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發表於 2005-7-3 12:00 PM
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Gretzky兄,
a)Most of my readings are on secondary sources...one of my favourite scholar's work on the Pentateuch is David Clines's Theme of the Pentateuch. You can find bookreviews on his position on the documentary hypothesis. 啱啱睇0左David Clines既一篇文﹐暫時覺得佢既觀點幾平衡﹐唔會嚴重偏袒任何一方。下面我引用0左幾段有關佢觀點同主張既例子。(註:我會將我覺得有point既部份highlight in Bold同Italics。原文係冇既)
取自于: http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/academ ... /IntParties9God.pdf
David J.A. Clines, Interested Parties: The Ideology of Writers and Readers of the
Hebrew Bible (Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Supplement Series, 205;
Gender, Culture, Theory, 1; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1995), pp. 187-211.They themselves, readings against the grain of the text, go against the grain also of the central tradition in biblical scholarship, which has generally striven for a harmonizing and unifying depiction of the character of the deity in the Old Testament, one indeed that maximizes the compatibility of the portrait with that of the God of the New Testament and of Christian theology. The God of the Pentateuch is a complex and mysterious character, passionate and dynamic but by no means conformable to human notions of right behaviour. He is not very lovable, but he must be obeyed. He has his plans, but they are not infrequently deflected. He does not do very much explaining, and he relates to people mostly by a system of threats and promises. He has his favourites, and he is fiercely loyal to them. He is hard to please. Reading against the grain implies that there is a grain. It implies that texts have designs on their readers and wish to persuade them of something or other. It implies that there are ideologies inscribed in texts and that the readers implied by texts share the texts’ ideologies. But, as I have suggested earlier, readers are free to resist the ideologies of texts, and, what is more, texts themselves sometimes provoke readers into resisting them by manifesting tensions immanent within the texts themselves. All the same, there is no obligation to resist, nothing wrong in adopting the ideology of one’s text. All that is wrong is not knowing and admitting that that is what you are doing or not permitting other people to resist the ideology of the text. 至于佢對documentary hypothesis既主張﹐我暫時未揾到source。請問你有冇網址介紹佢呢方面既觀點?I am assuming your view of the Christian God (or all gods) is that they are falliable and subject to the scrutiny of science and rational thinking, right? 係。hmm...may i ask whether you believe in absolute truth at all? 睇0下你"絕對真相"既定義係乜啦。你問我信唔信已經假設0左:
1)有"絕對真相"呢樣嘢。
2)大家都知道"絕對真相"係乜嘢。
3)"絕對真相"同"現實世界"有唔同(如果唔係就唔使諗多呢個字眼出嚟啦)。
4)"絕對真相"係可以或者需要信既(而唔係睇﹐聽﹐聞﹐食﹐諗既)。
你既問題引導性好強噃! But not having answers doesn't mean there is no absolute truth. And that's why I would keep seeking. 你0甘講以經假設0左有"絕對真相"啦。
全世界人都冇見過飛馬Pegasus唔代表冇﹐不如你尋求真相既時候幫我順便揾埋。May I ask what is your ontology? 如果我有權唔答既話你即管問啦! 哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈!
你假設0左我有存在本體論。我都唔知我有冇。。。
不如我0甘答你啦:
講真﹐我唔知我點解喺度﹐我甚至唔敢肯定我真係喺度。不過﹐既然我既五官話我知我"好似喺度"﹐0甘不如就喺呢段"好似喺度"既時間做0的"好似有建設性 "同"好似會開心"既事。記得冇錯既話﹐我0甘諗應該係存在主義(Existentialism)﹐不過我某程度上又認同宿命論 (Determinism)﹐而我又覺得佛教(Buddhism)同道教(Taoism)既理論都好有道理﹐再加上我認為儒家(Confucius)同墨家(Mo-tze)既思想都有好多可取之處。你可唔可以話俾我知我既ontology係乜?:cool: |
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