Notes on Contributors Preface Introduction: Cognition, Evolution, and Biblical Exegesis, István Czachesz 1. Cognitive Science and Biblical Interpretation, István Czachesz (University of Tromsø, Norway) and Gerd Theissen (University of Heidelberg, Germany) 2. Emotional Fear in Pentateuchal Legal Collections, Thomas Kazen (Stockholm School of Theology, Sweden) 3. Liquid Life: Blood, Life, and Conceptual Metaphors In the Hebrew Bible and the Ancient Near East, Anne Katrine De Hemmer Gudme (University of Copenhagen, Denmark) 4. "To Love" in the Bible: a Cognitive-Evolutionary Approach, Ronit Nikolsky (University of Groningen, The Netherlands) 5. “The Glory of the Lord Has Risen Upon You”: Some Observations on the “Glory”-Language of Isaiah 56–66 Based on a Cognitive Semantic Approach, Marilyn E. Burton (Independent Researcher, UK) 6. The Influence of Categorization on Translation Meaning, Shelley Ashdown (Dallas International University, USA) 7. Imaging Resurrection: Toward an Image Schematic Understanding of Resurrection Beliefs in Second Temple Judaism, Frederick S. Tappenden (University of Alberta, Canada) 8. Liturgical Linguistics: Towards the Syntax of Communicating with the Super-Human Agent in Judaism, Tamás Biró (Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary and University of Jewish Studies, Hungary) 9. Forgiveness of the Sinless: A Classic Contradiction in 1 John in the Light of Contemporary Forgiveness Research, Rikard Roitto (Stockholm School of Theology, Sweden) 10. Christian Beginnings and Cultural Evolution, István Czachesz (University of Tromsø, Norway) Notes Bibliography Index
Examines religious texts to fill the research gap in textual interpretation within the cognitive science of religion and biblical studies.
Ronit Nikolsky is Assistant Professor of Culture and Cognition at the University of Groningen, Netherlands. István Czachesz is Professor of Biblical Studies at the University of Tromsø, Norway, and the review editor of the Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion. Frederick S. Tappenden is Principal and Dean, and Professor of Theology at St. Stephen’s College at the University of Alberta, Canada. Tamás Biró is Senior Research Fellow at the Department for Assyriology and Hebrew at ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Hungary, and an Associate Professor and Vice-Rector of the Jewish Theological Seminary - University of Jewish Studies, Budapest, Hungary.
The editors of Language, Cognition, and Biblical Exegesis enlist an
outstanding group of scholars—fluent in both the relevant religious
and scientific literatures and languages—to assemble a splendid
collection of essays that variously recruit the many
methodological, theoretical, and empirical resources of cognitive
linguistics, of conceptual metaphor theory, and of the cognitive
and evolutionary sciences of religion to insightfully illuminate
biblical texts—both Hebrew and Christian--and the cultural settings
from which they arose.
*Robert N. McCauley, William Rand Kenan Jr. University Professor,
Emory University, USA*
This book is a significant contribution to the new discipline
called cognitive philology. It draws on the combined competences of
the cognitive and humanistic sciences to understand the minds
behind ancient and biblical texts. It is a treasure trove of
studies and applications of cutting-edge science by leading
biblical and cognitive science of religion scholars. This is a
must-read for all interested in new approaches to ancient
texts.
*Armin W. Geertz, Emeritus Professor of the History of Religions,
Aarhus University, Denmark*
In this book, we are confronted with the cognitive turn. The
authors challenge us to understand the mental processes that affect
the creation, use, transmission, and reception of biblical texts.
Their work provides us with a whole new meaning of the word
exegesis. Without replacing conventional literary, linguistic,
historical, and social scientific outlooks, each author sees the
text through the cognitive looking glass. Such a new look helps us
to see, like Alice, that what we thought we knew might need to be
revised.
*April D. DeConick, Professor of Biblical Studies, Rice University,
USA, and author of The Gnostic New Age (2016)*
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