Order and History (Volume 1)

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出版者:University of Missouri Press
作者:Eric Voegelin
出品人:
页数:656
译者:
出版时间:2001-11-30
价格:GBP 64.50
装帧:Hardcover
isbn号码:9780826213518
丛书系列:
图书标签:
  • 政治
  • 思想史
  • (集)
  • 沃格林
  • (English)
  • 政治哲学
  • 历史
  • EricVoegelin
  • 历史哲学
  • 秩序理论
  • 政治思想
  • 西方哲学
  • 社会结构
  • 文明演进
  • 制度研究
  • 历史叙事
  • 思想史
  • 文化史
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具体描述

Eric Voegelin's Israel and Revelation is the opening volume of his monumental Order and History, which traces the history of order in human society. This volume examines the ancient near eastern civilizations as a backdrop to a discussion of the historical locus of order in Israel. The drama of Israel mirrors the problems associated with the tension of existence as Israel attempted to reconcile the claims of transcendent order with those of pragmatic existence and so becomes paradigmatic.

According to Voegelin, what happened in Israel was a decisive step, not only in the history of Israel, but also in the human attempt to achieve order in society. The uniqueness of Israel is the fact that it was the first to create history as a form of existence, that is, the recognition by human beings of their existence under a world-transcendent God, and the evaluation of their actions as conforming to or defecting from the divine will. In the course of its history, Israel learned that redemption comes from a source beyond itself.

Voegelin develops rich insights into the Old Testament by reading the text as part of the universal drama of being. His philosophy of symbolic forms has immense implications for the treatment of the biblical narrative as a symbolism that articulates the experiences of a people's order. The author initiates us into attunement with all the partners in the community of being: God and humans, world and society. This may well be his most significant contribution to political thought: "the experience of divine being as world transcendent is inseparable from an understanding of man as human."

《序曲与回响:文明织锦的初章》 这是一部宏大叙事的开端,它将带领读者踏上一段跨越时间长河的旅程,探索人类文明进程中那些塑造了我们今日世界的关键性节点。本书并非对具体历史事件的流水账式记录,而是着眼于更深层次的规律与驱动力,剖析“秩序”如何在混沌中孕育,以及“历史”的浪潮如何层层叠叠地塑造出文明的面貌。 第一部分:秩序之锚 在本书的开篇,我们将深入探讨“秩序”这一概念的本质及其在人类早期社会形成中的核心作用。从原始部落的萌芽,到早期文明的崛起,人类始终在寻求稳定与可预测性。我们将考察: 氏族与部落的形成: 探讨血缘、亲情以及共同的生存需求如何促成了早期社会的基本结构。分析氏族首领的权威建立、规则的确立,以及这些早期秩序的脆弱与韧性。 农业革命的催化: 详述农业的出现如何从根本上改变了人类的生活方式,从游牧转向定居,从而催生了更复杂的社会组织、财产观念以及对土地和资源的管理需求。我们将审视这一转变如何为私有制和等级制度的出现埋下伏笔。 早期城邦与国家的雏形: 考察为何一些地区能够率先发展出更为复杂的政治实体——城邦和早期国家。分析军事组织、宗教权威、早期法律条文以及公共工程建设在确立和维护早期秩序中的关键作用。例如,苏美尔的城邦、古埃及的统一王国,以及早期中国的王朝,它们各自的秩序构建模式将为我们提供生动的例证。 权力与合法性: 深入剖析早期社会中权力的来源与维系。宗教信仰、血统传承、军事征服以及民众的认同感,这些因素是如何相互作用,为统治者赋予合法性的?我们将探讨早期统治者如何通过仪式、象征以及意识形态来巩固其权力基础。 经济活动与社会契约: 探究早期贸易、市场萌芽以及社会分工的出现如何影响社会结构。分析简单的交易规则、债务关系以及早期契约精神的形成,如何为社会关系的稳定提供了一种非强制性的秩序保障。 第二部分:历史之潮 当基本的社会秩序得以建立,历史的洪流便开始显现其更为复杂和多变的形态。本书将聚焦于那些推动历史进程的关键性变革、冲突与思想演变: 文明的碰撞与融合: 探讨不同文明之间互动产生的深远影响。贸易路线、军事征服、文化交流以及人口迁徙,这些因素如何导致技术的传播、思想的启蒙以及新的文明形态的诞生?我们将审视丝绸之路、地中海贸易圈等早期跨区域交流网络的意义。 思想的解放与革新: 考察人类思想史上的重要转折点。哲学、宗教、科学的早期发展如何挑战旧有的观念,为社会变革提供理论基础?从古希腊的理性精神,到印度的宗教思潮,再到中国诸子百家的思想争鸣,这些精神的火花如何点燃了文明进步的火炬? 制度的演进与变迁: 分析政治制度、法律体系、经济模式在历史长河中的演进轨迹。王朝的兴衰、帝国的扩张与瓦解,以及社会结构的调整,都反映了制度适应时代需求或因无法适应而走向衰败的必然性。我们将审视共和制、封建制等不同制度形态的特点及其历史命运。 冲突的驱动与遗产: 审视战争、革命、社会动荡等冲突形式在历史中的作用。冲突往往是旧秩序被打破、新秩序得以确立的催化剂。我们将分析冲突的根源,以及它们如何塑造了民族国家、意识形态的形成,并留下深远的文化和政治遗产。 记忆与传承: 探讨人类如何通过书写、口述、艺术等多种形式来记录、传承和解释自己的历史。历史的叙述本身就构成了一种重要的社会建构,它影响着人们对过去、现在和未来的认知。我们将思考历史的“何以重要”,以及它如何塑造了集体认同与文化记忆。 《序曲与回响:文明织锦的初章》旨在提供一个宏观的视角,帮助读者理解文明是如何在秩序的奠定与历史的变迁中,如同精妙织锦般层层叠加,最终勾勒出我们所处世界的复杂图景。它并非对琐碎事实的堆砌,而是对文明底层逻辑的探索,对驱动人类走向今日的关键性力量的深度审视。本书将为理解更为复杂的历史现象打下坚实的基础,开启一段关于人类文明发展规律的深度求索。

作者简介

Eric Voegelin (1901-1985) was one of the most original and influential philosophers of our time. Born in Cologne, Germany, he studied at the University of Vienna, where he became a professor of political science in the Faculty of Law. In 1938, he and his wife, fleeing Hitler, immigrated to the United States. They became American citizens in 1944. Voegelin spent much of his career at Louisiana State University, the University of Munich, and the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. During his lifetime he published many books and more than one hundred articles. The Collected Works of Eric Voegelin will make available in a uniform edition all of Voegelin's major writings.

目录信息

[ Note: Paging for the original 1956 edition is shown in brackets. In the Analytical Table of Contents there are shown page numbers in parentheses as they appeared in the original edition. These are ommitted in the new Collected Works edition.]
Editor's Introduction 1
Preface 19 [ix]
Acknowledgments 25 [xv]
Introduction: The Symbolization of Order 39 [1]
PART ONE: THE COSMOLOGICAL ORDER OF THE ANCIENT NEAR EAST [15]
Chapter 1: Mesopotamia 55 [16]
Chapter 2: The Achaemenian Empire 85 [46]
Chapter 3: Egypt 91 [52]
PART TWO: THE HISTORICAL ORDER OF ISRAEL [111]
Chapter 4: Israel and History 157 [116]
Chapter 5: The Emergence of Meaning 176 [134]
Chapter 6: The Historiographic Work 188 [145]
PART THREE: HISTORY AND THE TRAIL OF SYMBOLS [185]
Chapter 7: From Clan Society to Kingship 233 [188]
Chapter 8: The Struggle for Empire 265 [219]
Chapter 9: The Mundane Climax 303 [256]
Chapter 10: The End of Israel's Worldly Existence 361 [311]
PART FOUR: MOSES AND THE PROPHETS [353]
Chapter 11: The Deuteronomic Torah 405 [355]
Chapter 12: Moses 431 [380]
Chapter 13: The Prophets 481 [428]
Indexes [517]
Biblical References 571 [517]
Modern Authors [520]
Subjects and Names 577 [522]
Analytical Table of Contents
Preface
19 [ix]
Acknowledgments
25 [xv]
Introduction: The Symbolization of Order
39 [1]
Being and Existence. The Community of Being: God, Man, World, Society. Participation through Existence. The Order of Being in Perspective. Essential Ignorance and Anxiety (1). Experiences of Order. The Experience of Consubstantiality. The Experience of Lasting and Passing. Degrees of Durability. Hierarchy of Existents. The Attunement of Man to the Lasting Existents. The Experience of Obligation (2). Forms of Symbolization: Society as Microcosmos and Macroanthropos. The Breakdown of Cosmological Empires and the Orientation toward Transcendent Being (5). The Nature of Symbols. Conflicts of Analogues and Early Tolerance. The Oneness of Being and the Plurality of Symbols. Attempts at Rationalization. The Radical Inadequacy of Symbols to their Task (6). The Love of Being and Existence. Intolerance through Love of Being. Conversion. The Leap in Being. The Levels of Attunement. Tolerance through Love of Existence (8).
Part One: The Cosmological Order of the Ancient Near East
[13]
The Order of Society and the Order of Mankind. Cosmological Order as a Type. Historical Variations within the Type. The Organization of Materials (13).
Chapter 1: Mesopotamia
§ 1. THE CREATION OP GOD AND THE DOMINION OF MAN 55 [16]
Hybris and Chastisement. The Rivalry of God and Man in Genesis (16). The Myth of Adapa (18).
§ 2. THE SYMBOLIZATION OF POLITICAL ORDER 61 [21]
Political Order in Cosmological Symbols. From City State to Empire. Divine Lordship and Earthly Kingship (21). Time, Space, and Substance (24). The Omphalos (27). The Zodiac and the Number Twelve (29). The Sun and the Cycle of Renewal (32). Rationalization (34).
§ 3. THE SYMBOLIZATION OP COSMIC ORDER 78 [38]
Cosmic Order in Political Symbols. The Mesopotamian, Chinese, and Mycenaean Cases. The Aptitude of Civilizations for the Leap in Being. Comparison of the Three Cases (38). The Enuma Elish. The Blend of Cosmogony, Theogony, and Politics. Generations of Gods and Civilizational Crises (41).
Chapter 2: The Achaemenian Empire
85 [46]
The Parallel of God and King. Influence of Zoroastrianism (46). The Dual ism of Good and Evil. The Behistun Inscription. The Empire of Truth(47). Polytheism and Pluralistic Construction of the Conquest. Dynastic Consciousness (49). Rationalization桵onistic and Dualistic (50).
Chapter 3: Egypt
§ I. THE STRUCTURE OP CIVILIZATIONAL COURSES 91 [52]
The Toynbee-Frankfort Debate. The Phases of Egyptian History. The Issue of Osirian Religiousness (53). Analysis of the Conflict. Institutions, Experiences, Civilizational Form. The Climate of Experience and Stability of Form (56). The "Song of the Harper." Skepticism and Hedonism (57). Types of Civilizational Form. Compactness and Differentiation of Experiences. The Chinese Case. Civilizational Form and the Super-Civilizational Drama of Mankind (60).
§ 2. THE COSMOLOGICAL FORM 102 [63]
The Birth of the Two Lands. The Experience of the Nile (64). The Sun Hymns. Conflict with the Nile Symbol. The Visible and the Invisible God. Conflict with Cosmological Symbolism. The Transcendental Component in Pharaonic Order (67). Divine Kings and Animals. Divine Manifestation in the Pharaoh. Manifestations in Celestial Bodies, in Animal Species, in Representative Men. Probable Causes of the Egyptian Peculiarity (72). The Radiation of Cosmic Order over Society. The Son of God梚n the Pyramid Texts, in the Middle and New Kingdoms. The Meaning of Maat. The Transmission of Maat (75).
§ 3. THE DYNAMICS OF EXPERIENCE 121 [81]
1. The Egyptian Type of Differentiation. Egyptian Cosmogony and Ionian Speculation. The Structure of the Myth: Component Blocks of Experience; the Experience of Consubstantiality as the Binding Force. The Value of Mythical Compactness (82). Speculation within the Range of Consubstantiality. Evolution toward Monotheism. The Amon Hymns of Dynasty XIX. Theologia negativa and Analogia entis (85). 122
2. The Memphite Theology. The Mythical Drama of Order from Chaos. Unification of Egypt and Foundation of Memphis (88). Theogonic Speculation. Ptah as the Creator ex nihilo . Divine Creation桼oyal Foundation. The Epistemological Footnote. Rational Consciousness in the Creation of the Myth. Comparison with the Christian Logos Speculation (90). 127
3. The Response to Disorder (95). The Coffin Text on a Community of Equals (96). The "Dispute of a Man, Who Contemplates Suicide, with His Soul" (98). 135
4. Akhenaton. The New Position of the Pharaoh. The Ascendancy of Thebes. The "Instructions" for Meri-ka-re. The "Admonitions of Ipu-wer." The "Prophecies of Neferrohu" (101). The Amarna Revolution. A Sun Hymn of Amenhotep III. The "Hymns of Akhenaton." The Reactionary Monopoly of Pharaonic Mediation. The Impasse of Pharaonic Order (105). 141
Part Two: The Historical Order of Israel
[111]
The House of Bondage and the Freedom of God (111). The Symbols of the Break with Civilization: Sheol, Exodus, Desert, Kingdom of God (113). The Chosen People and the Promised Land (113).
Chapter 4: Israel and History
1. Israel and the Civilizational Courses. Three Tables of Events: The Biblical Narrative, Migrations and Dominations, Toynbee's Cycle of Syriac Civilization (116). Pragmatic and Paradigmatic History. The Leap in Being as the Source of True Order. The Chosen People as the Carrier of Truth. Paradigmatic History as the Confirmation of Truth. The Historical Form of Existence (121). The Eclipse of God. The Spengler-Toynbee Theory of Civilizational Cycles (124). 157 [116]
2. The Meaning of History. Equivocations: The Objective Time of the Civilizational Courses桾he Inner Form of Society. Compact History in Cosmological Form. Differentiated History in the Present under God. The Origin of Meaning in the Historical Present. The Radiation of Meaning over the Compact Past (126). Problems in the Radiation of Meaning: The Ontological Reality of Mankind桾he Origin of History in a Moving Present桾he Loss of Historical Substance (128). 167
Chapter 5: The Emergence of Meaning
176 [134]
Psalm 136. The Emergence of Meaning: Creation, Covenant, Canaan. World-History (154). The Range of Motives: Exodus, Sinai, Shechem. The Expansion of Motives: Events, Experiences, Cults, Cult Legends, Historiographic Elaboration (136). The Pattern of Emergence: Advance and Relapse. The Sacred Line and Mankind. The Rhythm of the Book of Judges. The Kingdom and the Prophets. Exile and Return. Retrospect from the Rabbinical Position (139). The Ambiguity of Canaan. Judaism and Christianity (143).
Chapter 6: The Historiographic Work
The Biblical Narrative. The Layers of Meaning. The Historiographic Stratum (145). 188 [145]
§ I. THE SOURCES OF THE NARRATIVE. A NOTE ON THE STATE OF THE PROBLEM 190 [146]
The Nature of the Problem (146). The Wellhausen School. The Conception of Sources. Rising Dissatisfaction. Criticism (149). The Position of I. Engnell. The Tradition-Historical Method. The Collections of Traditions. Traditionist Circles. J. Pedersen. The Plurality of Motivating Centers (156).
§ 2. THE SYMBOLS OF HISTORIOGRAPHY 206 [162]
Justification of the Term "History." Compactness of Israelite Experience (162). Toroth (Instructions) and Sepher (Book) (164). Toldoth (Generations). Expansion of Genealogies from Clan to Mankind. Separation of the Remnant (165). Speculative Use of Toldoth. The Toldoth of Adam and the Toldoth of Heaven and Earth. Generative Descent from God (168). Berith (Covenant). Expansion from Clan Agreements to the Mosaic Berith. Institutional Use of the Symbol. The Historiographic Use. The Four Ages of World-History. The Four Ages in Christian Speculation (171).
§ 3. THE MOTIVATIONS of HISTORIOGRAPHY 218 [174]
The Range of the Narrative. Its Contents: History, Myth, Enactment of the Myth. The Narrative a Symbolic Form sui generis (174). The Motivations: The Foundation of the Kingdom and the Covenant (176). The Two Foci of Construction and the Compact Experience of Order. The Mortgage of World-Immanent Existence. The Targets of Attack. The Basis of the Attack. Comparison with Christian Problems. The Struggle for Spiritual Freedom (179).
Part Three: History and the Trail of Symbols
[185]
Pragmatic Existence and the Order of the Covenant. The Complexity of Israelite Symbols. History as a Symbol of Revelation. Organization of Sub- ject Matter (185).
Chapter 7: From Clan Society to Kingship
§1. THE ABRAM STORY 233 [188]
1. Yahweh's Berith with Abram. The Story of Genesis 14. The Nature of the Source. The Political Scene before 1500 B.C. The Baal Berith. The Transformation of the Berith Symbol. The Berith with Yahweh. The God of the Fathers (188). 233
2. The Continuity of the Political Situation. The Scene in the Amarna Period梐t the Time of the Conquest (196). 241
§2. THE DEBORAH SONG 245 [199]
1. The Transmission of Yahwism to the Time of Moses. The Israelite Confederacy (199). 245
2. The Deborah Song (201). Yahweh and War. The Ritual of the Holy War (204). War and Permanent Political Organization (208). 247
§3. THE KINGSHIP OF GIDEON 258 [212]
Amalgamation of Hebrews and Canaanites. The New Israel (212). Gideon and the Midianite Wars (213). The Sanctuary of the Yahweh of Ophrah (215). The Marriage Policy. The Function of the Harem. Abimelech's coup d'etat (216). "The Fable of the Trees in Search of a King" (217).
Chapter 8: The Struggle for Empire
§1. THE AMPLITUDE OF YAHWISM 265 [219]
Assimilation to Canaanite Gods. Summodeism in statu nascendi . The Formation of Personality through the Spirit of Yahweh (219).
§ 2. THE KINGSHIP OF SAUL 270 [224]
1. The Rise of Saul. The Philistine Expansion. The National Kingship of Saul (224). The Royalist Version of Saul's Kingship. The King and the God (226). Prophetism桟ollective and Solitary. Populist Yahwism. The Bands of Prophets. Ecstaticism and Articulation (228). 270
2. Spiritual Order of the Soul. Saul and the Witch of Endor. The Prohibition of the elohim (232). The Soul in Israel and Hellas (234). Historical Realism v. Philosophy. The Transfer of the Redeemer Function to Yahweh. The Return of God into History. David's Funeral Elegy for Saul and Jonathan (236). 279
3. Theocracy. The Antiroyalist Version of Saul's Kingship (242). Samuel and Theocracy (245). 289
§ 3. THE RISE OF DAVID 295 [249]
The Entrance of Judah into Israelite History (249). The New Social Forces. The Retinue of the War Leaders and the Rise of Professional Armies. The King's Clan. The War of the Generals. David Becomes King (251).
Chapter 9: The Mundane Climax
§1. THE DAVIDIC EMPIRE 303 [256]
The Empire and the Identity of Israel (256). The Economic Limitations (258).
§2. THE DAVID-BATHSHEBA STORY 306 [259]
"The Fable of the Poor Man's Lamb" (260). The Disintegration of the War Ritual. Israel as a Strategic Reserve in the Imperial Army (261). David's Character (265). Justice (266).
§ 3. DAVID'S KINGSHIP 315 [267]
The Two Unctions (268). David's Berith with Israel. The Succession of Solomon (269). Yahweh's Berith with the House of David (271).
§4. DAVID AND JERUSALEM 320 [273]
The Imperial Program. The Meaning of "David." Genesis 14. El Elyon. The Theophorous Names. The Priesthoods (274). Psalm no (279).
§5. THE IMPERIAL PSALMS. A DIGRESSION ON THE STATE OF THE PROBLEM 330 [282]
1. The Nature of the Psalms. Their Function in the Cult. Poetic and Religious Individualism as Causes of Misunderstanding (282). 330
2. Form-critical and Cult-functional Methods. H. Gunkel. S. Mowinckel (284). 332
3. Divine Kingship and Patternism. The Theoretical Issue. The New Year Rituals. S. H. Hooke. A. R. Johnson. The Literature on Kingship (287). 336
4. The Difficulties of the New Position. The Insufficient Philosophical Foundation (290). 339
5. The Resistance to Mythologization. The Sinai Cult. G. von Rad. The Nathan Prophecy. H.- J. Kraus. Literary Criticism v. Analysis of Order (293). 341
6. Conclusion. A. J. Wensinck on Cosmological Symbolism. The Relation of Cosmological and Historical Form. The Institutional Vacuum of the Covenant Order. The Completion through the Empire. The Pressure of Historical Form on the Meaning of the Psalms (298). 347
§6. THE IMPERIAL SYMBOLISM 353 [303]
The Cosmological Symbols. The Nathan Prophecy. Egyptian Influences. The Imperial Psalms (303). Eschatological Transformation. Psalms of Solomon 17. The Epistle to the Hebrews (309).
Chapter 10: The End of Israel's Worldly Existence
§1. THE DIVIDED KINGDOMS 361 [311]
The Literary Outburst. Order beyond Mundane Existence. The Growth of Israel. The Trail of Symbols (311). The Destiny of Israel. The Archaic Revolt (315).
§2. THE PRAGMATIC SITUATION 367 [316]
The Internal Organization of the Northern Kingdom (316). The Egyptian Intervention. Egyptian Aspects of Solomon's Reign. Pharaoh's Daughter. The Temple. The Robe of the High Priest. The Cult Reform of Jeroboam (317). The Rise of Assyria. The Omride Policy. Jehu's Revolt (322).
§3. THE BOOK OF THE COVENANT 375 [325]
The Interest in the Law. Hosea. The Response to the Crisis of Mundane Existence (325). The Sinaitic Legislation. Debharim and Mishpatim (328). The Decalogic Form (330). The Decalogue and Social Order (332).
§4. THE PROPHET ELIJAH 385 [334]
The Malachi Texts (33$). The Experience of Judgment (337). The Vision on Mount Tabor (338). The Day of Yahweh (340). The Stages of Eschatology (343). Elijah. Moses and Elijah. The Omrides and Elijah. The Attack on the Baal. Elijah in the Desert. The Prophetic Succession (345).
Part Four: Moses and the Prophets
[353]
Chapter 11: The Deuteronomic Torah
1. The Prophets and the Order of Israel. Assimilation and Nationalism. Universalism and Parochialism. The Judaite Will to Existence. Deuteronomic "Theology" (355). 405 [355]
2. The Speeches of Moses. Period of their Creation. Suppression, Discovery, and Enactment (359). 410
3. The Instructions of Yahweh and the Torah of Moses. The Myth of Mosaic Authorship梠f the Word of God (362). 412
4. The Regulation of Revelation. Motivations in the Prophetic Revolt. The Inclusion of the Circumstances in the Contents of Revelation. The Regulation: The King, the Priests, the Prophets. The Dividing Line between the Histories of Israel and the Jews (367). 418
5. Deuteronomy and the Beginnings of Judaism. Israelite and Jewish Aspects of the Torah. G. von Rad and W. Eichrodt. Flattening of Existence and Peace of Mind. The Experience of "Today." Military Reform and Religious Wars. Religion Defined. The Institutional Model of Divine Order. Imperial Pressure, Repristination, and Preservation of Order (372). 423
Chapter 12: Moses
§I. THE NATURE OF THE SOURCES 431 [380]
The Permitted Questions and Answers (381). Form and Historical Substance. The Form of the Torah. The Form of the Prophetic Legend. The Historical Substance: Yahwist v. Pharaonic Order. The Form of the Paschal Legend (383).
§ 2. THE SON OF GOD 439 [388]
The Summary of leitmotifs. Exod. 4:21�23. Israel: The New Son of God. Service to Yahweh v. Service to Egypt. The Historical Demotion of Egypt (389). The Name of Moses. The People and the Leader. Egyptization. Mosheh: "The One Who Draws Out and Who is Drawn Out." The Red Sea Miracle (392). The Transfer of the Mosheh Symbol to David. Psalm 18. The Royal Son of God and the Order of Mankind. Transition to Messianism. The Transfer of the Mosheh Symbol to Jesus. Heb. 13:20 (395). Moses as the Prcfiguration of the Son of God. The Tentative Symbol of Moses the God (398). Yahweh Tries to Kill Moses. The Uncircumcized Lips and the Mouth of God (400).
§ 3. THE GOD 453 [402]
The Yahweh of Moses (402). The Spiritual Biography of Moses in Exod. 2 (403). The Revelation from the Thornbush. Literary Structure of the Epi- sode. The Interpretation of the I-AM-WHO-I-AM. St. Thomas on the Thorn- bush Episode. The Hidden and the Revealed God. Revelation and Historical Constitution of the People (405). Relation of the Thornbush Episode to the Amon Hymns. The Date of Moses (412).
§4. THE NEW DISPENSATION 466 [415]
Revelation and Human Response. The Construction of the Exodus Drama (416). The Construction of the Berith Drama (418). The Message from Sinai. The Kingdom of Priests. The Order of Mankind with its Center in the Royal Domain (421). The Covenant (423). The Decalogue. The Constitution of the Theopolity. The Suppression of Rebellion Anti-Divine and Anti-Human. The Flow of the People through the Rhythm of Time (424).
Chapter 13: The Prophets
§I. THE PROPHETIC EFFORT 481 [428]
The Continuum of Historical Form. Recall of the Past and Call in the Present. Derailment into the Torah. Prophetic Resistance. Universalism and Personalism. Relegation to the Past (428).
§2. THE UNFOLDING Of THE PROBLEM
I. The Decalogue. Jeremiah's Temple Address. The Decalogue as the Meas- ure of Conduct. Prophetic and Public Authority (431). The Trial of Jeremiah. Comparison with Socrates (434). The Call of Isaiah (436). 484 [431]
2. The Covenant. Law v. the Order of the Soul. The Normative Form of Existential Issues (438). Jeremiah's Attack on the Alien Gods (440). Complaints about Conduct桝mos, Hosea, Isaiah (442). The Demand of Virtues (444). The Prophets' Ontology. Isaiah and Warfare. Metastasis (447). Metastatic Operations (453). Metastatic Experience and the Existential Issue. The Covenant Written in the Heart (455). 491
3. The Message. The Critique of the Sinaitic Symbolism (458). The In- effective Revelation (460). The Dialectics of Divine Foreknowledge and Human Decision. The Dual Symbolism of the Prophets (461). Ontology and History (464). Jeremiah's Enactment of Israel's Fate. The Contraction of the Chosen People into the Chosen Man (465). Jeremiah's Call. The Prophet as the Royal Son of God, as the New Moses, as the Servant of Yahweh, as the Lord of History (467). The Prophet to the Nations. Amos. The Literary Form of the Prophets (470). The Messianic Problem. The Last Words of David. The Image of the Ruler (471). The Institutional Phase of the Mes sianic Problem桝mos, Hosea (470. The Metastatic Phase. Isaiah. The Kabhod of Yahweh. The Call. The Political Intervention. The Immanuel Prophecy. The Disciples and the Sealing of the Message. The Prince of Peace Prophecy. The Metastatic Vision (475). The Existential Phase. Jeremiah (481). Jeremiah's Spiritual Autobiography. Suffering, Complaint, Revenge. The Justice of God. The Mystery of Iniquity. The Dialogue with God. Prophetic Existence as Participation in God's Suffering (484). 511
§3. THE SUFFERING SERVANT 542 [488]
The Problem of Israelite Order. The Positions of Isaiah and Jeremiah. The Movement beyond the Order of the Concrete Society. The Exodus of Israel from Itself (488). Deutero-Isaiah (491). The Work a Symbolic Drama. Errors of Interpretation. The Logoi of Philosophy and Revelation. The Time of Experience, of the Composition, of Salvation (494). Organization of the Work. Substance and Form of Revelation. A New Type of Prophecy (498). The Prologue in Heaven. The leitmotifs : The Former Things and the New Things. The Redeemer God. God as the Creator of the World, of Israel, of Salvation. Theology of History. The Fall of Babylon and the Experience of Redemption. The God of All Mankind (501). The Servant and His Work of Redemption. The Ordination of the Servant in Heaven. The Servant in History梐s the Light to the Nations, as the Disciple of God. His Suffering and Work. The Representative Sufferer for Mankind (507).
· · · · · · (收起)

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【关键词】埃里克·沃格林 秩序 经验 符号 【出版日期】2018-01-01 【摘要】作为20世纪一位重要的政治思想家,埃里克·沃格林在政治哲学与历史哲学领域有其独到贡献,但汉语学界对他的研究仍处起步阶段。沃格林在一些核心概念上采用了与人们通常的理解有所不同的用法,这对我们...  

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政治学研究的是实实在在的对象,order of being/philosophy of being, being 翻译成“存在者”容易让人理解,翻译成“存在”真是玄之又玄,让人丈二和尚摸不到屁股,西人从本体研究到知识再研究到语言,都冲着实实在在的对象折腾,到我们这里,都成了众妙之门了,我们实在是本...

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【关键词】埃里克·沃格林 秩序 经验 符号 【出版日期】2018-01-01 【摘要】作为20世纪一位重要的政治思想家,埃里克·沃格林在政治哲学与历史哲学领域有其独到贡献,但汉语学界对他的研究仍处起步阶段。沃格林在一些核心概念上采用了与人们通常的理解有所不同的用法,这对我们...  

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【关键词】埃里克·沃格林 秩序 经验 符号 【出版日期】2018-01-01 【摘要】作为20世纪一位重要的政治思想家,埃里克·沃格林在政治哲学与历史哲学领域有其独到贡献,但汉语学界对他的研究仍处起步阶段。沃格林在一些核心概念上采用了与人们通常的理解有所不同的用法,这对我们...  

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政治学研究的是实实在在的对象,order of being/philosophy of being, being 翻译成“存在者”容易让人理解,翻译成“存在”真是玄之又玄,让人丈二和尚摸不到屁股,西人从本体研究到知识再研究到语言,都冲着实实在在的对象折腾,到我们这里,都成了众妙之门了,我们实在是本...

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当我翻开“Order and History (Volume 1)”这本书的时候,我并未预设它会如此深入地触及我内心深处对社会运作的思考。这本书不仅仅是历史的记录,更是一次关于人类文明如何从蒙昧走向有序的深刻哲学追问。作者在论述过程中,将“秩序”的概念置于一个动态的、不断演进的框架中,让我看到了历史发展的连续性和革命性。我印象最深刻的是,书中对于“制度”的分析,它并非仅仅是冰冷的规则,而是承载着特定时期社会价值和权力关系的载体。作者通过对不同时代法律体系、政治架构、经济规则的梳理,揭示了制度是如何在构建秩序的同时,也在塑造着社会成员的思想和行为模式。他强调了“社会契约”的重要性,以及当这种契约被撕毁或被忽视时,秩序将如何走向崩塌。我对书中关于“集体行为”的章节尤为着迷,作者分析了在特定历史条件下,群体是如何自发地形成某种共识,并为了维护某种“秩序”而采取行动的。这种行动,有时是积极的合作,有时则是激烈的反抗。他对“权威”的解读也极具启发性,权威的来源、合法性的基础以及权威的衰落过程,都被作者置于历史发展的宏观视角下进行了细致的剖析。读完这本书,我感觉自己对“秩序”这个概念的理解,不再停留在表面,而是上升到了一个更为抽象和深刻的哲学层面。

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我必须说,“Order and History (Volume 1)”这本书的阅读体验,远超出了我最初的预期。作者以其非凡的才华,将“秩序”这个看似抽象的概念,置于历史的长河之中,展现了它如何在人类文明的演进过程中扮演着至关重要的角色。他不仅仅关注了宏观的政治和社会结构,更深入到了微观的个体行为和心理动机。我特别欣赏作者对“社会化”过程的分析,他探讨了人类个体如何在家庭、教育、宗教等各种社会机构中学习和内化社会规则,从而成为维护秩序的积极参与者。他还深入分析了“身份认同”在秩序构建中的作用,当个体清晰地认识到自己在社会中的位置和角色时,就更容易接受并遵循既定的秩序。书中关于“变革”的章节也让我受益匪浅,作者并没有将历史的变革视为简单的线性发展,而是揭示了其中蕴含的复杂性和偶然性。他分析了不同类型的变革(如渐进式变革、革命式变革)是如何发生的,以及它们对既有秩序产生的深远影响。读完这本书,我感觉自己对历史的理解上升到了一个全新的高度,我开始能够从“秩序”这个维度去审视和分析各种历史现象,并从中获得更深刻的洞察。

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“Order and History (Volume 1)”这本书给我带来的最大惊喜在于它对“秩序”概念的哲学性探讨。我原以为这本书会是一本纯粹的历史叙述,侧重于事件的发生和发展,但它却将我带入了对“秩序”本质的思考。作者并没有给出一个固定的“秩序”定义,而是通过梳理不同历史时期、不同文明中的秩序形态,展现了“秩序”的多样性和演变性。他探讨了自然法则、社会契约、宗教教义、权力结构等多种因素是如何被用来构建和维护秩序的,以及这些秩序是如何在时间的长河中不断地被修正、被颠覆、被重建的。我特别喜欢书中关于“无序”与“有序”之间辩证关系的讨论。作者并没有将“无序”完全视为负面,而是指出,适度的“无序”有时也是创新的温床,是旧秩序走向新秩序的催化剂。这种辩证的视角让我对社会变革有了更深的理解,不再简单地认为稳定就是一切,而是认识到动态的平衡和适度的调整同样重要。书中关于“合法性”的讨论也让我印象深刻。作者分析了不同历史时期,统治者是如何通过各种方式来证明其统治的合法性,从而获得民众的认同,维持社会秩序。这不仅包括武力征服,还包括意识形态的传播、法律的制定、甚至是通过对过去的解读和叙述。这种对“合法性”的深入挖掘,让我看到了历史背后更为复杂的人性需求和权力运作。读完这本书,我感觉自己对“秩序”这个概念有了全新的认识,它不再仅仅是外在的规则和约束,更是一种内在的信念和认同。

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这本书的名字听起来就很有分量,"Order and History (Volume 1)",光是这个标题就勾起了我无限的遐想。我一直对历史的脉络、事件的因果关系以及人类社会如何从混沌走向有序有着浓厚的兴趣。这本书似乎在承诺一种深入的探索,一种对时间长河中秩序建立和演变过程的深刻剖析。我好奇作者会如何构建这个“秩序”的概念,是政治上的统治秩序、经济上的运转秩序,还是思想上的观念秩序?它又将如何与“历史”这个宏大的主题相结合?我期待作者能够提供一种全新的视角,去理解那些看似零散的历史事件是如何相互关联,最终形成我们今天所认知的世界。第一卷通常是开篇,所以我想这本书会奠定一个坚实的基础,为后续的卷册铺垫,或许会涉及一些早期文明的兴起,或者某种社会组织的最初形态。我希望它不仅仅是罗列事实,而是能像一位经验丰富的向导,带领我穿越时空的迷雾,去揭示历史背后那些隐藏的规律和驱动力。我对于那些能够引发深度思考,挑战既有认知的作品总是充满期待,而“Order and History”显然有这样的潜力。这本书的封面设计也给我留下了深刻的印象,它的色调、字体,似乎都在暗示着某种庄重与智慧。我希望它能提供给我那种“读完后,仿佛打开了一扇新世界大门”的感觉,让我在阅读的过程中不断产生新的领悟和启发。

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从我个人的阅读习惯来说,我更偏爱那些能够提供独特见解和深度分析的书籍,而“Order and History (Volume 1)”正是这样一本让我受益匪浅的作品。作者在梳理历史的同时,展现了他非凡的洞察力。他对于“秩序”的理解,超越了单纯的社会科学范畴,融入了心理学、人类学甚至哲学等多个领域的思考。我记得书中有一个章节,详细分析了人类社会早期,个体如何在群体中找到自己的位置,以及这种“归属感”是如何成为早期秩序建立的重要基石。作者运用了大量考古发现和人类学研究成果来支持他的论点,使得这些看似遥远的理论变得触手可及。他还讨论了“恐惧”在维持秩序中的作用,以及统治者如何巧妙地利用恐惧来控制民众,同时又避免恐惧本身成为失控的源头。这种 nuanced 的分析让我看到了历史人物和群体行为背后更为复杂的心态和动机。我尤其欣赏作者对于“历史的叙事”本身如何构成一种“秩序”的探讨。他指出,我们今天所理解的历史,并非客观事实的简单堆砌,而是经过选择、解读和重构的产物。不同的历史叙事,往往服务于不同的社会群体和时代需求,从而构建起不同的“秩序”。这种反思让我对我们所接触到的历史知识有了批判性的审视。这本书的学术严谨性和思想深度是毋庸置疑的,但同时,作者也努力让文字保持一定的可读性,使得即便是非专业读者也能从中获得启发。

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“Order and History (Volume 1)”这本书带给我的体验,更像是在进行一场跨越时空的智力探险。作者以其深厚的学识和广阔的视野,将历史的宏大叙事与对“秩序”的精微分析巧妙地结合在一起。他没有回避历史中的黑暗面,而是将其视为理解秩序形成和演变过程中不可或缺的一部分。书中关于“压迫”与“秩序”关系的讨论,让我深思。作者认为,尽管压迫性的秩序看似强大,但往往内在不稳固,容易因为微小的裂缝而导致整个体系的崩塌。相反,那些真正具有生命力的秩序,往往建立在一定程度的共识和妥协之上,能够容纳多元化的声音和发展。我特别对作者在分析不同文明的“秩序”模式时,所展现出的文化相对主义的视角印象深刻。他避免了用单一的价值标准去评判不同文明的社会组织方式,而是努力去理解它们各自的文化背景、历史条件和社会需求。这种包容性的态度,让我对人类文明的多样性有了更深的敬意。他还讨论了“记忆”在构建和维系秩序中的重要作用。历史记忆的传承,集体叙事的构建,都在不断地塑造着人们的身份认同和社会归属感,进而巩固了现有的秩序。但同时,对历史记忆的重新解读,也可能成为挑战现有秩序的有力武器。这本书的分析是如此的深刻和全面,让我不得不一次又一次地停下来,反复咀嚼其中的观点。

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我最近刚读完“Order and History (Volume 1)”,虽然书名听起来有些宏大,但实际阅读体验却异常的引人入胜。作者对历史事件的梳理堪称教科书级别,但他并没有止步于简单的叙述,而是巧妙地将“秩序”的概念贯穿始终。我特别喜欢作者在分析某个历史时期时,不仅关注了政治和军事层面的权力结构,还深入探讨了文化、宗教、经济以及社会习俗是如何共同作用,构建起那个时代的“秩序”。举例来说,关于古代某文明如何从部落联盟演变成统一王国,作者不仅仅描述了战争和征服,还详细分析了法律的制定、商业网络的形成以及共同信仰的传播是如何一步步巩固了统治,并为社会成员提供了行为准则和安全感。这种多维度的分析让我对历史的理解不再是碎片化的,而是形成了一个更加立体和完整的图景。我曾经对某些历史事件感到困惑,例如为什么看似强大的帝国会突然衰落,或者为什么某些社会变革会如此迅速且彻底。这本书通过揭示不同层面的“秩序”是如何相互影响、制约甚至相互颠覆的,为我解答了许多疑问。作者的文笔也很流畅,虽然涉及的内容很深奥,但读起来并不枯燥。他善于运用恰当的比喻和生动的例子,将抽象的理论具象化,让我能够轻松地理解那些复杂的概念。我尤其欣赏他对于“秩序”本身的演变过程的探讨,书中关于“秩序”是如何被挑战、被重塑、甚至被创造出来的论述,让我对社会发展 dynamics 有了更深刻的认识。

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“Order and History (Volume 1)”这本书带给我的,是一种前所未有的阅读体验。它不仅仅是一本讲述历史的书,更是一次关于人类文明本质的深刻探索。作者以一种非常独特且富有洞察力的方式,将“秩序”这个抽象的概念具象化,并置于历史发展的宏大背景之下。他探讨了“秩序”是如何在不同的文化、不同的时代、不同的社会形态中以不同的形式呈现,以及这些“秩序”是如何被构建、被维护、被挑战和被改变的。我特别喜欢书中关于“规范”与“习俗”的讨论。作者认为,规范是明确的规则,而习俗是潜移默化的影响,两者共同构成了社会秩序的基石。他通过分析不同文明的节日、仪式、社交礼仪等,展示了习俗如何在潜移默化中塑造着社会成员的行为,并巩固了现有的秩序。他还深入探讨了“冲突”在秩序形成过程中的作用。他认为,冲突并非总是破坏性的,有时它也是一种“重塑”的动力,能够打破僵化的旧秩序,为新的秩序腾出空间。这种辩证的视角,让我对历史的理解不再局限于一成不变的平静,而是看到了其中蕴含的动态张力和变革力量。这本书的语言风格也非常独特,它既有学者般的严谨,又不失文学般的优美,读起来令人心旷神怡。

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“Order and History (Volume 1)”这本书的结构安排和内容呈现,都给我留下了深刻的印象。作者以一种非常清晰且逻辑严密的思路,将复杂的历史进程和抽象的“秩序”概念娓娓道来。他没有选择简单地按照时间顺序来叙述,而是根据“秩序”的不同维度和形成机制,巧妙地组织章节。例如,书中可能有一章专门探讨“宗教在秩序建立中的作用”,另一章则关注“经济因素对社会结构的影响”。这种主题式的梳理,使得我在阅读过程中能够更容易地抓住核心论点,并看到不同历史时期在同一维度上的共性与差异。我特别欣赏作者在引用史料和学术观点时的严谨性,他不仅引用了大量的原始文献和考古证据,还对学界主流观点进行了梳理和评论,并在此基础上提出了自己的独到见解。这使得这本书不仅具有学术价值,也充满了启发性。我还注意到,作者在论述过程中,非常注重“因果关系”的分析。他不仅仅是在描述历史事件,更是在努力揭示这些事件发生的原因,以及它们如何一步步地导向了某种特定的“秩序”。这种对因果链条的深入挖掘,让我能够更好地理解历史的逻辑,以及人类社会的复杂性。读完这本书,我感觉自己仿佛经历了一次系统性的历史思维训练,对如何分析和理解历史有了全新的方法和视角。

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“Order and History (Volume 1)”这本书为我打开了一个全新的认知维度,让我对“秩序”这一概念有了更加深刻和系统的理解。作者并非简单地罗列历史事实,而是以一种极具启发性的方式,将历史事件与“秩序”的形成、演变和瓦解紧密地联系起来。他深入分析了“权力”在构建和维护秩序中的核心作用,探讨了不同形式的权力(如政治权力、经济权力、宗教权力)是如何相互交织,共同塑造了历史的进程。我印象深刻的是,书中关于“合法性”的论述,作者分析了统治者如何通过各种方式来确立其统治的合法性,以获得民众的认同和服从,从而维持社会秩序的稳定。这不仅仅是依靠武力,更包括意识形态的灌输、法律的制定、以及对历史的解读和叙述。他还探讨了“记忆”在历史进程中的重要作用,集体记忆的形成和传承,如何影响着人们对过去的认知,以及如何塑造着当下的社会秩序。这种对历史进程中“记忆”的深刻挖掘,让我看到了历史的叙事本身也是一种“秩序”的构建。这本书的分析是如此的细致和深入,以至于我不得不反复阅读,才能消化其中的大量信息和深刻见解。

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祈求上帝显灵的摩西哪有我们桓温桓大司马“如不能名垂千古,那就遗臭万年”的人物风流?

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我又在为难自己了。600多页的全英文,里面夹杂各种希腊、拉丁、古英语……

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我又在为难自己了。600多页的全英文,里面夹杂各种希腊、拉丁、古英语……

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我又在为难自己了。600多页的全英文,里面夹杂各种希腊、拉丁、古英语……

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我又在为难自己了。600多页的全英文,里面夹杂各种希腊、拉丁、古英语……

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