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Another Hebraism is the use of the conditional "if" to mean the negative "not".
But the habits and discipline received from Hebraism remain for our race an eternal possession.
Hebraism is the identification of a usage, trait, or characteristic of the Hebrew language.
The concept has origins in both Hellenism and Hebraism.
The word "hebraism" may also describe a word in another language that has Hebrew etymology.
For Arnold, Hellenism was the opposite of Hebraism.
In a chapter of the book entitled Hebraism and Hellenism he traces the roots of these views.
Finally, the word "hebraism" describes a quality, character, nature, or method of thought, or system of religion attributed to the Hebrew people.
It is in this sense that Mathew Arnold (1869) contrasts Hebraism with Hellenism.
"The Romantic Hebraism of Gabriel Preil."
The book contains most of the terms - culture, sweetness and light, Barbarian, Philistine, Hebraism, and many others - which are more associated with Arnold's work influence.
He continued, however, his collaboration with the Enciclopedia Treccani, for which he edited the entry on Hebraism, among the many he completed.
Drews is opposed to the theology of ancient Hebraism as much as he is opposed to Christianity, and even more opposed to liberal Protestantism.
According to the American scholar Frederic C. Gamst, their "Hebraism is an ancient form and unaffected by Hebraic change of the past two millennia".
Following the death of his wife in the 1980s came an increased interest in Hebraism, and with it a proliferation of paintings with themes from the Old Testament.
The whole book is a mixture of Hellenism and Hebraism, in which the same method of allegory is applied to Homer and Hesiod as to Moses.
Though the intellectual world of the sages is different from that of the prophetic and legal Hebraism, they do not break with the fundamental Jewish theistic and ethical creeds.
"Both the Christian and rationalist influences deriving from Hebraism and Hellenism promote a centralized, isolated sense of identity for the individual and for man in general," he continues.
The book had been grand if the Hebraism had been omitted and the law stated without Gothicism, as ethics, and with that scope for ascension of state which the nature of things requires.
"The Political Thought of John Locke and the Significance of Political Hebraism", 1(5) Hebraic Political Studies 568-592 (Shalem, 2006)
Issues included a symposium on political Hebraism in early American political thought and papers from a Cardozo Law School conference on The Hebrew Bible in Contemporary Intellectual Discourse.
Among her publications were Robert Browning and Hebraism (1934), and an autobiographical chapter which was included in Thirteen Americans, Their Spiritual Autobiographies (1953), edited by Louis Finkelstein.
Stephen G. Burnett, From Christian Hebraism to Jewish studies: Johannes Buxtorf (1564 - 1629) and Hebrew learning in the seventeenth century (Studies in the history of Christian thought 68).
I say--"It would be a mistake to class Mrs. Higgs among the followers of Loisy; her position is in many ways different; nor is she wholly to be identified with the concrete Hebraism of Harnack."
He believed that authentic mystical core of the Jewish tradition, which he called "Hebraism" as opposed to more isolationist exoteric Judaism, is profoundly universal and capable of uniting all world religions and nations into one brotherly cosmopolitan network.