FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 03-07-2005, 01:51 PM   #131
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: London
Posts: 47
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
I can understand your confusion. Jerusalem was a small statelet in the Judean hills. It cannot be equated with Palestine. It was just a tiny part. Ptolemy Soter was the first Macedonian to turn up at Jerusalem.

...

We are looking from the perspective of Jerusalem, not other parts of the ANE.

...

You're going to suffer from repetitive stress from such repeated shock and repetition of response. Besides six months mainly spent in Egypt in 332/1 Alexander passed the rest of his brief ramage in the east. What did Jerusalem experience in all this time? The rumour that an army went down and up the coast? No officials to extract taxes from it? You have the weirdest idea of Alexander's "kingdom". He had a relatively compact group of military elite around him who went with him everywhere he went. Do you imagine that he deposited administrators around his newly conquered territories he just so happened to import for the occasion?

...

But we are going back to the first vision... "Them", the Ptolemies, had an impact on Jerusalem life in such a way that Alexander never did, yet you want the third beast to be Alexander, because you feel Alexander was so important, even in Jerusalem, and that's just bullshit.

...

That's right. He just conquered all the places and left the empire's existence to those who picked up the pieces.
I've collected a couple of your responses up here to treat as once.

I agree with you that Alexander hardly built an empire, he was more on a sightseeing trip, conquering whatever came in his way, and as you say, leaving to his successors to actually build some kingdoms.

I also agree that in most of his empire, including Jerusalem, they might not notice much.

In his lifetime of course.

From the viewpoint of Daniel-2 - isnt this completely irrelevant?

The writer of the chapters 7-12 lives around 165 BC, more than 150 years after Alexander died. He does not face the "academic reality" of Alexanders own age, he faces The Legend of Alexander the Great.

The author does not know any details of what took place when Alexander passed by, but he lives in a place ruled by Alexanders greek successors for more than a hundred years. He knows cities like Alexandria, named from some great greek/macedonian conquerer who grabbed the whole world, only to die at a young age.

In his view he lives in a part (a quarter) of the kingdom of The Legend, Alexander the Great. His view is that Alexander conquered the world, just to die and his kingdom being split into several parts. To him, this should have appeared as a stand-alone kingdom, just as it did for Julius Caesar and Oliver Stone.

Your reasoning here might be valid for the author of chapters 1-6 (who wrote few years after alexanders death), but we already agree that this is another author than for the chapters 7-12 (who wrote about 150 years later).


Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
This is getting extremely laboured, but I'll try one more time. Jeremiah, obviously writing after the demise of the Medes doesn't seem to know the fact and "prophecies" that the Medes would destroy Babylon. I can't date Isaiah, but its prophecy is probably in the same position. We therefore have a tradition in Jewish literature of the Medes conquering Babylon. Your response was "so what?" apparently unaware that Daniel was writing with the knowledge of this tradition, ie the idea that the Medes would destroy Babylon. That notion easily explains the second beast, ie the beast which came after that of Babylon, ie Media.
My reply is still "so what" - especially as I'm fully aware of the unfortunate GT prophesy stating the medes should take Babylon.

My point is that our author number 2 has no problems with GT at all. The first author has already solved the "mede" problem by placing some odd "mede" into an apparent persian kingdom - "Darius the mede". Since this is already in the text, author number 2 has no need to put in any Mede kingdom in his sequence at all - he already has a "mede" in the text he is adding to - so that problem is solved for him.

He can simply put in the current kingdom, Seleucids, The Legend of Alexander before this, then Persia, then Babylon. The mede problem is already solved with "Darius the mede" - who can easily be faked into a distant Persian kingdom. This is simply the easiest "lie" to tell - many might know that persians took Babylon, but since their king then was "a mede" - GT is still correct.

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Especially when you simply ignore the reason I mention the fact, ie that the second part of the book inherited Darius the Mede, just like it inherited the Medes from the prophetic tradition.
I dont ignore this fact - I'm perfectly aware of it. I just realise one consequence of this "inheritance" which you choose to ignore:

The mede problem (from GT prophesies) is already solved for author #2. He has what appears to be a persian king of specifically mede descent as entering Babylon in 539 BC. This makes the "prophesies" true. Hence author #2 is free to actually put in the proper sequence of kingdoms - without using the medes at all.

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
We are dealing with tradition history, not history. We are viewing the world through the parochial vision of a small locality on the eastern side of the Judean hills, which saw the world via the powers that came to dominate it. What we will see in the literature are a) the maintenance of tradition and b) local mountain perspective. That's what you see in Daniel.
Agreed, but do not forget the time of the "perspective" - 165 BC. Surely we can presume that Alexander "the Great" was already famous/legendary at this time - his "impact" over time being a lot more noticed than whatever he did on his brief "rampage" 150 years earlier.

To summarize: the GT prophesy of medes taking Babylon is already solved when chapters 7-12 are written, Alexander the Great should be viewed as a legendary kingdom between the persians and the seleucids/pteolemies, making Alexanders kingdom an excellent (or perhaps necessary) candidate for the third kingdom in chapter 7.

regards

-phscs
Phscs is offline  
Old 03-07-2005, 02:21 PM   #132
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

There is no reason for you to contemplate the Median reference as a problem or the writer of Daniel "solving" anything. He had what he saw and he had his traditions. The Medes ending Babylon was part of the tradition.

Alexander was responsible for initiating Greek (Macedonian) hegemony over the whole known world. Why should the writer of Daniel in ch.7, which is quite a panoramic view of history (not even mentioning the Ptolemies), bother to separate him from what he started?


spin
spin is offline  
Old 03-08-2005, 05:47 AM   #133
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2000
Location: London
Posts: 47
Default The making of legends ...

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
There is no reason for you to contemplate the Median reference as a problem or the writer of Daniel "solving" anything. He had what he saw and he had his traditions. The Medes ending Babylon was part of the tradition.
Precisely - but lets not forget that "The Medes ending Babylon" can be interpreted easily in several ways. First, a Mede kingdom taking over Babylon, and second, some mede guy taking over Babylon at the head of some Army of another kingdom.

Religious people do have a tendency to stretch such "prophesies" to match whatever straw is available (even when the "straw" is fake, as in Darius the mede).

You seem to assume without reason that the author of Daniel-2 is forced to put in an entire mede kingdom - that's not really required is it?

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
Alexander was responsible for initiating Greek (Macedonian) hegemony over the whole known world. Why should the writer of Daniel in ch.7, which is quite a panoramic view of history (not even mentioning the Ptolemies), bother to separate him from what he started?
Babylon was a large kingdom, Persia was an even larger kingdom, and Alexander the Greats empire was the largest of them all. Then it split apart, into several smaller parts, one being seleucids - another being ptolemians.

Wouldn't this be the perspective of some person living in Jerusalem in 165 BC? Should we not expect the people in this greek controlled country to view Alexanders short-lived kingdom as greater than the persian empire?

Would it not be difficult for the author of Daniel-2 to sell his list of animals to his readers if he included the lesser kingdoms of Persia and Syria and left out (for him, in his time) the biggest kingdom of them all?

"he had what he saw" as you say.

regards

-phscs
Phscs is offline  
Old 03-08-2005, 05:57 AM   #134
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

I'll leave you with your repetitions.
spin is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 04:15 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.