Arithmetic, Policy, and the Interpretive Afterlife: Zionism as a Case in Structural Philosophy

A British imperial commission proposes splitting Palestine in 1937. Jewish leaders across bitter ideological divides — Labor socialists, Revisionist maximalists, diplomatic moderates — submit responses that converge on one requirement: the new state must contain a Jewish majority. The question was never whether. It was how, and how fast. I. Most arguments about Zionism are … Continue reading Arithmetic, Policy, and the Interpretive Afterlife: Zionism as a Case in Structural Philosophy