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???? Get to know our publishing house: https://radionaukowe.pl/wydawnictwo ???? Convenient book shopping: https://wydawnictwoRN.pl ???? Become a Patron: https://patronite.pl/radionaukowe ???? Support once: https://suppi.pl/radionaukowe ???? Listen on streaming: https://ffm.bio/radionaukowe ???? Subscribe: / @radionaukowe ???? Website: https://radionaukowe.pl ???? Facebook: / radionaukowe ???? Instagram: / radionaukowe ❌ Twitter: / radionaukowe ???? Visit LAMU: / @letniaakademiamlodychumyslow ???? See more: • Radio Naukowe recommends ???? Contact: [email protected] Popular thinking about the Hebrew Bible is somewhat different from the findings of scientists. - There is no archaeological evidence of the presence of the Israelites in Egypt. We have known this since the late 1980s, but in school textbooks we can still find information that Moses led the Israelites out of Egypt, that he gave them laws along the way, hence the Torah and the Ten Commandments - says on Radio Naukowe prof. Łukasz Niesiołowski-Spanò, dean of the Faculty of History at the University of Warsaw. Preparing each episode takes many hours of work. If you liked this podcast - you can support me on the Patronite website. Thanks! https://patronite.pl/radionaukowe * What is also important, as the historian says, the authors of the Bible and its recipients were an elite. - These are not folk tales collected at the market while shelling beans. It is not like that. That is what was believed 100 years ago - he emphasizes. Recently, there have been discussions about changing the dating of biblical texts. - At the moment, many hypotheses dating, for example, the Pentateuch, move the time of its creation to the 5th-4th century BC, the Persian era. If we compare the author of the biblical text to this era, we are dealing with Jerusalem, inhabited by 300-400 people. Half of whom can read. This is a creation within an elite group - says the researcher. Prof. Łukasz Niesiołowski- Spanò examines the previously underestimated influences of Greek culture on the authors of the Bible. He draws attention, for example, to the story of Job. - In Homer's Iliad, we have a story about a myth that Homer's readers must be familiar with, because the author writes about it as a well-known plot. It is about Niobe, who was deprived of offspring. In the Bible, we have a similar character who loses children. It is Job. Please note that Niobe and Job have the same etymology - says the scientist. - I do not believe in the possibility of the same narratives using the same name independently of each other. This one must have influenced each other - he assesses. As he adds, we know that the story of Niobe is older than the book of Job. – And this opens up a huge question of how the biblical authors could have been inspired by the Greeks – says the historian. In the podcast, we talk about how the Bible is studied, why the state of our knowledge is affected by the division of universities... into faculties. And we also look for the answer to the most important question: why were these texts written. I recommend it! https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/%C5%81u... https://radionaukowe.pl/ https://patronite.pl/radionaukowe Previous episodes about the Bible and the history of the Church Celibacy, strange hairstyles and hierarchy - the rise and professionalization of the clergy prof. Robert Wiśniewski • Celibacy, strange hairstyles and hierarchy ... Did St. Paul write the letters of St. Paul? Professionalization of the clergy part 2 prof. Robert Wiśniewski • Did St. Paul write the letters of St. Paul Pa... WE RECOMMEND OTHER MATERIALS: • Radio Naukowe - All episodes • Physics • Biology • Astronomy • Psychology • Animals • Religion • History • History of life • Geography • Technology • Man • Culture • Medicine • Archeology ???? Radio Naukowe - turn on knowledge! ???? #RadioNaukowe #KarolinaGłowacka#ŁukaszNiesiołowski- Spanò