I've previously noted that the idea that megillah megillah nitnah could be understood as a sort of Documentary Hypothesis. This week, in parshat Noach, I see that Shadal makes a similar point.
והנה בכול סיפור נח מצאנו שמות אלהות והויה מעורבבים יחד באופן שיפלו ולא יקומו דברי האומרים, כי משה מגילות מגילות קדמוניות מצא, והפרשיות אשר בהן שם אלהות נכתבו בדור אחד וע"י אנשים מיוחדים, ואשר בהן שם הויה נכתבו בדור אחר וע"י אנשים אחרים, ואשר בהן הויה אלהות בדור אתר ועל ידי אנשים אחרים ג"כ. וכבר נתחבטו בחקירות כאלה החוקרים האחרונים, והעלו חרס בידם
That is, Shadal does not think that Moshe wrote sefer Bereishit, or at least parshat Noach. (And a similar idea I believe is found in midrash, IIRC, that there was text as kabbalah which the Jews brought with them even to Egypt.) Thus, Moshe found 3 different texts here: E, J, and EJ, all from different sources. (EJ being with the Divine Name of Hashem Elokim.) Moshe has a status of redactor, combining them in various ways, such that it would be extremely difficult if not impossible to pull out the individual threads. And modern day commentators have delved into this, but brought up (mere) shards of clay in their hands.
6 comments:
R' Dovid Tzvi used this as well see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mosaic_authorship
Reb Josh,
Shadal is arguing against such a hypothesis here (he writes "yiplu v'lo yakumu") because in the Noach story the names are used interchangeably.
Oops! You are correct. I will correct my post to reflect this.
Thanks,
Josh
The online Shadal is from the 1965 Schlesinger edition. It sure is great to have (both online, and off). However, as Dan Klein notes in his introduction to his English translation of Shadal's pirush on Bereishis, the Schlesinger edition is incomplete. In fact, quite a lot of interesting material was omitted.
Here, in the passage in question Shadal goes on to summarize the various documentary hypotheses that were extant in his time, that of Jean Astruc and Johann Gottfried Eichhorn. He then cites a lengthy passage by Rosenmuller (apparently his favorite non-Jewish commentator) in Latin refuting the J-E documentary hypothesis.
Shadal's original, unabridged commentaries can be found in these:
http://books.google.com/books?lr=&as_brr=0&q=intitle%3Apentateuco+date%3A1840-1880+inauthor%3Aluzzatto&btnG=Search+Books
thanks.
josh
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