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02-07-2008, 08:50 PM | #521 |
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02-08-2008, 12:45 AM | #522 |
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Official Aramaic as lingua franca of the Middle East was replaced with Greek in the late 4th century BC, except in Judea where it was stuck to and degenerated into Middle Aramaic - so to speak, Jesus’ Aramaic. Counterintuitive supposition that Official Aramaic was still in use in the 2nd century (a full hundred and seventy years later) is ad hoc, that is, inferred from dating Daniel post-164, as no evidence of such use exists. The backward induction is simply circular.
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02-08-2008, 06:53 AM | #523 |
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Was Joseph Smith trying to fool anyone by writing the Book of Mormon in seventeenth-century English a la the King James Bible?
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02-08-2008, 07:22 AM | #524 |
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02-08-2008, 11:22 AM | #525 | ||
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02-08-2008, 11:31 AM | #526 | ||
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The conquest by Alexander the Great did not destroy the unity of Aramaic language and literature immediately. Aramaic that bears a relatively close resemblance to that of the fifth century BCE can be found right up to the early second century. The Seleucids imposed Greek in the administration of Syria and Mesopotamia from the start of their rule. In the third century, Greek overtook Aramaic as the common language in Egypt and Syria. However, a post-Achaemenid Aramaic continued to flourish from Judaea, through the Syrian Desert, and into Arabia and Parthia. And another (page 19). AFter discussing how Greek supplanted Aramaic in Syria and Mesopotamia in the 4th century BC, and then supplanted it in Egypt and northern Palestine in the 3rd century BCE, the author states: The retention of Imperial Aramaic in northwest Arabia, Judaea, Palmyra, Babylonia, and Parthia serves to underline national independence against the Seleucids and the Romans and cultural autonomy against Hellenism. Quote:
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02-08-2008, 12:02 PM | #527 | ||
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(Linguistics as a study functionally originates in the 19th c. quest for the historical relationship between European languages, then became generalized in the 20th c. to deal with all aspects of all languages.) spin |
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02-08-2008, 12:34 PM | #528 | ||
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Your last citation is more interesting. It’s a scholarly one. Curiously enough, you quote from a paragraph but not the next one in the same page, which is of crucial significance since it deals with the topic of evidence: Biblical Aramaic includes Ezra 4:8-6:18; 7:12-26 (written in the 4th cent. B.C.) Dan 2:4b-7:28 (finished 164 B.C.); Gen 31:47; Jer 10:11. These texts were originally produced in Achaemenid Imperial Aramaic. (p.19)This self explains. There are four texts in Achaemenid Imperial Aramaic - or Official Aramaic - in the Tanakh. A substantial portion of Ezra is ascribed to the 4th century. Two isolated verses from Genesis and Jeremiah remain undated. And the sole text ascribed to the 2nd century is the greater part of Daniel. The rest of the discourse - your quotation - is ex post rationalization from the presumption that Daniel was written in or about 164 B.C. By the way, more careful writers type a question mark (164?) to denote that dating Daniel in the 2nd century is a conjecture not supported by factual evidence. See Efrem Yildiz, “The Aramaic Language and its Classification,” Journal of Assyrian Academic Studies, 14 No.1 (2000), p.34. |
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02-08-2008, 01:28 PM | #529 | |||||||||
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2. It is not the citation from #507. Quote:
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Additionally, the list of places that the author mentions as retaining Imperial Aramaic down to the 2nd century -- ie., northwest Arabia, Judaea, Palmyra, Babylonia, and Parthia - speaks of much wider scope of usage and cannot be explained by merely pointing to a few verses in Daniel. In like fashion, your attempt to claim the fact of Imperial Aramaic persisting unto the 2nd century is ex post rationalization also falters on the same grounds: the geographic list of scope of usage is larger and wider than could be explained merely by invoking Daniel. Quote:
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02-08-2008, 02:02 PM | #530 |
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Do you have evidence of use of Imperial Aramaic in the 2nd cent. other than Daniel or not? |
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