<p>For more than two thousand years, philosophers and theologians have wrestled with the irreconcilable opposition between Greek rationality (Athens) and biblical revelation (Jerusalem). In <em>Athens and Jersusalem,</em> Lev Shestov¿an inspiration for the French existentialists and the foremost interlocutor of Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, and Martin Buber during the interwar years¿makes the gripping confrontation between these symbolic poles of ancient wisdom his philosophical testament, an argumentative and stylistic tour de force.</p><p>Although the Russian-born Shestov is little known in the Anglophone world today, his writings influenced many twentieth-century European thinkers, such as Albert Camus, D. H. Lawrence, Thomas Mann, Czeslaw Milosz, and Joseph Brodsky. <em>Athens and Jerusalem</em> is Shestov¿s final, groundbreaking work on the philosophy of religion from an existential perspective. This new, annotated edition of Bernard Martin¿s classic translation adds reference