Linguistique de l’écrit

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148935

The phenomenology of symbol

Genesis I and II

Frank K. Flinn

pp. 223-249

Résumé

The following essay, which is divided into three parts, is a phenomenological interpretation of the two accounts of creation which open the Book of Genesis. In the first part below, I discuss the problem of interpretation stemming from the current use of the term "myths" for the creation accounts. In the second part, I examine a problem peculiar to modernity — critical consciousness along with the demystification and demythologization which may block us from interpreting symbolic discourse. These two parts then provide a dialectical framework for the third — the phenomenological approach to the texts about the "Beginning" in the Book of Genesis.

Détails de la publication

Publié dans:

Hamrick William (1985) Phenomenology in practice and theory. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 223-249

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-010-9612-6_14

Citation complète:

Flinn Frank K., 1985, The phenomenology of symbol: Genesis I and II. In W. Hamrick (ed.) Phenomenology in practice and theory (223-249). Dordrecht, Springer.