1st Edition

Philosophy, Religious Studies, and Myth Volume III

Edited By Robert A. Segal Copyright 1996
426 Pages
by Routledge

426 Pages
by Routledge

426 Pages
by Routledge

Much of the theorizing about myth in philosophy and religious studies grows out of efforts to understand the classics and the Bible. In the case of the classics, the presence of myth has been taken for granted, and conclusions reached about Greek and Roman mythology have spurred generalizations about myth. In the case of the Bible, however, the existence of myth has been contested. In fact,... Read more
Volume Introduction; Myth and Symbol in Contemporary Philosophy and Theology: The Limits of Demythologizing; The Meaning of Mythology in Relation to the Old Testament; Myth and the New Testament: The Greek Word of 1vor;; New Testament and Mythology; Judaism and the Modern Political Myths; The Mythic; The Meaning and Function of Myth in Greek and Roman Literature; The Prestige of the Cosmogonic Myth; Myth and Reality; Mythic Thought in the Ancient Near East; Sumerian Mythology: A Review Article; Greek Mythology: Some New Perspectives; Review of The Intellectual Adventure of Ancient Man: An Essay on Speculative Thought in the Ancient Near Eastern Myth and the Old Testament; Method in the Study of N ear Eastern Myths; Inside and Outside the Mouth of God: The Boundary Between Myth and Reality; The Truth of Myth; Introduction: The Symbolic Function of Myths; Myth: Some Philosophical Problems; Myth in Greek Historiography; The Semantic Approach to Myth; Myth and History in Israelite-Jewish Thought

Biography

Robert A. Segal University of Lancaster