• Media type: E-Book; Conference Proceedings
  • Title: Knowledge construction in late antiquity
  • Contributor: Amsler, Monika [HerausgeberIn]
  • Corporation: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG ; University of Maryland
  • Published: Berlin: De Gruyter, 2023
  • Published in: Trends in classics ; Supplementary volumes ; volume 142
  • Contains: Frontmatter
    Acknowledgements
    Contents
    List of Figures and Tables
    Introduction: Knowledge Construction in Late Antiquity
    Better Left Unread: Rabbinic Interpretations of Prophetic Scrolls
    Tabular Thinking in Late Ancient Palestine: Instrumentality, Work, and the Construction of Knowledge
    Leading Sources of Knowledge at the Monastery: Isidore of Pelusium
    Fabricating Monstrosity: Archival Manipulation and the Production of Orthodoxy in Socrates of Constantinople’s Ecclesiastical History
    Knowledge Construction in Progress: From Paratext to Marginal Annotations in the Greek Medical Papyri
    Learning from Mistakes: Constructing Knowledge in Late Antique Mathematical Texts
    The “Poetic Itch” and Numerical Maxims in the Talmud – An Inquiry into Factors of Knowledge Construction
    Re-scaffolding a ‘Missing Chapter’
    Grammar in the School of Diodore of Tarsus: An Institutional Context for the Transfer of Exegetical Knowledge
    List of Contributors
    General Index
    Index Locorum
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (X, 306 p.)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9783111010311; 9783111011042
  • DOI: 10.1515/9783111010311
  • Identifier:
  • Reproduction note: Issued also in print
  • Origination:
  • Keywords: Wissensproduktion > Spätantike
  • Description: Social Studies of the sciences have long analyzed and exposed the constructed nature of knowledge. Pioneering studies of knowledge production in laboratories (e.g., Latour/Woolgar 1979; Knorr-Cetina 1981) have identified factors that affect processes that lead to the generation of scientific data and their subsequent interpretation, such as money, training and curriculum, location and infrastructure, biography-based knowledge and talent, and chance. More recent theories of knowledge construction have further identified different forms of knowledge, such as tacit, intuitive, explicit, personal, and social knowledge. These theoretical frameworks and critical terms can help reveal and clarify the processes that led to ancient data gathering, information and knowledge production. The contributors use late-antique hermeneutical associations as means to explore intuitive or even tacit knowledge; they appreciate mistakes as a platform to study the value of personal knowledge and its premises; they think about rows and tables, letter exchanges, and schools as platforms of distributed cognition; they consider walls as venues for social knowledge production; and rethink the value of social knowledge in scholarly genealogies—then and now
  • Footnote: In English
  • Access State: Open Access
  • Rights information: Attribution (CC BY)