firedragon
Veteran Member
Mate, I'm trying to make sure I UNDERSTAND the OP
Thats the spirit.
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Mate, I'm trying to make sure I UNDERSTAND the OP
Where does one think it has all gone wrong or right?
In the domain of theology there are four well known types of scriptural criticism / analysis: textual, source, form, and literary. What I often see is that when discussing scriptural criticism, people of get these four approaches confused or they blur them together. More specifically, I see that textual criticism as an approach, if often misunderstood..
Okay, I *think* I understand the OP now (I hope I do).
In trying to understand the OP, I learned that theologists have at least four types of analysis / criticism they use when studying scripture:
- textual
- source
- form
- literary
So far, so good, nothing wrong with that.
BUT, I would guess that for non-theologists, these four approaches are not well known. If that's the case, then my guess is that people who want to debate or discuss these approaches have lost sight of the fact that the rest of us would need some context in order to properly understand the topic. In the case of this OP, it could have started with something like this:
Did I get that mostly right? If so, it seems like a fine topic for a thread
In this post I am directly addressing textual criticism of the Qur'an which almost all have misunderstood and only learned a little off some YouTube videos done by famous, well spoken sarcastic entertainers with absolutely no expertise on the subject.
And my suggestion is that people who do specialized forms of scriptural criticism ought to set more precise context when they discuss or debate in public.
For example, you know that I approach the study of scripture from a cognitive science perspective. If people are discussing scripture in general, I might want to join that discussion or debate. But if you declare upfront that you're talking about "textual criticism", then I know to leave that topic alone
Of course. The topic textual criticism and its written in the heading.
But any tom, dick or harry can relate to what's said in the OP. This is not some theoretical curricula said here mate.
Cheers.
"The Curse of Knowledge" is a very common problem, and you've got it in this case. You've forgotten what it's like to be a beginner in this domain. I can assure you that "any tom, dick, or harry" will be confused by the OP. OTOH, I think people who are interested in theology will find it understandable.
Oh I apologise then.
No worries, it seems like we're having a nice conversation here - who would have predicted that?