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Kirsh, Nurit. 2003. “Population Genetics in Israel in the 1950s: The Unconscious Internalization of Ideology.” Isis 94:631655.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kirsh, Nurit. 2003–2004. “Physicians in the Young State of Israel: Putting Jewish Migration into Its Historic Perspective.” Korot 17:7196 (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Kirsh, Nurit. 2004. “Geneticist Elisabeth Goldschmidt: A Twofold Pioneering Story.” Israel Studies 9 (2):71105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Penslar, Derek J. 1991. Zionism and Technocracy: The Engineering of Jewish Settlement in Palestine, 1870–1918. Bloomington and Indianapolis; Indiana University Press. (Hebrew version, 2001).Google Scholar
Shvarts, Shifra. 1997. Kupat Holim Ha-Clalit 1911–1937. Beer-Sheva: Ben Gurion University Press (Hebrew).Google Scholar
Shvarts, Shifra. 2000. Kupat Holim, Histadrut, Memshala 1947–1960. Beer-Sheva: Ben Gurion University Press (Hebrew).Google Scholar