National Repository of Grey Literature 3 records found  Search took 0.00 seconds. 
Moses according to Freud: The Figure of Moses in Sigmud Freud's "Moses and Monotheism"
Polcer, Josef ; Sláma, Petr (advisor) ; Čapek, Filip (referee)
This paper discusses the perspective of Sigmund Freud on the figure of Moses. It seeks to understand the reasons for writing the book, thought paradigms, historical images, which were thought to author axis. A large part is dedicated to criticism of Freud's works, as well as psychoanalysis, which for him was a key area for understanding the history of the Jewish nation, which was constituted after a period of suppressed neuroses. Indispensable area is the multiplicity of areas of the human soul and the mentality of the Jewish community. Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)
Moses Outside Bible: The Figure of Moses in Jewish and non-Jewish Historiography of the Antiquity as Compared with the Bible
Mikschik, Jan ; Sláma, Petr (advisor) ; Rückl, Jan (referee)
This diploma thesis focuses on the character of the biblical Moses and his presentation in extrabiblical sources. It attempts to analyse the oldest extra-biblical sources, with regard to their autors, historic background, and literary and contemporary context. They are then compared with the Old Testament tradition and on the basis of common motives and topics it tries to find or refute their interconnection and clarify their influence in the formation of the picture of Moses. Besides these sources, it also deals with their interpretation by contemporary researchers, compares these approaches with the quest for the historical Moses, the problems related to the interpretation of Mosess life and his role relating to the xodus.
Moses according to Freud: The Figure of Moses in Sigmud Freud's "Moses and Monotheism"
Polcer, Josef ; Sláma, Petr (advisor) ; Čapek, Filip (referee)
This paper discusses the perspective of Sigmund Freud on the figure of Moses. It seeks to understand the reasons for writing the book, thought paradigms, historical images, which were thought to author axis. A large part is dedicated to criticism of Freud's works, as well as psychoanalysis, which for him was a key area for understanding the history of the Jewish nation, which was constituted after a period of suppressed neuroses. Indispensable area is the multiplicity of areas of the human soul and the mentality of the Jewish community. Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)

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