Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind: mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Abschlussarbeit Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Tübingen
Mohr Siebeck
[2020]
|
Schriftenreihe: | Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament. 2. Reihe
515 |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | XXXV, 658 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9783161496608 |
ISSN: | 0340-9570 |
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240 | 1 | 0 | |a Greco-Roman philosophy of mind and Paul |
245 | 1 | 0 | |a Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind |b mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries |c Max J. Lee |
264 | 1 | |a Tübingen |b Mohr Siebeck |c [2020] | |
300 | |a XXXV, 658 Seiten | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
490 | 1 | |a Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament. 2. Reihe |v 515 |x 0340-9570 | |
502 | |b Dissertation |c Fuller Theological Seminary |d 2002 |g erweiterte Ausgabe der Dissertation | ||
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
PREFACE
................................................................................................................................
VII
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
...............................................................................................................
XI
ABBREVIATIONS
AND
PRIMARY
SOURCES
TABLE
......................................................................
XVII
PART
I:
MAPPING
THE
APOSTLE
PAUL
*
S
MORAL
MILIEU
1
CHAPTER
1:
AN
INTRODUCTION
TO
GRECO-ROMAN
PHILOSOPHY
OF
MIND
............
3
1.
WHAT
IS
ANCIENT
PHILOSOPHY
OF
MIND?
..............................................................................
3
2.
WHICH
MORAL
TRANSFORMATION
SYSTEMS
AND
WHY
.............................................................
5
3.
POWER,
HUMAN
AGENCY,
AND
DIVINE
CORRESPONDENCE
.......................................................
12
CHAPTER
2:
CONTINGENCY,
COHERENCE,
AND
PHILOSOPHICAL
SYSTEMS
..............
17
1.
METHODS
AND
MODELS
.........................................................................................................
17
1.1.
A
PROVISO
ON
THE
USE
OF
THE
TERM
SYSTEM
..............................................................
17
1.2.
TOWARD
AN
ABSTRACTED
MODEL
OF
MORAL
TRANSFORMATION
........................................
23
2.
COMPONENTS
TO
MORAL
TRANSFORMATION
............................................................................
31
2.1.
WHY
BEGIN
WITH
THE
PASSIONS:
DEFINING
THEIR
STRUCTURE
AND
POWER
....................
31
2.2.
PHILOSOPHICAL
REACTIONS
TO
POPULAR
VIEWS
ON
THE
PASSIONS
..................................
33
2.3.
SELF-MASTERY,
MORAL
ACTION,
VIRTUE,
AND
OTHER
COMPONENTS
...............................
37
FIG.
1:
SELF-MASTERY,
TEMPERANCE,
AND
CHARACTER
FORMATION
.................................
40
SUMMARY
REMARKS
FOR
PART
I
.........................................................................
45
PART
II:
MORAL
TRANSFORMATION
IN
MIDDLE
PLATONISM
47
CHAPTER
3:
THE
BODY-BEATING
PLATONIST:
THE
NON-COGNITIVE
STRUCTURE
OF
THE
PASSIONS
AND
THE
PLATONIC
COUNTER-CYCLE
OF
VIRTUE
AGAINST
VICE
.....
49
1.
INTRODUCING
MIDDLE
PLATONISM
......................................................................................
49
1.1.
THE
FOUNDER
AND
HIS
FOLLOWERS:
PLATO,
PLUTARCH,
ALCINOUS,
AND
GALEN
................
50
1.2.
UNIFYING
DOCTRINES
AND
COMMON
COMMITMENTS
....................................................
51
XII
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
2.
SELF-MASTERY
AS
MODERATION
OF
THE
PASSIONS
...................................................................
56
2.1.
THE
PLATONIC
NON-COGNITIVE
THEORY
OF
EMOTIONS
.................................................
57
2.2.
THE
PLATONIC
VIEW
OF
SELF-MASTERY
.........................................................................
66
3.
VICE,
VIRTUE,
AND
CHARACTER
FORMATION
...........................................................................
73
3.1.
THE
CYCLE
OF
ERROR
AND
VICE
....................................................................................
75
3.2.
THE
COUNTER-CYCLE
OF
VIRTUOUS
ACTION,
HABIT,
AND
CHARACTER
FORMATION
............
78
FIG.
2:
THE
MIDDLE
PLATONIC
PROGRAM
OF
BEHAVIOR
MODIFICATION
...........................
85
3.3.
DEBILITATING
DESIRE
AND
EXERCISING
REASON
*
S
POWER
.............................................
88
FIG.
3:
PLATO
*
S
ANTHROPOLOGY
.....................................................................................
98
FIG.
4:
MIDDLE
PLATONIC
ANTHROPOLOGY
......................................................................
99
CHAPTER
4:
*
BECOMING
LIKE
GOD
*
AND
NURTURING
MORAL
PROGRESS
IN
MIDDLE
PLATONISM
.......................................................................................
103
1.
THE
GOAL
TO
*
BECOME
LIKE
GOD
*
.....................................................................................
103
1.1.
PLATO
*
S
TENSION
BETWEEN
THE
VIRTUOUS
LIFE
AND
A
LIFE
OF
CONTEMPLATION
...........
103
1.2.
ASSIMILATION
THROUGH
CONTEMPLATION
....................................................................
105
1.3.
ASSIMILATION
THROUGH
THE
MORAL
LIFE
....................................................................
112
2.
DIVERSE
WAYS
OF
IMITATING
THE
DIVINE:
HOW
THE
MIDDLE
PLATONISTS
RESOLVED
PLATO
*
S
TENSION
...............................................................................................................
119
2.1.
MORAL
LIKENESS
TO
A
LESSER,
DEMIURGIC
GOD
ACCORDING
TO
ALCINOUS
..................
123
EXCURSUS .
PLATO
*
S
THEOLOGY
.....................................................................................
129
TABLE
1:
PLATO
*
S
METAPHYSICAL
FRAMEWORK
..............................................................
130
TABLE
2:
PLATO
*
S
RELIGIOUS
/
MYTHIC
FRAMEWORK
....................................................
131
TABLE
3:
ALCINOUS
*
THEOLOGY
...................................................................................
134
2.2.
MORAL
LIKENESS
TO
THE
THOUGHTS
OF
THE
FIRST
GOD
ACCORDING
TO
ALCINOUS
...........
136
2.3.
MORAL
LIKENESS
TO
THE
DIVINE
ATTRIBUTES
OF
GOD
ACCORDING
TO
PLUTARCH
..............
139
TABLE
4:
PLUTARCH
*
S
THEOLOGY
...
147
2.4.
A
NON-PLATONIST
ACCOUNT
OF
ASSIMILATION
TO
GOD
ACCORDING
TO
GALEN
...............
148
3.
NATURE
VERSUS
NURTURE:
MENTORS,
FRIENDS,
AND
THE
HARD-WIRED
LIMITATIONS
TO
MORAL
PROGRESS
...............................................................................................................
155
3.1.
*
TO
KNOW
THYSELF
*
REQUIRES
THE
HELP
OF
OTHERS
.................................................
156
3.2.
MORAL
MENTORS
AND
FRANK
FRIENDS
..........................................................................
158
3.3.
NATURE
*
S
LIMITS
ON
MORAL
PROGRESS
.......................................................................
162
SUMMARY
REMARKS
FOR
PART
II
......................................................................
171
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
XIII
PART
III:
MORAL
TRANSFORMATION
IN
STOICISM
173
CHAPTER
5:
THE
SUPERHUMAN
STOIC:
THE
COGNITIVE
STRUCTURE
OF
THE
PASSIONS
AND
THE
PERFECTION
OF
MORAL
JUDGMENT
...............................
175
1.
INTRODUCING
THE
ROMAN
STOA
OF
THE
EARLY
IMPERIAL
PERIOD
..........................................
175
1.1.
THE
FOUNDERS
AND
THEIR FOLLOWERS:
THE
OLD
STOA,
SENECA,
MUSONIUS
RUFUS,
EPICTETUS,
AND
OTHER
GRECO-ROMAN
STOICS
.............................................................
177
1.2.
NEOSTOIC
ORTHODOXY
AND
INNOVATIONS
....................................................................
179
2.
THE
STOIC
COGNITIVE
THEORY
OF
EMOTIONS
........................................................................
183
2.1.
THE
TAXONOMY
OF
EMOTIONS
..................................................................................
184
2.2.
THE
MIND
EXPERIENCES
AN
APPEARANCE
(STAGE
1)
.................................................
188
2.3.
THE
MIND
JUDGES
THE
IMPRESSION
(STAGE
2)
...........................................................
190
2.4.
THE
JUDGMENT
PRODUCES
AN
IMPULSE
(STAGE
3)
.....................................................
193
2.5.
THE
IMPULSE
MOVES
THE
HUMAN
AGENT
TOWARD
ACTION
(STAGE
4)
........................
195
2.6.
A
STOIC
EXAMPLE
FROM
EURIPIDES
ON
THE
COGNITIVE
ORIGIN
OF
EMOTION
...............
202
3.
THE
STOIC
VIEW
OF
SELF-MASTERY
.......................................................................................
207
3.1.
AIMING
FOR
STOIC
*
AIRCTOEIA
.....................................................................................
207
3.2.
EXTIRPATING
THE
PASSIONS
.........................................................................................
213
3.3.
SELF-MASTERY
AND
TEMPERANCE
AS
THE
CONSISTENT
EXERCISE
OF
KNOWLEDGE
..........
219
CHAPTER
6:
THE
GOOD,
THE
BAD,
AND
THE
INDIFFERENT:
STOIC
MORAL
PSYCHOLOGY
OF
ACTION
AND
CHARACTER
FORMATION
...............................
221
1.
THE
COGNITIVE
FORMATION
OF
VIRTUE
VERSUS
VICE
............................................................
221
1.1.
VIRTUES
AS
TYPES
OF
KNOWLEDGE
AND
VIRTUE
AS
A
STABLE
STATE
..............................
222
1.2.
VICES
AS
TYPES
OF
IGNORANCE
AND
VICIOUSNESS
AS
AN
UNSTABLE
STATE
...................
226
2.
THE
INSTANTANEOUS
AND
COMPREHENSIVE
CHARACTER
OF
STOIC
PERFECTION
.......................
228
2.1.
THE
TAXONOMIES
AND
UNITY
OF
THE
VIRTUES
............................................................
228
2.2.
TRANSFORMATION
AS
RADICAL
CHANGE
NOT
GRADUAL
PROGRESS
...................................
236
2.3.
STOIC
PERFECTION:
AVAILABLE
TO
ALL,
ATTAINABLE
BY
FEW
.........................................
242
3.
MORAL
VALUATION,
ACTION,
AND
CHOICE
............................................................................
245
3.1.
DEFINING
THE
GOOD,
THE
BAD,
AND
THE
INDIFFERENT
..................................................
247
3.2.
DISTINGUISHING
PREFERRED
VERSUS
DISPREFERRED
INDIFFERENTS
..................................
253
FIG.
5:
GOODS,
EVILS,
AND
INDIFFERENTS
(PREFERRED,
DISPREFERRED,
OR
NEITHER)
.......
258
3.3.
TYPES
OF
MORAL
ACTS:
RIGHT,
ERRONEOUS,
APPROPRIATE,
AND
UNSUITABLE
...............
259
FIG.
6:
APPROPRIATE
VS.
INAPPROPRIATE
ACTS:
RIGHT,
INTERMEDIATE,
AND
ERRONEOUS
..........................................................................................................
261
3.4.
A
VERY
SHORT
EPITOME
OF
STOIC
ETHICS
...................................................................
270
XIV
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
7:
NEOSTOIC
INNOVATIONS
TO
CHRYSIPPAN
MORAL
PSYCHOLOGY
........
271
1.
THE
PROMINENCE
OF
POWER
LANGUAGE
IN
NEOSTOIC
ACCOUNTS
.........................................
271
1.1.
THE
EXAGGERATED
POWER
OF
APPEARANCES,
ASSENT,
AND
IMPULSES
.........................
272
1.2.
THE
EXCESSIVE
POWER
OF
THE
PASSIONS
AND
EPICTETUS
*
DECONSTRUCTION
OF
MEDEA
AS
A
DENIAL
OF
*
AKPAOTA
...............................................................................
281
1.3.
RATIONAL
POWER
ACCORDING
TO
MUSONIUS
RUFUS
AND
MARCUS
AURELIUS
..................
292
2.
COMPONENTIAL
THEORIES
ON
THE
FORMATION
OF
THE
PASSIONS
..........................................
296
2.1.
PANAETIUS
ON
IMPULSIVE
POWER VERSUS
RATIONAL
POWER
........................................
298
2.2.
POSIDONIUS
ON
COGNITIVE
PASSIONS
CHARGED
BY
BODILY
IMPULSES
.........................
302
2.3.
SENECA
ON
THE
PRE-PASSIONS
....................................................................................
307
3.
COMPONENTIAL
THEORIES
ON
NON-COGNITIVE
AIDS
TO
SELF-MASTERY
.................................
315
3.1.
DIOGENES
OF
BABYLON
ON
MUSIC
*
S
CONTRIBUTION
TO
SELF-MASTERY
.........................
317
3.2.
POSIDONIUS
ON
MODERATING
AFFECTIVE
MOVEMENTS
WITH
MUSIC
...........................
325
3.3.
SENECA
ON
PACIFYING
THE
PRE-PASSIONS
WITH
POETRY
...............................................
328
CHAPTER
8:
NEOSTOIC
INNOVATIONS
IN
HABIT,
PRACTICE,
AND
MENTORING
........
332
1.
NON-INTELLECTUAL
VIRTUES
AND
VICIOUS
HABITUDES
...........................................................
332
1.1.
DEFINING
NON-INTELLECTUAL
VIRTUES
AS
SKILLS
OR
HABITUDES
....................................
333
1.2.
PROCLIVITIES,
SICK
HABITS,
AND
INFIRMED
CONDITIONS
..............................................
339
2.
SPIRITUAL
EXERCISES
AND
PRACTICING
PHILOSOPHY
..............................................................
345
2.1.
PRACTICING
PHILOSOPHY
AND
WHY
KNOWING
IS
NOT
ENOUGH
..................................
346
2.2.
TYPES
OF
SPIRITUAL
EXERCISES
..................................................................................
356
3.
MENTORING
STUDENTS
TO
PRACTICE
PHILOSOPHY
..................................................................
363
3.1.
SENECA
ON
MENTORSHIP
IN
STOICISM
AND
OTHER
PHILOSOPHICAL
TRADITIONS
..............
364
3.2.
FROM
MENTORS
AND
STUDENTS
TO
A
SOCIETY
OF
STOIC
FRIENDS
....................................
370
CHAPTER
9:
THE
STOIC
SELF
.............................................................................
375
1.
O
LKCLGIOLC
AND
THE
FORMATION
OF
THE
INTEGRATED
SELF
.....................................................
375
1.1.
HIEROCLES
ON
O
LK
*
LG
)
OI
;,
SELF-PRESERVATION,
AND
THE
CONSTITUTION
OF
SELF
............
378
1.2.
THE
DOXOGRAPHERS
ON
APPROPRIATION
AND
APPROPRIATE
ACTS
...............................
381
1.3.
STOIC
ETHICS
AS
THE
RATIONAL
OUTWORKING
OF
PRE-RATIONAL
O
IKELWOLC
...................
385
1.4.
THE
INTEGRATED
SELF:
FROM
INDIVIDUAL
TO
SOCIAL
O
LKE
L
WOU
;
....................................
396
2.
STOIC
ANTHROPOLOGY
AS
MATERIAL
AND
MONISTIC
...............................................
401
2.1.
THE
HUMAN
PERSON
AS
AN
ENSOULED
BODY
AND
EMBODIED
SOUL
...........................
401
2.2.
THE
MONISM
OF
THE
SOUL
AND
RATIONAL
AGENCY
.....................................................
407
2.3.
AN
EPITOME
OF
STOIC
HUMANITY
..............................................................................
410
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
XV
CHAPTER
10:
THE
STOIC
GOD
AND
IMITATIO
DEI
......................................................
411
1.
THE
NATURE
OF
GOD
AND
HUMANITY
*
S
ROLE
IN
THE
COSMOS
.............................................
411
1.1.
A
MATRIX
OF
INTERENTAILING
PROPOSITIONS
ON
THE
NATURE
OF
GOD
...........................
411
1.2.
GOD
*
S
PROVIDENCE,
NATURAL
DETERMINISM,
AND
MORAL
RESPONSIBILITY
..................
418
1.3.
EPICTETUS
ON
NPOATPEAU;
AND
NEOSTOIC
DEVELOPMENTS
ON
FREEDOM
.....................
429
2.
THE
IMITATION
OF
GOD
AS
THE
STOIC
TCKOQ
........................................................................
437
2.1.
LIVING
ACCORDING
TO
NATURE,
REASON,
AND
VIRTUE
..................................................
438
2.2.
IMITATING
THE
RATIONAL
AND
VIRTUOUS
GOD
...............................................................
441
2.3.
THE
ROLE
OF
GOD
IN
STOIC
MORAL
PROGRESS
.............................................................
452
SUMMARY
REMARKS
FOR
PART
III
.....................................................................
455
PART
IV:
RETROSPECT
AND
PROSPECT
459
CHAPTER
11:
RETROSPECT:
MODELS
AND
MILIEU
...............................................
461
1.
THE
MIDDLE
PLATONIST
MODEL
OF
MORAL
TRANSFORMATION
.................................................
461
1.1.
PLATONIST
MORAL
PSYCHOLOGY
...................................................................................
462
1.2.
THE
PLATONIST
CYCLE
OF
VICE
AND
COUNTER-CYCLE
OF
VIRTUE
..................................
463
1.3.
SOCIAL
STRUCTURES
REINFORCING
THE
ATTAINMENT
OF
VIRTUE
......................................
464
1.4.
INTEGRATING
ASSIMILATION
TO
GOD
WITH
MORAL
FORMATION
......................................
464
1.5.
A
PLATONIST
MODEL
OF
REINFORCING
CONCENTRIC
CYCLES
..........................................
468
FIG.
7:
THE
MIDDLE
PLATONIST
MODEL
OF
MORAL
TRANSFORMATION
..............................
469
2.
THE
STOIC
MODEL
OF
MORAL
TRANSFORMATION
....................................................................
470
2.1.
STOIC
MORAL
PSYCHOLOGY
.........................................................................................
470
2.2.
STOIC
MORAL
VALUATION
OF
THE
GOOD,
THE
BAD,
AND
THE
INDIFFERENT
.......................
472
2.3.
INSTANTANEOUS
TRANSFORMATION
AND
THE
ANALOGUE
OF
A
TITRATION
POINT
................
472
FIG.
8:
THE
EARLY
STOIC
MODEL
OF
MORAL
PSYCHOLOGY,
ACTION,
AND
PERFECTION
......
474
2.4.
NEOSTOIC
INNOVATIONS
TO
THE
CHRYSIPPAN
MODEL
OF
PERFECTION
.............................
475
FIG.
9:
NEOSTOIC
INNOVATIONS
TO
EARLY
STOIC
MORAL
PSYCHOLOGY
AND
FORMATION
...
475
2.5.
AN
INTEGRATED
STOIC
MODEL:
TRANSFORMATION,
IMITATIO
DEI,
AND
O
LKEUDOU
;
...........
479
FIG.
10:
THE
STOIC
MODEL
OF
MORAL
TRANSFORMATION
..............................................
481
3.
MAPPING
THE
MORAL
MILIEU
OF
THE
APOSTLE
PAUL
BETWEEN
PLATONISM
AND
STOICISM
.....
483
3.1.
THE
IMPORTANCE
OF
PLATONISM
AND
STOICISM
IN
THE
TRANSITIONAL
PERIOD
...............
484
3.2.
COMPARISONS
BETWEEN
THE
MODELS
AND
THE
SPECTRUM
THEY
CREATE
......................
487
FIG.
11:
GRECO-ROMAN
PHILOSOPHIES
IN
A
NON-COGNITIVE
TO
COGNITIVE
SPECTRUM
..................................................................................................
489
XVI
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
12:
PROSPECT:
INTERACTIONS,
INTERTEXTUALITY,
AND
ENCYCLOPEDIA
.....
493
1.
INTERTEXTUALITY,
GRECO-ROMAN
ALLUSIONS,
AND
THE
TYPES
OF
INTERACTIONS
BETWEEN
PHILOSOPHICAL
SCHOOLS
....................................................................................................
493
1.1.
ECLECTICISM
(TYPE
OF
INTERACTION
1)
.......................................................................
494
1.2.
REFUTATION
(TYPE
OF
INTERACTION
2)
.........................................................................
497
1.3.
COMPETITIVE
APPROPRIATION
(TYPE
OF
INTERACTION
3)
.............................................
498
1.4.
IRENIC
APPROPRIATION
(TYPE
OF
INTERACTION
4)
........................................................
503
1.5.
CONCESSION
(TYPE
OF
INTERACTION
5)
.......................................................................
506
1.6.
COMMON
ETHICAL
USAGE
(TYPE
OF
INTERACTION
6)
...................................................
512
1.7.
IMPLICATIONS
FOR
DETECTING
GRECO-ROMAN
ALLUSIONS
IN
THE
NEW
TESTAMENT
.......
516
2.
WHERE
DO
WE
GO
FROM
HERE?
.........................................................................................
519
2.1.
AN
ESTIMATION
OF
EPICUREANISM
AND
DIASPORA
JUDAISM
IN
THE
SPECTRUM
............
519
FIG.
12:
EPICUREANISM
AND
JUDAISM
BETWEEN
PLATONISM
AND
STOICISM
..................
522
2.2.
TOWARD
A
COMMON
ANCIENT
ETHICAL
TRADITION
.....................................................
523
CLOSING
REMARKS
...........................................................................................
527
APPENDIX
1:
THE
PHILOSOPHER
PLATO
AND
THE
LEGACY
OF
THE
ACADEMY:
SOURCES
FOR
MIDDLE
PLATONISM
..................................................................................
531
1.
THE
LIFE
AND
WORKS
OF
PLATO
.....................................................................................
531
2.
THE
LIFE
AND
WORKS
OF
PLATO
*
S
GRECO-ROMAN
HEIRS:
PLUTARCH,
ALCINOUS,
AND
GALEN
........................................................................................................................
535
APPENDIX
2:
ZENO,
CHRYSIPPUS,
AND
THEIR
LATE
HELLENISTIC
AND
IMPERIAL
HEIRS:
SOURCES
FOR
EARLY,
MIDDLE,
AND
ROMAN
STOICISM
....................................................
545
1.
ZENO,
CHRYSIPPUS,
AND
THE
EARLY
STOA
.......................................................................
545
2.
SOURCES
FOR
MIDDLE
STOICISM
.....................................................................................
553
3.
SOURCES
FOR
ROMAN
STOICISM
.....................................................................................
555
BIBLIOGRAPHY
........................................................................................................................
567
INDEX
OF
ANCIENT
SOURCES
....................................................................................................
609
INDEX
OF
MODEM
AUTHORS
....................................................................................................
635
INDEX
OF
SUBJECTS
.................................................................................................................
643
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Lee, Max J. 1968- |
author_GND | (DE-588)1208939335 |
author_facet | Lee, Max J. 1968- |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Lee, Max J. 1968- |
author_variant | m j l mj mjl |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV025546463 |
classification_rvk | BC 7550 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)917451739 (DE-599)BVBBV025546463 |
discipline | Theologie / Religionswissenschaften |
format | Thesis Book |
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genre_facet | Hochschulschrift |
id | DE-604.BV025546463 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T22:36:14Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9783161496608 |
issn | 0340-9570 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-020147296 |
oclc_num | 917451739 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-11 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-824 DE-29 |
owner_facet | DE-11 DE-19 DE-BY-UBM DE-12 DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-824 DE-29 |
physical | XXXV, 658 Seiten |
psigel | gbd_4_2101 |
publishDate | 2020 |
publishDateSearch | 2020 |
publishDateSort | 2020 |
publisher | Mohr Siebeck |
record_format | marc |
series | Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament. 2. Reihe |
series2 | Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament. 2. Reihe |
spelling | Lee, Max J. 1968- Verfasser (DE-588)1208939335 aut Greco-Roman philosophy of mind and Paul Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries Max J. Lee Tübingen Mohr Siebeck [2020] XXXV, 658 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament. 2. Reihe 515 0340-9570 Dissertation Fuller Theological Seminary 2002 erweiterte Ausgabe der Dissertation Paulus Apostel, Heiliger (DE-588)118641549 gnd rswk-swf Lebensführung (DE-588)4034864-7 gnd rswk-swf Urchristentum (DE-588)4062115-7 gnd rswk-swf Judentum (DE-588)4114087-4 gnd rswk-swf Ethik (DE-588)4015602-3 gnd rswk-swf Zeithintergrund (DE-588)4128644-3 gnd rswk-swf Diaspora Religion (DE-588)4012089-2 gnd rswk-swf Platonismus (DE-588)4046303-5 gnd rswk-swf Stoizismus (DE-588)4128559-1 gnd rswk-swf Frühjudentum (DE-588)4071487-1 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4113937-9 Hochschulschrift gnd-content Wertbegriffe & Moral (DE-2581)TH000006398 gbd Ethik (DE-2581)TH000006651 gbd Platonismus (DE-588)4046303-5 s Stoizismus (DE-588)4128559-1 s Ethik (DE-588)4015602-3 s Frühjudentum (DE-588)4071487-1 s Urchristentum (DE-588)4062115-7 s Lebensführung (DE-588)4034864-7 s DE-604 Paulus Apostel, Heiliger (DE-588)118641549 p Diaspora Religion (DE-588)4012089-2 s Judentum (DE-588)4114087-4 s Zeithintergrund (DE-588)4128644-3 s Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-3-16-159431-1 (DE-604)BV046784388 Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament. 2. Reihe 515 (DE-604)BV038743412 515 DNB Datenaustausch application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=020147296&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Lee, Max J. 1968- Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament. 2. Reihe Paulus Apostel, Heiliger (DE-588)118641549 gnd Lebensführung (DE-588)4034864-7 gnd Urchristentum (DE-588)4062115-7 gnd Judentum (DE-588)4114087-4 gnd Ethik (DE-588)4015602-3 gnd Zeithintergrund (DE-588)4128644-3 gnd Diaspora Religion (DE-588)4012089-2 gnd Platonismus (DE-588)4046303-5 gnd Stoizismus (DE-588)4128559-1 gnd Frühjudentum (DE-588)4071487-1 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)118641549 (DE-588)4034864-7 (DE-588)4062115-7 (DE-588)4114087-4 (DE-588)4015602-3 (DE-588)4128644-3 (DE-588)4012089-2 (DE-588)4046303-5 (DE-588)4128559-1 (DE-588)4071487-1 (DE-588)4113937-9 |
title | Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries |
title_alt | Greco-Roman philosophy of mind and Paul |
title_auth | Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries |
title_exact_search | Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries |
title_full | Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries Max J. Lee |
title_fullStr | Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries Max J. Lee |
title_full_unstemmed | Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries Max J. Lee |
title_short | Moral transformation in Greco-Roman philosophy of mind |
title_sort | moral transformation in greco roman philosophy of mind mapping the moral milieu of the apostle paul and his diaspora jewish contemporaries |
title_sub | mapping the moral milieu of the apostle Paul and his diaspora Jewish contemporaries |
topic | Paulus Apostel, Heiliger (DE-588)118641549 gnd Lebensführung (DE-588)4034864-7 gnd Urchristentum (DE-588)4062115-7 gnd Judentum (DE-588)4114087-4 gnd Ethik (DE-588)4015602-3 gnd Zeithintergrund (DE-588)4128644-3 gnd Diaspora Religion (DE-588)4012089-2 gnd Platonismus (DE-588)4046303-5 gnd Stoizismus (DE-588)4128559-1 gnd Frühjudentum (DE-588)4071487-1 gnd |
topic_facet | Paulus Apostel, Heiliger Lebensführung Urchristentum Judentum Ethik Zeithintergrund Diaspora Religion Platonismus Stoizismus Frühjudentum Hochschulschrift |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=020147296&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
volume_link | (DE-604)BV038743412 |
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