I am increasingly interested, being led here by a tutor, from 'simple' religious symbolism to the semantic and linguistic aspects of religious experience. Obviously I believe that religious experience is 'real', but when Moses saw the burning bush, was it actually a burning bush, was it a symbol that approximated a burning bush, was it a burning bush to symbolise something other, or was it something that semantically Moses, or more precisely his audience, had no suitable linguistic referants to translate in any other form more meaningful form.
For example, to pick up on Z's text I am drawing a parallel between 'super-intelligent beings' as a post-modern secular society would classify them, and God, gods, angels/demigods, heroes etc., as a pre-modern religious society would classify them.
I'm dabbling my toes in semantics, linguistics, the cognitive sciences, and this bit on cognitive linguistics leapt out at me:
'Finally, cognitive linguistics argues that language is both embodied and situated in a specific environment ... that language and cognition mutually influence one another, and are both embedded in the experiences and environments of its users.'
and this:
'Linguistic inquiry is pursued by a wide variety of specialists, who may not all be in harmonious agreement; as journalist Russ Rymer put it: "Linguistics ... is soaked with the blood of poets, theologians, philosophers, philologists, psychologists, biologists, anthropologists, and neurologists, along with whatever blood can be got out of grammarians."'
and this:
'Diachronic linguistics ... examines how language changes through time ...'
I am particularly interested in the development of Christian theological language in the meeting of Hebrew (existential) and Greek (philosophical) culture ... for example the development of Trinitarian Theology, which required terms like 'essence', 'substance', 'person', 'being', 'soul' and of course 'theos' and 'logos' to be redefined to try and explain something rationally, that itself lies beyond the capacity of the reasoning faculty to comprehend independently, if we allow that 'Revelation' signifies that data which cannot be deduced by the function of human reason alone.
... and vaguely wondering if any of this makes sense?
Thomas
For example, to pick up on Z's text I am drawing a parallel between 'super-intelligent beings' as a post-modern secular society would classify them, and God, gods, angels/demigods, heroes etc., as a pre-modern religious society would classify them.
I'm dabbling my toes in semantics, linguistics, the cognitive sciences, and this bit on cognitive linguistics leapt out at me:
'Finally, cognitive linguistics argues that language is both embodied and situated in a specific environment ... that language and cognition mutually influence one another, and are both embedded in the experiences and environments of its users.'
and this:
'Linguistic inquiry is pursued by a wide variety of specialists, who may not all be in harmonious agreement; as journalist Russ Rymer put it: "Linguistics ... is soaked with the blood of poets, theologians, philosophers, philologists, psychologists, biologists, anthropologists, and neurologists, along with whatever blood can be got out of grammarians."'
and this:
'Diachronic linguistics ... examines how language changes through time ...'
I am particularly interested in the development of Christian theological language in the meeting of Hebrew (existential) and Greek (philosophical) culture ... for example the development of Trinitarian Theology, which required terms like 'essence', 'substance', 'person', 'being', 'soul' and of course 'theos' and 'logos' to be redefined to try and explain something rationally, that itself lies beyond the capacity of the reasoning faculty to comprehend independently, if we allow that 'Revelation' signifies that data which cannot be deduced by the function of human reason alone.
... and vaguely wondering if any of this makes sense?
Thomas