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SCM Core Text Theological Hermeneutics
SCM Core Text Theological Hermeneutics
SCM Core Text Theological Hermeneutics
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SCM Core Text Theological Hermeneutics

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This book introduces theological hermeneutics by giving a historical account of the development of hermeneutical thinking. It defines hermeneutics as the analysis of the obstacles to understanding. The history of hermeneutical thinking and responses to obstacles is told here, beginning with the allegorical interpretation of myths in Hellenism throu
LanguageEnglish
PublisherSCM Press
Release dateFeb 11, 2013
ISBN9780334048268
SCM Core Text Theological Hermeneutics

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    SCM Core Text Theological Hermeneutics - Alexander S. Jensen

    Theological Hermeneutics

    The SCM Core Texts

    Christian Spirituality (Karen Smith)

    The Philosophy of Religion (Gwen Griffith-Dickson)

    Religion and Modern Thought (Victoria Harrison)

    Religious Syncretism (Eric Maroney)

    Theological Hermeneutics (Alexander Jensen)

    Wisdom Literature (Alastair Hunter)

    World Religions (Tom Robinson and Hillary Rodrigues)

    SCM CORE TEXT

    Theological Hermeneutics

    Alexander S. Jensen

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    Copyright information

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher, SCM Press.

    © Alexander S. Jensen 2007

    The Author has asserted his right under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, to be identified as the Author of this Work

    British Library Cataloguing in Publication data

    A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

    Scripture quotations are from the New Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1989 by the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    978 0 334 02901 4

    First published in 2007 by SCM Press

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    London N1 0NX

    www.scm-canterburypress.co.uk

    SCM Press is a division of SCM-Canterbury Press Ltd

    Typeset by Regent Typesetting, London

    Printed and bound in Great Britain by

    William Clowes Ltd, Beccles, Suffolk

    Contents

    Acknowledgements

    Introduction

    What is hermeneutics?

    The hermeneutic circle

    The place of hermeneutics

    The approach of this book

    1. Hermeneutics in Antiquity

    Introduction

    Language and meaning

    Graeco-Roman antiquity

    Judaism

    Christianity

    2. Augustine of Hippo

    Introduction and biography

    Sources

    Words and signs

    Memory

    Using signs

    The inner word in the spoken word

    3. The Middle Ages

    Jerome’s translation

    Medieval interpretation

    Ways of speaking of God

    4. Humanism and the Reformation

    Humanism

    Reformation

    5. Rationalism and Enlightenment

    A new context

    Enlightenment

    Orthodoxy

    Scottish common-sense philosophy and modern fundamentalism

    Pietism

    6. Friedrich Schleiermacher: Hermeneutics as the Art of Understanding

    Introduction and biography

    Sources

    Feeling and language

    The art of understanding

    Grammatical and psychological interpretation

    Historical criticism

    The hermeneutic circle

    Outlook: Perception, feeling and language

    7. Historicism

    The text as source for the study of history: Dilthey and the history of religion school

    Hermeneutics of suspicion: Marx, Nietzsche and Freud

    8. Existentialism I: Martin Heidegger and Rudolf Bultmann

    Bultmann and Heidegger: Sources

    Existentialism

    9. Existentialism II: The Path to Language

    Understanding through language

    Hermeneutical theology

    10. The Universality of the Sign I: Open Sign Systems

    Structuralism

    Post-structuralism and deconstruction

    Postmodern theology

    11. The Universality of the Sign II: Closed Sign Systems

    Karl Barth

    Canonical approaches and new biblical theology

    Literary criticism

    12. Critical Theory, Feminism and Postcolonialism

    Critical Theory

    Feminism

    Postcolonialism

    13. Towards a Hermeneutical Theology

    Preliminary considerations

    A hermeneutical theology

    Conclusion

    The inner word

    The significance of hermeneutics

    Notes

    For Helen

    Acknowledgements

    Hermeneutics has been a passion of mine since my undergraduate days. Initially, this was born out of curiosity – the word sounded attractive, my lecturers used it in interesting ways, and so I was eager to find out what was hidden behind this mysterious title. As I came to discover, the content of this field of study is even more fascinating than the title.

    My first introduction to hermeneutics was by reading Jean Grondin’s Introduction to Philosophical Hermeneutics, the German edition of which appeared some years before the English.1 Some readers may notice how my understanding of hermeneutics is still influenced by Grondin’s interpretation of Gadamer.

    I am grateful to my own lecturers, and later to colleagues and students for their ongoing encouragement. Especially my students in the ‘Hermeneutics and Theology’ course at Trinity College, Dublin, in 2003/04 challenged me to find a way to explain complex ideas and sometimes inapproachable terminology in accessible ways. The idea for this book stems from that course, and it is based on what I learned about teaching hermeneutics in this course. I hope it will be a useful resource in the lecture theatre, an aid for the interested enquirer and a partner in discussion for the scholar.

    There are many more people who have supported me in writing this book in various ways. I cannot name all the people with whom I discussed my ideas on hermeneutics. My colleagues in the theology and philosophy programmes at Murdoch University were a great support in this and many other ways. In particular, I would like to thank Dr Paul MacDonald, Prof. Trish Harris, Prof. Bill Loader and Dr Andrew Webster, all of Murdoch University, as well as Prof. John Tonkin of the University of Western Australia, for their friendship and support.

    The greatest thanks, however, are due to my wife Helen for her love, patience and support. This book is dedicated to her in gratitude.

    Introduction

    Although this may not be immediately obvious to every reader, understanding of language is a deeply problematic activity. People often do not see this, because in most instances understanding seems to work. So what is the use of theoretical reflection on an activity that, in practice, seems to work well enough?

    The great economist John Maynard Keynes once wrote that ‘practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influences, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist. Madmen in authority, who hear voices in the air, are distilling their frenzy from some academic scribbler of a few years back.’2 In other words, if we do not reflect on our presuppositions, then we take for granted theories that were discredited long before we were born. This is not only true in the field of economics, but especially in the area of understanding, of reading and listening.

    Most people read in order to learn the facts behind the text. The typical instance for this style of reading is the way we approach newspapers. When reading the newspaper, most readers would understand that they learn the facts reported in the article. They read the words of the report in the belief that through them one can reach to the objective facts behind the words. Certainly, one has to allow for some distortion due to the journalist’s bias, but being aware of this, one can avoid being influenced by the writer’s subjectivity. In other words, for most readers the aim of reading is to reach objectivity, to learn facts. This is not only the case with newspapers, but most people would approach most kinds of literature in this way. This naïve realism, however, is by no means the God-given or natural way of reading, but it is the result of a set of philosophical assumptions that date back to the late eighteenth century and are connected with the work of the Scottish philosopher Thomas Reid (1710–96), the founder of so-called Scottish common-sense philosophy (see pp. 82–4). In the philosophical discourse, his ideas have long been discredited, but ‘practical people’ still adhere to it.

    The main point of Keynes’ book was that ideas count. Even in a field such as economics, where it is easy to disregard theory and go for practical or common-sense solutions, theory lies behind all decisions. If one is not familiar with the theory and the ideas, then one becomes too easily the slave of some defunct theorist. It is therefore crucial to become familiar with the history of thought and the current debates in all areas where one works. This is particularly true with regard to one’s approach to understanding in theology. Understanding texts, one’s self, God and the world are at the heart of the theological enterprise. Consequently, if one does not make explicit one’s assumptions and reflect on them critically, one is prone to be guided by unacknowledged presuppositions. In order to avoid this, it is essential to be familiar with the field of study commonly called hermeneutics.

    What is hermeneutics?

    Hermeneutics is the reflection on the problem of understanding. This can be taken in two ways. First, the simple meaning is that hermeneutics is the ‘art of hermeneuein, i.e. of proclaiming, translating, explaining and interpreting’,3 or, in short, the ‘art of understanding’ (see p. 90). Thus hermeneutics can be seen as reflection on how we understand, usually with regard to text or speech, and what we need to do in order to avoid misunderstanding.

    In this respect, hermeneutics is understood as the identification, analysis and removal of obstacles to understanding. One identifies obstacles to understanding, such as the lack of knowledge of classical Greek, medieval philosophy, or the biography of the author, and develops strategies for dealing with this. This is quite straightforward, and hardly warrants its own field of study. However, there are more complex and fundamental obstacles to understanding which need to be identified and considered.

    What happens, for example, if ancient authoritative texts do not make sense any more? The ancient Greeks were faced with this issue with the Iliad and the Odyssey, which told the stories of the Trojan War and Odysseus’ homecoming. These were the foundational texts of Hellenic culture, but in the sixth century BC they clashed with the maturing cultural, ethical and religious norms of Hellenic society. Consequently, the Greeks had to develop strategies which would allow them to reinterpret these texts radically while continuing to take them seriously. We will see in the next chapter how this led to the development of allegorical interpretation.

    A similar difficulty arises with theological texts, both from the Bible and from the Christian tradition. Some biblical texts seem to presuppose a world-view that we do not share any more. We know that the world is not a flat disc under a dome, beyond which the chaos-waters are stored. We also know that certain medical symptoms are not caused by demon possession, but by disease. And we do not take slavery for granted in our society.

    Most readers will have developed strategies to deal with these obstacles to understanding, consciously or unconsciously. However, if readers do not reflect critically on their strategies, then they are in great danger of being beholden to some defunct ‘academic scribbler of a few years back’. They are likely to be unwitting adherents of some discredited hermeneutical theory. Thus critical reflection on one’s own hermeneutical presuppositions is not only necessary, but essential for the intellectual integrity of the theologian, be it the academic theologian, the preacher or the interested layperson.

    Finally, understanding becomes problematic in principle if we acknowledge that we cannot even completely understand ourselves. Both sensory perception as well as memories are non-conceptual and non-verbal. The fifth-century theologian Augustine of Hippo called this the verbum interius, the inner word. When we conceptualize our perceptions and memories, when we begin to think consciously, then the inner word enters the external word, the verbum externum – the pre-verbal thought becomes explicit thought. Augustine identified a fundamental obstacle in the entering of the inner word into the external word: there is always a loss (see p. 45). We cannot adequately translate our pre-verbal perceptions and memories into language. Consequently, even understanding our own selves becomes problematic. This insight, based on the work of Augustine of Hippo, lies at the heart of hermeneutical reflection since the early twentieth century (see p. 138).

    So if we speak of hermeneutics as the identification, analysis and removal of obstacles to understanding, then we need to do so in the broadest possible way. Our understanding is always impeded, even our self-understanding.

    For these reasons, hermeneutics is an essential part of theology. First of all, theology is about the interpretation of Christian texts, biblical and other, and the proclamation of the Christian faith on the basis of the understanding gained from these texts. Thus all issues involved in textual interpretation are of utmost importance for theology. In addition, theology attempts to express the Christian experience of God in intellectually accountable language. As I have already indicated, if there is a problem with the translation of human experience into language, then this poses a fundamental problem for Christian theology. We will see in the course of this book that, if we take these issues seriously, all theology must first and foremost be hermeneutical theology (see section ‘Hermeneutical Theology’, pp. 151–4).

    The hermeneutic circle

    One of the most basic insights in the field of hermeneutics is that understanding is always circular. From the romantic period of the early nineteenth century onwards, this phenomenon has been a major concern in hermeneutical thinking. In short, it refers to the conundrum that one can understand the whole of a text only when one has understood its parts. The parts, however, can only be properly understood in the light of the whole. In order to understand a text, one needs to enter this circle. The German theologian and philosopher Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768–1834) suggested that one enters the circle by making an informed guess (see pp. 98–9).

    When I start reading a book, I make a guess as to what it may be about. While proceeding through the book, my initial guess is constantly revised in the light of the parts of the book as I go along. Assuming that the book is a good one, I may read the book again and, in the light of the understanding of the whole that I gained in the first reading, understand the parts better, which, in turn, will give me a better understanding of the whole. I may even study certain sections of the book in great detail in order to gain a more profound understanding of the whole book.

    Moreover, the hermeneutic circle can be drawn wider than this. Schleiermacher also suggested that, if one endeavours to understand a particular book, it can be understood only within the context of the complete works of the author, which, in turn, requires knowledge of his or her individual works. The oeuvre of a given author, however, can only be understood within the context of the literature of his or her language. Thus there is no end to the widening of the circle.

    In a later version of the circle, which is connected to the existentialist hermeneutics of Martin Heidegger and Rudolf Bultmann, the hermeneutic circle expands again, and includes the interpreter’s preconceptions of the subject matter. In other words, if I read a book on theological hermeneutics, it requires that I have at least some notion of its subject matter, of the practice of reading, of theology and religion, etc. Otherwise I will not be able to make much sense of the book. Thus a preconception of the subject matter is not a hindrance to ‘objective’ understanding, but an essential prerequisite.

    If one follows this train of thought, this has important implications for our understanding of the nature of theological language and of Christian proclamation. We will discuss these in detail in the chapter on existentialist hermeneutics (see pp. 122–4). For now, it will suffice to note that hermeneutics is essentially circular. This may be unsatisfactory for those who prefer understanding to be objective, and who do not think that prejudice, presupposition and guesswork have a place in interpretation. However, the admission that this cannot be avoided is an acknowledgement of the problematic nature of all human understanding, and the limitations of language as the medium of understanding. In this case, we can even welcome the circularity of understanding with Martin Heidegger who suggested that ‘what is decisive is not to get out of the circle but to come into it in the right way’.4 (See p. 123.)

    The place of hermeneutics

    After these initial definitions and distinctions, we can now locate hermeneutics. It occupies the place between epistemology and methodology. Epistemology is the theory of knowledge, including the theory of how we gain knowledge. Methodology is the theory of method, the reflection on the methods one employs to achieve a certain task. Hermeneutics is the link between the two.

    Theological epistemology is concerned with the nature of revelation and with the question as to how we can know God. One’s attitudes towards these issues will be determined by some fundamental theological stances, namely towards the nature and work of Christ, and how human beings appropriate this. One’s epistemology will then shape one’s hermeneutics, because what one believes to be the nature of religious knowledge will shape the way in which one sees religious knowledge understood and communicated. Consequently, the way in which one sees religious knowledge understood and communicated will affect one’s methodology, one’s reflection on appropriate methods for the theological task at hand, be it the interpretation of a biblical text, writing a treatise on the Trinity, planning a liturgy, or preaching a sermon. Finally, from the methodology follows the method, which is the way in which one goes about the task. To close the circle, the praxis of the Church, its liturgical and sacramental life, its proclamation, community life, and the pastoral ministry one receives will, in turn, shape one’s fundamental theological views.

    It is of utmost importance for theological intellectual integrity to be coherent in these areas. If theologians are incoherent, and one step does not follow from the other, they will not only damage their own integrity, but also the academic quality of their work and the credibility of their ministry.

    Within this nexus, hermeneutics is in a crucial position, being situated between the more cerebral areas of fundamental theology and epistemology on the one hand and the applied areas of methodology and method on the other. It is the bridge between theory and praxis. Consequently, some hermeneutical writings will lean towards the applied side, which is usually the case in writings on biblical hermeneutics, which focus on the application of hermeneutical theory to biblical interpretation. Others will lean towards the theoretical side, by focusing on the nature of language and understanding. As we will see, the existentialist hermeneutics of the twentieth century even claimed that hermeneutics should take the place of ontology (the reflection on the very nature of being), and thus made hermeneutics the foundation of all philosophy and theology.

    In this book, I try to strike a balance between the practical aspect of hermeneutics and the theoretical, keeping in mind that the purpose of this book is not to introduce biblical hermeneutics but general theological hermeneutics. However, as everything in theology is interrelated, we will not be able to avoid touching on issues of biblical hermeneutics.

    The approach of this book

    This book is essentially a historical introduction to theological hermeneutics. It will follow the development of the philosophical and theological assumptions with which people approached the problematic activity of reading. It is, as it were, a history of the problem of understanding. In this history, we will identify persistent problems, and how interpreters sought to solve these problems with all philosophical and philological tools that were at hand. We will trace how hermeneutics developed from the theory of textual interpretation into the universal philosophy of being. And we will discover the close relationship between philosophical and theological hermeneutics.

    The presentation will take the form of a narrative from antiquity to the so-called hermeneutic school of the twentieth century and the present. This will be complemented by an introduction to alternative proposals, such as structuralist and postmodern hermeneutics as well as critical theory and related approaches, namely feminism and post-colonial hermeneutics. We will also discover how the different schools of thought do not live in isolation, but enter into dialogue, critique each other and keep each other accountable.

    The choice of this structure carries with it my own bias, as my own thought is deeply indebted to the hermeneutical school. Others will be able to construct alternative narratives of the development of hermeneutics and the interaction of the various schools. However, I trust that the student will gain a broad overview of the development of hermeneutics and the current debates as a basis for further studies of this fascinating and exciting field.

    Further reading

    Introductions to the subject

    Abrams, M. H., 1999, A Glossary of Literary Terms, 7th edn, Fort Worth, Tex.: Harcourt Brace College.

    Bontekoe, Ronald, 1996, Dimensions of the Hermeneutic Circle, Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press International.

    Bruns, Gerald L., 1992, Hermeneutics Ancient and Modern, New Haven; London: Yale University Press.

    Eagleton, Terry, 1996, Literary Theory: An Introduction, 2nd edn, Oxford: Blackwell.

    Ferguson, Duncan S., 1987, Biblical Hermeneutics: An Introduction, London: SCM Press.

    Grondin, Jean, 1994, Introduction to Philosophical Hermeneutics, Yale Studies in Hermeneutics, New Haven; London: Yale University Press.

    Harrisville, Roy A. and Walter Sundberg, 2002, The Bible in Modern Culture: Baruch Spinoza to Brevard Childs, 2nd edn, Grand Rapids, Mich.: W. B. Eerdmans.

    Inwood, Michael, 1998, ‘Hermeneutics’, in: Edward Craig (ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, vol. IV, London; New York: Routledge, pp. 384–9.

    Jasper, David, 2004, A Short Introduction to Hermeneutics, Louisville, Ky.: Westminster John Knox Press.

    Jeanrond, Werner G., 1994, Theological Hermeneutics: Development and Significance, London: SCM Press.

    Kaiser, Walter C. and Moisés Silva, 1994, An Introduction to Biblical Hermeneutics: The Search for Meaning, Grand Rapids, Mich.: Zondervan.

    Oeming, Manfred, 2006, Contemporary Biblical Hermeneutics: An Introduction, translated by Joachim F. Vette, Aldershot: Ashgate.

    Ramberg, Bjørn and Kristin Gjesdal, 2005, ‘Hermeneutics’, in: The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (website, Winter 2005), edited by Edward N. Zalta. Available from http://plato.stanford.edu/archives/win2005/entries/hermeneutics/.

    Terrin, Aldo Natale, Christoph Dohmen et al., 2007, ‘Hermeneutics’, in: Hans Dieter Betz, Don S. Browning et al. (eds), Religion Past and Present, vol. IV, Leiden: Brill.

    Thiselton, Anthony C., 1998, ‘Hermeneutics, Biblical’, in: Edward Craig (ed.), Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy, vol. IV, London; New York: Routledge, pp. 389–95.

    Readers

    Klemm, David E. (ed.), 1986, Hermeneutical Inquiry: Volume 1: The Interpretation of Texts, AAR Studies in Religion, vol. 43, Atlanta: Scholars Press.

    Klemm, David E. (ed.), 1986, Hermeneutical Inquiry: Volume 2: The Interpretation of Existence, AAR Studies in Religion, vol. 44, Atlanta: Scholars Press.

    Mueller-Vollmer, Kurt (ed.), 1989, The Hermeneutics Reader: Texts of the German Tradition from the Enlightenment to the Present, New York: Continuum.

    Ormiston, Gayle L. and Alan D. Schrift (eds), 1990, The Hermeneutic Tradition: From Ast to Ricoeur, Albany, NY: State University of New York Press.

    1. Hermeneutics in Antiquity

    Introduction

    Hermeneutical reflection began when the old myths about the gods did not make sense any more. The great myths, especially Homer’s Iliad and Odyssey, were the authoritative texts of ancient Greek culture, but already in the classical period, beginning in the sixth century BC, aspects of these texts had become problematic.5 Although the final form of these epics was comparatively recent, they reflected the social reality and religion of a long bygone age. Thus the way in which these texts depicted moral behaviour did not meet the norms of the readers; the attitude towards state and society in the texts was seen as backward and outdated compared with developing political theory. Furthermore, the perception of the gods as presented in the epics did not correspond to the theology of the time. The gods of the old myths had physical bodies, which could even be wounded, their moods changed, and they were often driven by inferior motives. In short, they behaved very much like the aristocracy of an age long past.

    The philosophers from the sixth century onwards disagreed on the precise nature of the divine, and whether it could be manifest in many gods or only in one, but they all agreed that the divine could not be moved or changed or affected by external influence, not to mention that the divine could not occur within human-like bodies. The anthropomorphism of Homer and Hesiod was discarded.6

    Thus the old myths contradicted the social experience in the developing city states and the morality that was required for this new social order, as well as growing theological insights. A radical solution to this problem was suggested by Plato, who in his most important work, The Republic, suggested that these harmful myths should simply be forbidden:

    But the narrative of Hephaestus binding Hera his mother, or how on another occasion Zeus sent him flying for taking her part when she was being beaten, and all the battles of the gods in Homer – these tales must not be admitted into our State, whether they are supposed to have an allegorical meaning or not.7

    A significant number of thinkers, namely of the Stoic school of philosophy, chose not to follow Plato’s suggestion, but the alternative which he implies: allegorical interpretation. Allegorical interpretation assumes, in short, that the text may say one thing, but it really means something quite different.8 This way of reading soon became the dominant way of dealing with difficult passages or even whole texts in antiquity and throughout the Middle Ages.

    Language and meaning

    Before we examine the ancient authors’ approach to textual interpretation, it is worthwhile to look at the purpose of the exercise: what did the ancient authors think they were doing when they read texts? What was their aim when reading, and what did they expect to find within texts? As far as we can establish, philosophers from Plato onwards reflected on the way in which language is meaningful.

    In his dialogue Ion, Plato suggested that ‘no one can become a good rhapsode [singer] who does not understand the meaning of the poet. For the rhapsode ought to interpret the thought (dianoia) of the poet to his hearers, but how can he interpret him well unless he knows what he means?’9 For Plato, the interpreter who performs an epic or poem before an audience, conveys the mind or the thought of the author. Thus the recovery of the thought (dianoia) of the author is the task of interpretation.

    In a similar vein, Aristotle suggests that

    spoken words are the symbols of mental experience and written words are the symbols of spoken words. Just as all people have not the same writing, so they have not the same speech sounds, but the mental experiences, which these directly symbolize, are the same for all, as also are those things of which our experiences are the images.10

    For Aristotle, all humans have basic mental experiences in common, which can be expressed in language. Consequently, interpretation is the recovery of the mental experience from the spoken or written words.

    The classical philosophers saw the mind or thought (dianoia) as linguistically constituted. When we think, we think in language. Thus Plato can describe the mind as the inner conversation of the soul: ‘Are not thought (dianoia) and speech (logos) the same, with this exception, that what is called thought is the silent conversation of the soul with itself?’11

    Thus there is, according to ancient philosophy, an inner conversation, or an inner word, which is thought, and this can be expressed in speech, in an external word. With this insight in mind, the Stoic philosophers introduced the distinction between the logos endiathetos (the inner word, that what is meant, i.e. the thought) and the logos prophorikos (the external, spoken word).12 We hear speech (the external word, the logos prophorikos), and by interpreting it, we can comprehend the meaning of the utterance (the thought, inner word or logos endiathetos). Thus there is congruence between speech and thought, which assumes that the thought is contained in speech completely, and that we can understand the thought or the mental experience contained in the utterance without loss.

    It is important to emphasize this attitude of classical Greek and Roman philosophy, because, as we will see below, the congruence between inner and external word is quite problematic. Yet it was only much later that Augustine of Hippo realized that there may be a loss of meaning in the transition from

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