The Contrariness of Speech and Polytheism

The ancient Greeks never speak of themselves as "polytheistic," of their religion as "polytheism." Certainly, thinkers comparing various world-views must have given a place to this one early on. Sextus Empiricus, ca. A.D. 200, notes that, if one looks around, some people assume o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Daube, David 1909-1999 (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Cambridge Univ. Press 1994
In: Journal of law and religion
Year: 1994, Volume: 11, Issue: 1, Pages: 317-321
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Summary:The ancient Greeks never speak of themselves as "polytheistic," of their religion as "polytheism." Certainly, thinkers comparing various world-views must have given a place to this one early on. Sextus Empiricus, ca. A.D. 200, notes that, if one looks around, some people assume one god, hena theon, some many, pollous; such an observation could probably have been made hundreds of years before. Yet from here to the labels "polytheistic" and "polytheism" is a big step. They are met in no text B.C. It is Philo, outsider and critic, who first employs them.The ground was prepared in that the adjective was current long before, though not descriptive of a creed. Significantly, the noun is not traceable earlier at all, nor the nominal use of the adjective, what we translate as "a polytheist." Here is the passage with the adjective from Aeschylus. The daughters of Danaus flee from Egypt to Greece with their father in order not to be forced into marriage by their cousins. Expecting the latter to pursue them, they take refuge at the sanctuary of Argos, favoured—the father explains—by quite a few of the mightiest Olympians; and they implore the king not to let them be dragged from this "many-godded seat." Even for Lucian, Philo's junior by over a century, the adjective has much the same meaning and, of course, there is no noun.
ISSN:2163-3088
Contains:Enthalten in: Journal of law and religion
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.2307/1051636