
Wisdom In Classical And Biblical Tradition Begins With The Recognition That Modern Culture Emerged From A Synthesis Of The Legacies Of Ancient Greek Civilization And The Theological Perspectives Of Jewish And Christian Scriptures. Part Of What Made This Synthesis Possible Was A Shared Outlook: A Common Aspiration Toward Wholeness Of Understanding That Refused To Separate Knowledge From Goodness, Virtue From Happiness, Cosmos From Polis, And Divine Authority From Human Responsibility. This Wholeness Of Understanding, Or Wisdom, Features Prominently In Both Classical And Biblical Literatures As An Ultimate Good. Wisdom In Classical And Biblical Tradition Has Two Central Aims. The First Is To Explain In Formal Terms What Wisdom Is. Though Wisdom Involves Matters Of Practical Judgment Affecting The Life Of The Individual And The Social Sphere, It Has Also Been Identified With An Understanding Of The World And Of The Ultimate Realities That Give Meaning To Human Thought And Action. Michael Legaspi Explains How, In Its Traditional Form, Wisdom Was Understood To Govern Intellectual, Social, And Ethical Endeavors. Legaspi's Second Aim Is To Analyze Figures And Texts That Have Yielded And Shaped The Traditional Understanding Of Wisdom. This Book Examines Accounts Of Wisdom From Foundational Texts That Range From The Period Of Homer To The Destruction Of The Second Temple, And Explains Why The Search For Wisdom Remains An Important But Problematic Endeavor Today-- Homer And The Wisdom Of The Hero -- Wisdom And Knowledge In The Hebrew Bible -- Job The True Sage -- Piety And Wisdom In Socrates -- A Nation Of Philosophers -- The School Of Solomon -- An End To Wisdom. Michael C. Legaspi. Includes Bibliographical References And Indexes.
This book investigates the historical and conceptual synthesis of ancient Greek and biblical traditions to define the nature of wisdom as a unified pursuit of knowledge, virtue, and divine order. Michael C. Legaspi, a scholar of biblical and classical literature, utilizes a comparative framework to analyze how these foundational texts conceptualized wisdom not merely as intellectual acquisition, but as a governing principle for ethical and social life. By examining the transition from Homeric ideals to the post-Second Temple period, the author argues that the traditional understanding of wisdom once integrated human responsibility with cosmic meaning.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and students of theology and classics frequently note the academic rigor and thematic density of Legaspi's prose. Experts highlight this work as a significant contribution to understanding the intellectual bridge between Hellenistic and biblical thought.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0190885157
ISBN-13:
9780190885151
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