Öz
Monotheistic Judaism, which emphasizes more concrete, more mundane and more rational arguments among the divine religions, explains the basic elements of religion, including the corpus of scriptures, in reconciliation with ethnic reason, while the Talmud / Rabbinic tradition interprets this corpus in order to convince the rational evidence in accordance with the philosophical world of their time it used it to reinforce the dogmatic nature of faith.In later periods, the Jewish religious reason, which entered into syncretism with newly emerged modern philosophical currents, gained a multidimensional intellectual form and pursued a dynamically rationalized tradition in cult and intellectual community typologies such as Reformist, Orthodox, Conservative, Reconstructionist and Renewal, even the Haskala Movement, based on the arguments of modernity. Lastly, The postmodern Jewish mind, on the other hand, tends towards more multi-cultural understandings, more complicated and mixed, even pluralist theologies, aims to infiltrate to the "multiple, short-lived, worlds of mentality built by local histories, thereby leaving its traditional abstractive and elite sacred idea of liberation history in order to give rise to more ethnic sacrednesses.