Historiography and Hermeneutics in Jesus Studies: An Examinaiton of the Work of John Dominic Crossan and Ben F. MeyerBloomsbury Publishing, 1 mag 2004 - 248 pagine This work identifies two distinct methodological approaches in Jesus studies, as represented by the work of two prominent historical Jesus scholars, Dominic Crossan and Ben Meyer. Crossan's work is the apotheosis of a venerable approach centered on "tradition criticism." Meyer offered a critique of this approach in the form of a historiographic "holism." This work brings Meyer's proposals to light in a sharp comparison with the historiographic assumptions he criticized. It goes beyond Meyer, recognizing the full significance of narrativity in historical method. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 63
Pagina 19
... simply 'out there'. Exploration of these musings is deferred by historiographic first things. After the Preface in which he comments on the parabolic nature of reality, Crossan begins the first chapter by situating his study squarely ...
... simply 'out there'. Exploration of these musings is deferred by historiographic first things. After the Preface in which he comments on the parabolic nature of reality, Crossan begins the first chapter by situating his study squarely ...
Pagina 33
... simply present in and of themselves, but are present only in relation to what they are not (diflérance), opposing terms carry in themselves traces of each other, just as they carry traces of all other things that they are not.55 ...
... simply present in and of themselves, but are present only in relation to what they are not (diflérance), opposing terms carry in themselves traces of each other, just as they carry traces of all other things that they are not.55 ...
Pagina 37
... simply language genuflecting before Israel's aniconic God... What does it do to the human imagination to imagine an unimaginable God? Is it possible to proclaim figural aniconicity and still assert linguistic iconicity? Must not ...
... simply language genuflecting before Israel's aniconic God... What does it do to the human imagination to imagine an unimaginable God? Is it possible to proclaim figural aniconicity and still assert linguistic iconicity? Must not ...
Pagina 44
... simply bracketed his interest in the historical Jesus. Transmissional analysis is always done with an eye to the historical Jesus, inasmuch as analysis of how traditions are handled in transmission assumes an original version of the ...
... simply bracketed his interest in the historical Jesus. Transmissional analysis is always done with an eye to the historical Jesus, inasmuch as analysis of how traditions are handled in transmission assumes an original version of the ...
Pagina 45
... simply a necessary tradition-critical move at this stage in Crossan's work. His previous work on parables could handle parabolic material by means of tradition criticism with little concern for identification of something like a ...
... simply a necessary tradition-critical move at this stage in Crossan's work. His previous work on parables could handle parabolic material by means of tradition criticism with little concern for identification of something like a ...
Sommario
1 | |
17 | |
Part II BEN MEYER AND CRITICAL REALISM | 79 |
FROM HOLISM TO NARRATIVE INTELLIGIBILITY | 153 |
Bibliography | 226 |
Index of References | 237 |
Index of Authors | 238 |
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Historiography and Hermeneutics in Jesus Studies: An Examinaiton of the Work ... Donald L. Denton Anteprima limitata - 2004 |
Historiography and Hermeneutics in Jesus Studies: An Examinaiton of the Work ... Donald L. Denton Anteprima limitata - 2004 |
Historiography and Hermeneutics in Jesus Studies: An Examinaiton of the Work ... Donald L. Denton Anteprima non disponibile - 2004 |
Parole e frasi comuni
actions Aims analysis answers application approach attestation authentic beginning called cognitional complexes concern considered consistent context continues course criteria criterion Critical Realism Crossan described determine discussion dissimilarity distinct early eschatology established evidence experience explanation expressed fact first followed formulation give given Gospels hermeneutic historian historical investigation historical Jesus historiography horizons human hypothesis important individual intentions interpretation involves issues Jesus studies judgement knowing knowledge known language later limited Lonergan material meaning method methodological Meyer narrative nature noted notion object observation offers operations original parables parallel particular past position possible present Press principle problem Quest questions reality reason reference reflects relation requires role says sciences seems seen sense significant similar simply social sources specific structure Testament theological theory things tion tradition true understanding University versions Wright