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02-11-2009, 04:00 AM | #121 | ||||
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02-11-2009, 04:17 AM | #122 |
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Seriously though we see in articles like Doublets in the Odyssey, by K. O'Nolan
The Classical Quarterly, New Series, Vol. 28, No. 1, (1978), pp. 23-37 that most doublets are plays with words. Repeated imagery, ornamental formulaic expressions etc. They are not repeated scenes or scenes framed using earlier scenes as we see in Mark. |
02-11-2009, 06:28 AM | #123 | |
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I'm also wondering if you are misusing the term "doublets". Could you point us to the places in GMark where we find the whatever it is you are calling "doublets"? Jeffrey |
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02-11-2009, 06:40 AM | #124 | ||
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Good to know. But your statement could be taken in two different ways; were the Marcan doublets the literary ones, or were the Josephan doublets the literary ones? And what kind were the doublets in the other body of work (whichever it was)?
Furthermore, could you please give some examples of doublets from Josephus and from Mark so that we can all see that they are of different kinds (literary and whatever label you see fit to give the other kind)? Quote:
When you searched Tacitus, did you find no doublets at all, or did you find only the wrong kind of doublet? Did you search Thucydides (particularly book 8)? Did you search Polybius? Did you search Livy? Quote:
Ben. |
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02-11-2009, 06:45 AM | #125 | |
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One more thing. I myself do not tend to group Mark with the Greco-Roman histories. Rather, I see Mark as a form of biography. Have you perchance searched any of the biographies for doublets? Ben. |
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02-11-2009, 07:08 AM | #126 | ||
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You might wish to know that Ted/Jacob apperas to be engaged in equivocation when he cites O'Nolan as his authority for the supposed non existence of "doublets" in ancient literature, especially since there seems to be a vast difference between the way that NT scholars use the term and the meaning O"Nolan gives to it -- i.e. " a combination of two terms which are to all intents synonymous". So in addition to wondering if Jacob/Ted has actually read the Odyssey to see if Homer employs there what I think Ted means by "doublets" (i.e., intercalations, and the literary technique known as inclusio), I have to wonder whether he's actually read the O'Nolan article he points us to. If he has, he has certainly misunderstood what O"Nolan is on about. Jeffrey |
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02-11-2009, 07:49 AM | #127 | |
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I myself tend to view intercalations and its cousin the inclusio technique in a bit different light than I do doublets. But we shall have to wait and see what Jacob means. Ben. |
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02-11-2009, 09:01 AM | #128 | |
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Doublets
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spin |
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02-11-2009, 09:03 PM | #129 | ||
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02-11-2009, 09:13 PM | #130 | ||||
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Science - that an experiment is not necessarily predictable because we haven't tried it in all possible worlds. Well the historical books I know of don't have doublets in form of repeated events. I dont have to read all historical books to prove this. Badgering me about whether I have read all history books cant help. You present one that has repeated scenes and you have falsified my argument. Plain and simple. Quote:
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They are all wrong. Take it from me. |
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