“My Thoughts Are (Not) Your Thoughts.” Transposed Second-Order Thinking in the Hebrew Bible

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/1013-8471/4217

Keywords:

Hebrew Bible, Second-order thinking, Greek Philosophy,

Abstract

Following 19th-century distinctions between Hellenism and Hebraism, many popular 20th-century histories of Western philosophy assigned the intellectual world of the Hebrew Bible to a twilight zone between late mythological and early philosophical ways of thinking. Partly in response to this, research in Semitic languages during that time began to include comparative-linguistic arguments hoping to demonstrate radical structural incommensurability between Hebrew and Greek ways of thinking. In the latest trend in the associated research, a multi-disciplinary dialogue has been initiated on the subject of “second-order thinking†within the ancient Near East “before†or “outside†Greek philosophy. In this article, the author aims to contribute to the ongoing discussion by suggesting that Biblical Hebrew as religious language already presupposes an intricate variety of transposed second-order thinking.

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Author Biography

Jaco Gericke, North-West University Faculty of Theology Ancient Texts, Contexts and Reception

Old Testament, Associate Research Professor

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Published

2018-10-24

How to Cite

Gericke, Jaco. 2018. ““My Thoughts Are (Not) Your Thoughts.” Transposed Second-Order Thinking in the Hebrew Bible”. Journal for Semitics 27 (1):16 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/1013-8471/4217.

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Section

Articles
Received 2018-04-19
Accepted 2018-07-11
Published 2018-10-24