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ANCIENT GREEK AND HEBREW THOUGHT

rew language verbs are far more common than adjectives.

Adding up some of these differences, one can focus on the fact that Greek culture aims at self-esteem, emotional adjustment, and external training of the body, while the Hebrew culture aimed at the discovery of a child's God-given gifts and talents, and develop them to their fullest potential with a priority on spiritual training.

Now, one might say that Socrates, Plato and Aristotle also tried to develop the idea and ideal of learning. But, we have to understand that this training and learning had two "masters"- not a monotheistic God, but the state and the teaching of ideas like the soul and virtue and justice. These, in the Greek "concrete" thought, were not the result of any spiritual endeavor, but were man-made and man-driven.

There is also a vast difference of opinion about what can be called "social order". The Hebrews, in their Biblical texts, "state explicitly that God created the existing social order . . . Nowhere else do ewer meet this fanatical d

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ANCIENT GREEK AND HEBREW THOUGHT. (1969, December 31). In LotsofEssays.com. Retrieved 12:55, March 28, 2024, from https://www.lotsofessays.com/viewpaper/1706189.html