"Marduk redeemed the gods following Tiāmat from slavery, he freed them from slavery by creating men and making them carry the burden of serving the gods. That is, Marduk, to spare the vanquished gods from serving the other victorious gods, forms humanity which is therefore destined by original and natural disposition to serve the gods, to religion. Humanity is therefore the subject of redemption, it is not to be redeemed, but a part of the gods is redeemable: men redeem the gods. (p. 104)"
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Giuseppe_Furlani
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Related Quotes
"Arabic philosophy was [...] philosophy of foreign origin, Greek speculation, Aristotelian philosophy, and was introdu…"
"The Arabs knew Aristotle's doctrines only through Arabic language versions. No Arab philosopher knew Greek. (p. 132)"
"The Babylonians and Assyrians had a large number of myths and legends, largely based on those of the Sumerian, a nati…"
"The purpose of the recitation was first of all this: to narrate, to make the great deeds of the god [[Marduk] well kn…"
"LEnûma eliš had the same function during the New Year celebration that every hymn to the god had during ceremonies in…"
"We cannot say anything about the author of the grandiose poem, since in the numerous Mesopotamian texts in cuneiform …"
"The fight between the gods and the monster or monsters certainly has an astral, and perhaps even cosmic, character, a…"
"There was perhaps no great god of ancient Mesopotamia of whom it was not said that he had subjugated monstrous and te…"
"The whole epic story, and in particular the conflict of Marduk and Tiāmat have an astral meaning, and certain traits …"
"In Arab culture, philosophy has occupied a rather conspicuous position. Philosophy, perhaps even only with the simple…"