Mole
Permabanned
- Joined
- Mar 20, 2008
- Messages
- 20,282
Only spoken cultures have sacred books. By contrast literate cultures don't have sacred books.
For instance, it was the spoken culture of Islam that created the Koran; and the spoken culture of Christianity that created the Bible; and the spoken culture of Judaism that created the Torah; and the spoken culture of Hinduism that created the Bagavad Gita; and the spoken culture of China that created the Analects of Confucius.
And this makes sense, for in a spoken culture there is nothing rarer or more valuable than a book, or to be more accurate, a manuscript, and so naturally the manuscript becomes sacred.
But in a literate culture where tens of thousands of books are created each year, it is impossible to see one book as sacred. No, in a literate culture the literal interpretation becomes sacred.
But as we move out of the literate culture, which itself moved out of the spoken culture, and into the electronic culture, what will we find is sacred?
For instance, it was the spoken culture of Islam that created the Koran; and the spoken culture of Christianity that created the Bible; and the spoken culture of Judaism that created the Torah; and the spoken culture of Hinduism that created the Bagavad Gita; and the spoken culture of China that created the Analects of Confucius.
And this makes sense, for in a spoken culture there is nothing rarer or more valuable than a book, or to be more accurate, a manuscript, and so naturally the manuscript becomes sacred.
But in a literate culture where tens of thousands of books are created each year, it is impossible to see one book as sacred. No, in a literate culture the literal interpretation becomes sacred.
But as we move out of the literate culture, which itself moved out of the spoken culture, and into the electronic culture, what will we find is sacred?