•
Iggeret Hanhagat ha-Guf we ha-Nefesh, a treatise in verse on the control of the body and the soul. •
Ẓeri ha-Yagon, on resignation and fortitude under misfortune.
Cremona, 1550. •
Iggeret ha-Wikkuaḥ, a dialogue between an orthodox Jew and a philosopher on the harmony of philosophy and religion, being an attempt to prove that not only the
Bible, but even the
Talmud, is in perfect accord with philosophy.
Prague, 1810. •
Reshit Ḥokhmah, treating of moral duties (and giving the so-called "ethical epistles" of
Aristotle), of the sciences, and of the necessity of studying philosophy. In this Shem-Ṭob treats of the philosophy of Aristotle and
Plato. This and the preceding work have been translated into
Latin (Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, MS. Latin, No. 6691A). • ''Sefer ha-Ma'alot'', on the different degrees of human perfection; ed. L. Venetianer, 1891. •
Ha-Mebaḳḳesh, a survey of human knowledge in the form of a dialogue in rimed prose interspersed with verse. This work is a remodeling of the
Reshit Ḥokmah.
Amsterdam, 1779. •
Sefer ha-Nefesh, a psychological treatise according to the Arabian
Peripatetics, especially
Avicenna, inspired by
Tagmulé ha-Nefesh by
Hillel of Verona.
Brody, 1835. •
Moreh ha-Moreh, commentary on the philosophical part of the
Moreh Nebukim (Guide to the Perplexed) of
Maimonides, with an appendix containing corrections of the Hebrew translation of
Samuel ibn Tibbon.
Presburg, 1837. • Letter in defense of the
Moreh Nebukim, which had been attacked by several French rabbis; published in the ''Minḥat Ḳena'ot''.
Presburg, 1838. • Extracts from
Ibn Gabirol's
Meḳor Ḥayyim, published by
Solomon Munk in his
Mélanges de Philosophie Juive et Arabe.
Paris, 1859. • ''De'ot ha-Filusufim'', containing Aristotle's
Physics and Metaphysics according to
Ibn Roshd's interpretations (Steinschneider,
Cat. Hebr. MSS. Leyden, No. 20). •
Iggeret ha-Musar, a compilation of ethical sentences (comp.
Orient, Lit. 1879, p. 79). •
Megillat ha-Zikkaron, a historical work, no longer in existence, quoted in the
Mebaḳḳesh. •
Iggeret ha-Ḥalom, a treatise on
dreams, mentioned in
Moreh ha-Moreh, iii, ch. 19, p. 131. ==Jewish Encyclopedia bibliography==