Of course they're not independent of one another.Secret Alias wrote:Ah, finally at last.I'm not so much interested in what Zechariah is talking aboutAnd please explain why these are independent of one another. How do we determine that?I'm interested in what Philo might have been talking about,
I've always had an interest in Zechariah, Isaiah, and Daniel, and their relationships in relation to Christianity, before I read anything of Carrier's.
I don't understand the relevance of that statement.But there is no reason to think that Philo would have lost his ability to read and interpret texts.
See my posts on page 1 of this thread - http://www.earlywritings.com/forum/view ... f=3&t=1944Secret Alias wrote:No you're interested in bolstering and making stronger unworkable theories that have no support in antiquity. If you cared about being fair to the evidence you'd find some example where Philo speaks of 'Jesus' as an angel.I'm interested in phases of evolution of the theologies
I think that Philo conflates Logos with angelic prophecies
eg.
- "Philo represents the apex of Jewish-Hellenistic syncretism. His work attempts to combine Plato and Moses into one philosophical system ..."
"Philo uses an allegorical technique for interpretation of the Hebrew myth and in this he follows the Greek tradition of Theagenes of Rhegium (second half of the sixth century B.C.E.) ... Philo seeks out the hidden message beneath the surface of any particular text and tries to read back a new doctrine into the work of the past ..."
"Philo bases his doctrines on the Old Testament, which he considers as the source and standard not only of religious truth but in general of all truth. Its pronouncements are for him divine pronouncements. They are the words of the ἱερὸς λόγος, θεῖος λόγος, ὀρθὸς λόγος [holy word, godly word, righteous word] uttered sometimes directly and sometimes through the mouth of a prophet, especially through Moses, whom Philo considers the real medium of revelation ..."
"Philo evolved an original teaching of Logos. The polysemic profusion of this word provided for its use in different connotation. Complying with the anthropomorphic description of God in Tanakh, Philo used logos in the meaning of an utterance. In Philo’s philosophy, God is absolutely transcendent: his notion is even more abstract than that of the Monad of Pythagoras or the Good of Plato .."
"Philo thought that God created and governed the world through mediators. Logos is the chief among them, the next to God, demiurge of the world. Logos is immaterial, an adequate image of God, his shadow, his firstborn son."