Home History Epistemology in the Biblical Tradition – Judean Knowledge-Building, Scribal Craftsmanship, and Scribal Culture
Chapter Open Access

Epistemology in the Biblical Tradition – Judean Knowledge-Building, Scribal Craftsmanship, and Scribal Culture

  • Jeffrey L. Cooley
View more publications by transcript Verlag
Finding, Inheriting or Borrowing?
This chapter is in the book Finding, Inheriting or Borrowing?
© 2019 transcript Verlag

© 2019 transcript Verlag

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter 1
  2. CONTENT 5
  3. Preface and Acknowledgements 9
  4. The Construction and Transfer of Knowledge in the Pre-Modern Era 13
  5. SECTION 1: METHODOLOGICAL AND THEORETICAL ASPECTS
  6. Transmitting Symbolic Concepts from the Perspective of Cultural Cognition – The Acquisition and Transfer of Folk-biological Knowledge 41
  7. The Transfer of Knowledge from Mesopotamia to Egypt 71
  8. Epistemology in the Biblical Tradition – Judean Knowledge-Building, Scribal Craftsmanship, and Scribal Culture 99
  9. Bodies of Texts, Bodies of Tradition – Medical Expertise and Knowledge of the Body among Rabbinic Jews in Late Antiquity 123
  10. The Reception and Rejection of “Foreign” Astronomical Knowledge in Byzantium 167
  11. SECTION 2: OF MAN AND MOON – KNOWLEDGE AND CULTURAL MEANING OF THE MOON
  12. “He assigned Him as the Jewel of the night” – The Knowledge of the Moon in Mesopotamian Texts of the Late Second and First Millennia BCE 187
  13. Shapeshifter – Knowledge of the Moon in Graeco-Roman Egypt 213
  14. Concepts Concerning the Moon in Plutarch’s De facie in orbe lunae – Found, Inherited, or Borrowed Ideas 253
  15. Conclusion – Of Moon and Men: Observations about the Knowledge of the Moon in Antiquity 279
  16. SECTION 3: THE END OF THE WORLD IN FIRE – IMAGINATIONS FROM ANTIQUITY TO THE MIDDLE AGES
  17. Know Your Sources Before You Argue – Minucius Felix and Augustine of Hippo on the Conflagration 289
  18. The Idea of an Apocalyptic Fire According to the Old and Middle Iranian Sources 313
  19. Poets, Prophets, and Philosophers – The End of the World According to Otto von Freising 343
  20. The Ragnarǫk Myth in Scandinavia – Finding, Inheriting, and Borrowing 365
  21. Conclusion – The End of the World in Fire 385
  22. About the Authors 391
  23. Authors and Texts Cited 395
  24. General index 403
Downloaded on 21.10.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783839442364-005/html?lang=en
Scroll to top button