שמור ב:
| מחבר ראשי: | |
|---|---|
| פורמט: | Recurso digital |
| שפה: | אנגלית |
| יצא לאור: |
Zenodo
2025
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| נושאים: | |
| גישה מקוונת: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.17801773 |
| תגים: |
הוספת תג
אין תגיות, היה/י הראשונ/ה לתייג את הרשומה!
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תוכן הענינים:
- <p><em>This research article examines the optical foundations of ancient religion, architecture, and political authority. In early civilizations, natural light and shadow structured timekeeping, ritual practice, and the legitimacy of kingship. Temples functioned as optical technologies—architectural instruments designed to receive, shape, and reveal celestial illumination at precise moments. These visual events organized society and established a cosmological order mediated by rulers and priesthoods.</em></p> <p><em>The study reconstructs this ancient visual worldview and analyzes how the biblical writings respond to it. While surrounding cultures grounded divine presence in predictable celestial events, the biblical texts redefine divine revelation as an act of God’s will, independent of architecture or cosmic alignment. By examining optics, sacred space, and political theology across Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Israel, the article argues that the Bible appropriates but ultimately overturns the optical cosmology of its environment.</em></p> <p><em>This publication contributes to interdisciplinary research in archaeoastronomy, ancient Near Eastern studies, cognitive archaeology, and biblical theology.</em></p>