|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: ANC-APO |
|
|
ANTHROPOMORPHISM (Gr. &vOponros, man, ,uopcb , form) , the attribution (a) of a human body
Early religion, among its many objects of worship , includes beasts (see ANIMAL-WORSHIP ), considered, in the more refined theology of the later Greeks and Romans, as metamorphoses of the great gods. Similarly we find " therianthropic " formshalf animal, half humanin Egypt or Assyria-Babylonia. In contrast with these, it is considered one of the glories of the Olympian mythology of Greece that it believed in happy manlike beings (though exempt from death, and using special
Israel shows us animal images, doubtless of a ruder sort, when Yahweh is worshipped in the northern kingdom under the image of a steer. (Some scholars think the title " mighty one of Jacob," Psalm cxxxii., 2, 5, et al., r4x as if from late
Israel inclined to morality more than to art, and forbade image worship altogether. This prepared the way for the conception of God as an immaterial Spirit. True mythical anthropomorphisms occur in early parts of the Old Testament (e.g. Genesis iii. 8, cf. vi. 2), though in the majority of Old Testament passages such expressions are merely verbal (e.g. Isaiah lix. I). In the Christian Church (and again in early Mahommedanism) simple minds believed in the corporeal nature of God. Gibbon and other writers quote from John Cassian the tale of the poor monk, who, being convinced of his error, burst into tears, exclaiming, " You have taken away my God! I have none now whom I can worship!" According to a fragment of Origen (on Genesis i. 26), Melito of Sardis shared this belief. Many have thought Melito's work
The reaction against anthropomorphism begins in Greek philosophy with the satirical spirit of Xenophanes (540 B.c.), who puts the case as broadly as any. The " greatest God " resembles man " neither in form nor in mind." In Judaismunless we should refer to the prophets' polemic against imagesa reaction is due to the introduction of the codified law. God seemed to grow more remote. The old sacred name Yahweh is never pronounced; even " God " is avoided for allusive titles like " heaven " or " place." Still, amid all this, the God of Judaism remains a personal, almost a limited, being. In Philo
drawn
Philo
body
Till modern times the philosophical reaction was not carried out with full vigour. Spinoza (Ethics, i. 15 and 17), representing here as elsewhere both a Jewish inheritance and a philosophical, but advancing further, sweeps away all community between God and man. So later J. G. Fichte and Matthew
Arnold
The latest extension of the word, proposed in the interests of philosophy or psychology, uses it of the principle according to which man is said to interpret all things (not God merely) through himself. Common-sense intuitionalism would deny that man' does this, attributing to him immediate knowledge of reality. And idealism in all its forms would say that man, interpreting through his reason, does rightly, and reaches truth. Even here then the use of the word is not colourless. It implies blame. It is the symptom of a philosophy which confines knowledge within narrow limits, and which, when held by Christians (e.g. Peter Browne, or H. L. Mansel), believes only in an " analogical " knowledge of God. (R. MA.) End of Article: ANTHROPOMORPHISM (Gr. &vOponros, man, ,uopcb , form) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/ANC_APO/ANTHROPOMORPHISM_Gr_vOponros_m.html"> ANTHROPOMORPHISM (Gr. &vOponros, man, ,uopcb , ... </a> |
|
|
(Previous) ANTHROPOMETRY (Gr. avOpwnros, man, and Air poi'... |
(Next) ANTI, or CAMPA |
|
Sponsored Advertisements