2023/05/13

틀리기 쉬운 우리 말 - 개시와 게시와 계시

틀리기 쉬운 우리 말 - 개시와 게시와 계시
슈라。 2015 2 28 1010
==
5/13/23, 12:18 PM 틀리기 쉬운 우리 말 - 개시와 게시와 계시
https://dsct1472.tistory.com/469 2/9
==

우리 말 중에는 발음이 비슷해서 헷갈리기 쉬운 단어들이 많이 있습니다 
개시 게시 계시도 그 중 하나의 예로 볼 수 있는데요
정확한 의미를 전달해야 하는 신문 기사나 방송에서도 종종 틀리게 사용하는 걸 보게 되는 단어들 입니다
이번 글에서는 개시와 게시 그리고 계시의 의미에 대해 알아보겠습니다
===
개시의 사전적 의미
[開始] 행동이나 일 따위를 시작함.
- 행동 개시
- 공격 개시
[開市] 시장을 처음 열어 물건의 매매를 시작함. 같은 말 개점(開店)
- 개시 무역

[開市] 하루 중 처음으로, 또는 가게 문을 연 뒤 처음으로 이루어지는 거래.
- 개시도 안 한 가게
- 개시니까 싸게 드립니다.
참고  국립 국어원 표준 국어 대사전
게시의 사전적 의미
[揭示] 여러 사람에게 알리기 위하여 내붙이거나 내걸어 두루 보게 함. 또는 그
런 물건.
- 일정표를 게시함.
- 게시판.
참고  국립 국어원 표준 국어 대사전
===
계시의 사전적 의미
[啓示] 깨우쳐 보여 줌.
[啓示] <종교> 사람의 지혜로서는 알 수 없는 진리를 신(神)이 가르쳐 알게 함.
- 신의 계시
- 부처의 계시를 받다.
참고  국립 국어원 표준 국어 대사전

===
개시와 게시와 계시의 구분
발음이 비슷한 세 단어를 단번에 구분할 수 있는 방법은 찾기 어렵습니다 하지만 세 단어의 의미를 잘 알아 두면 구분하는 데 도움이 되겠죠 
그 중에서도 세 단어의 음이 다른 개 게 계의 한자와 그 의미를 기억해 두면 구분에 도움이 되리라 생각합니다
  • 개시의 개開  열다
  • 게시의 게揭  걸다
  • 계시의 계啓  가르치다 인도하다

한자와 함께 알아 두세요
이상으로 개시 게시 계시에 대해 알아보았습니다

===


개시2, 開示
명사
열어서 보이는 것. 순화어는 `펴 보임', `드러내 보임'.

===
[名](スル)《「かいし」とも》
  1.  はっきり示すこと。「勾留理由の―を請求する」

  1.  説き明かし示すこと。教えさとすこと。「真義を―する」


===
카이-지【공개】 해설
[이름] (술) "카이시"모두
1 명확하게 표시할 것. " 구류 의 이유 -를 청구 한다"

2 설명 밝히는 것. 가르치는 것. " 진의를 한다"



Marketplace of the Gods: How Economics Explains Religion - by Witham, Larry

Marketplace of the Gods: How Economics Explains Religion - Kindle edition by Witham, Larry. Religion & Spirituality Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com.





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Larry Witham

Marketplace of the Gods: How Economics Explains Religion 1st Edition, Kindle Edition
by Larry Witham (Author) Format: Kindle Edition
4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 9 ratings
3.5 on Goodreads
33 ratings



Two centuries after Adam Smith illuminated the workings of the marketplace, a new movement among economists and social scientists is expanding his insights into a groundbreaking "economics of religion." Using cutting edge ideas from the behavioral sciences, and a deep knowledge of religious history, this new approach is making sense not only of past beliefs, but of religion today.

In Marketplace of the Gods, award-winning journalist Larry Witham tells the inside story of this expanding "economic approach" to religion, the puzzles it tries to solve, the controversies it has stirred, and the people who are making it happen. He shows that the economic approach, while evoking images of stock markets or accounting ledgers, actually begins with a simple idea about human beings as rational actors, judging costs and benefits in life. Every life has limits, so human experience is a series of trade-offs, balancing resources to make choices for the best possible benefits. As the economics of religion shows, this model can be applied to the rich story of the human race and its gods. Beginning with the individual, the choices in religion shape households, groups, movements, and entire "religious economies" of nations. On the one hand, this mixing of the profane and the sacred, the economic and the religious, is an exciting exchange of ideas between economics, sociology, psychology, history, and theology. On the other, it has spurred a lively protest. Indeed, for some, the economic approach seems to transform our good angels into grubby consumers.

As Witham shows, however, the economic approach to religion has insights for everyone, believers and skeptics alike. He illuminates this approach in a volume rich with ideas, history, contemporary events, and the insights of some of our sharpest modern-day thinkers.



From Publishers Weekly

A former religion reporter for the Washington Times, Witham turns his attention to the contemporary rise of economic theories to explain religion. Drawing on the works of Rodney Stark, Roger Finke, and Laurence R. Iannaccone, among others, he explores how these academics use economic models of costs and benefits to explain the persistence of religious faith in an age of growing secularization. While Witham gets off to a slow start, his concluding chapters offer insight into the way economic theories try to explain some of modernity's most perplexing issues: why is the United States more religious than Europe? What are the cost-benefits of extreme faith, such as that of religiously inspired terrorists? Economic answers such as the widely embraced theory that religions thrive on competition and are stifled by state regulation are ultimately reductionist; Witham quotes influential religion sociologist Robert Wuthnow, who has said that an economic analysis "fails to illuminate about 90 percent of what I find interesting about religion." Many readers may agree. Yet in a world dominated by the marketplace, books such as this one are an important part of the conversation. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.


About the Author

Larry Witham iis a veteran journalist and author who has covered current events, history, religion and society, science, and philosophy for more than two decades. Now a full-time author, he has written twelve books, including the recent award-winning Who Shall Lead Them?. Witham has contributed to publications ranging from the Christian Century and Beliefnet to Nature and Scientific American, and he has been on C-SPAN, Fox News, public television, and dozens of radio programs including affiliates of National Public Radio. He lives in the Maryland suburbs of Washington, DC.
--This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition.
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Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B003DZ0TT6
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Oxford University Press; 1st edition (May 5, 2010)
Publication date ‏ : ‎ May 5, 2010

Print length ‏ : ‎ 256 pagesBest Sellers Rank: #1,475,266 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)#986 in Religious Studies - Science & Religion
#2,962 in Science & Religion (Books)Customer Reviews:
4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 9 ratings





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Larry Witham



Larry Witham is an author, editor, journalist, and artist. His fourth novel will appear in Spring 2024 with TouchPoint Press. Witham has written sixteen books, mainly nonfiction. He was a finalist in the 2015 Pen Literary Awards for biography. He began his writing career as a daily newspaper reporter in Washington D.C., a job he held for twenty-one years. He went on to write and edit books full-time. Witham has received several national awards for his newspaper work and books, and was nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for a series he co-wrote on the clergy in America. He was Project Editor for the ten-volume Templeton Press science-and-religion series, and was editor of Science and Spirit magazine in 2007. A painter by avocation, Witham is currently exploring new art and writing projects. He has a bachelors degree in painting from San Jose State University (1974). Witham lives with his wife in the Maryland suburbs of Washington D.C.

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Linda

5.0 out of 5 stars Really interestingReviewed in the United States on July 13, 2019
Verified Purchase
A must read if you work at a church



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Dave Bühler, PhD

4.0 out of 5 stars What can money do?Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2014
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Gracias!


Divine Economy: Theology and the Market

Divine Economy: Theology and the Market (Routledge Radical Orthodoxy): 9780415226738: Economics Books @ Amazon.com






D. Stephen Long

Divine Economy: Theology and the Market (Routledge Radical Orthodoxy) 1st Edition
by D. Stephen Long (Author)
5.0 5.0 out of 5 stars 2 ratings
3.6 on Goodreads
22 ratings
Part of: Routledge Radical Orthodoxy (13 books)

What has theology to do with economics? They are both sciences of human action, but have traditionally been treated as very separate disciplines. Divine Economy is the first book to address the need for an active dialogue between the two.
D. Stephen Long traces three strategies which have been used to bring theology to bear on economic questions: the dominant twentieth-century tradition, of Weber's fact-value distinction; an emergent tradition based on Marxist social analysis; and a residual tradition that draws on an ancient understanding of a functional economy. He concludes that the latter approach shows the greatest promise because it refuses to subordinate theological knowledge to autonomous social-scientific research.
Divine Economy will be welcomed by those with an interest in how theology can inform economic debate.

===

Review
..."Stephen Long's book is an important contribution to what is becoming an increasingly pressing theological preoccupation."
-M. Douglas Meeks, Vanderbilt University "Journal of the American Academy of Religion, Winter 2002
"[T]his contribution seeks to connect Cambridge intellectual hothouse with the rest of us The book...[is] a litmus test of Radical Orthodoxy's claim to credibility in religious and secular arenas."
-"Theology
"Stephen Long...has fashioned a complex book that challenges not only traditional approaches to economy...but also rejects nearly all the approaches of Christian scholars who deal with economic matters.."
-Journal of Church and State

About the Author
D. Stephen Long is Assistant Professor of Systematic Theology at Garrett Evangelical Theological Seminary.


Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ Routledge; 1st edition (March 23, 2000)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
Top review from the United States


'satiably curious

5.0 out of 5 stars Like crystal: Dense, Clear, BrilliantReviewed in the United States on August 9, 2005
Verified Purchase
At only 50 pages in, I am already locked on. I'ts always gratifying when I purchase a book due to an interview with the author (in this case, the June/July issue of The Door), and find the writing style consistent with his or her conversational style. In the case of Stephen Long, the author seems to have done the heavy lifting in advance so layman that I am, I can follow the direction and intent of the text without stopping to back up too frequently.

Also, the subject of Capitalism's dependence on essentially Theological issues for its survival is an extremely exciting idea to contemplate! I expect to purchase more work on this concept and to look up some of Mr. Long's sources.

10 people found this helpful


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티모스 Thumos - Wikipedia 기개 気概(きがい、希: θυμός、thymos)

Taechang Kim

존 인스의 철학에서 보는 기업가 정신 : Philosophy of Entrepreunership

플라톤이 간파 한 인간 정신의 세 가지 구성 요소 : 욕망, 이성, 테이 모스 thymus.
그러나 욕망과 이성만으로 치우쳐 테이 모스를 망각했다.
현대 사회의 오염 된 기업가 정신을 기개, 기박, 패기의 테이 모스 철학을 가지고 정화 복원시키는 저자의 의욕에 매료되어 독해, 추가 사고 발전에 여러 가지 시사를 받았다.

Thumos - Wikipedia

Thumos

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Thumos (also commonly spelled 'thymos'Greekθυμός) is the Ancient Greek concept of "spiritedness" (as in "a spirited stallion" or "spirited debate"). The word indicates a physical association with breath or blood and is also used to express the human desire for recognition. It is not a somatic feeling, as nausea and giddiness are.

History[edit]

Homer[edit]

In Homer's works, thumos was used to denote emotions, desire, or an internal urge. Thumos was a permanent possession of living man, to which his thinking and feeling belonged. When a Homeric hero is under emotional stress, he may externalize his thumos and converse with or scold it.[1] Achilles, in the Illiad, cares for his own honour; he keeps gods and deities in his heart; "...the thunderous lord of Hera might grant you the winning of glory, you must not set your mind on fighting the Trojans, whose delight is in battle, without me. So you will diminish my honour (thumos)."[2]

Democritus[edit]

Democritus used "euthymia" (i.e. "good thumos") to refer to a condition in which the soul lives calmly and steadily, being disturbed by no fear, superstition, or other passions. For Democritus euthymia was one of the root aspects the goal of human life.

Plato[edit]

Plato's Phaedrus and his later work The Republic discuss thumos as one of the three constituent parts of the human psyche. In the Phaedrus, Plato depicts logos as a charioteer driving the two horses eros and thumos (erotic love and spiritedness are to be guided by logos). In the Republic (Book IV) soul becomes divided into (See Plato's tripartite theory of soul):[1]

  • nous ("intellect", "reason"), which is or should be the controlling part which subjugates the appetites with the help of thumos.
  • thumos ("passion"), the emotional element in virtue of which we feel joy, amusement, etc. (the Republic IV, 439e);
  • epithumia ("appetite", "affection"), to which are ascribed bodily desires;

Plato suggested we have three parts of our soul, which in combination makes us better in our destined vocation, and is a hidden basis for developing our innate ideas. Thumos may draw from this to strengthen man with our reasoning, this tripartite division is as follows:

  1. Reason (thoughts, reflections, questioning)
  2. Spiritedness (ego, glory, honor) and
  3. Desires (natural e.g. food, drink, sex vs unnatural e.g. money, power).

Contemporary views[edit]

Thymos and democracy: megalothymia and isothymia[edit]

"Megalothymia" refers to the need to be recognized as superior to others, while "isothymia" is the need to be recognized as merely equal to others. Both terms are neoclassical compounds, coined by Francis Fukuyama. In his book The End of History and the Last Man, Fukuyama mentions "thymos" in relation to liberal democracy and recognition. He relates Socrates' ideas about Thymos and desire to how people want to be recognized within their government. Problems emerge when other people do not recognize another's Thymos, and therefore do not provide the justice that it requires. In order for people to exist in harmony, Fukuyama argues, isothymia rather than megalothymia must be used to satisfy the human need for recognition. Any system that creates political inequality is necessarily feeding the megalothymia of some members while denying it to others. Fukuyama explains how Thymos relates to history with the example of anti-communism in relation to the Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, and China. He states, "We cannot understand the totality of the revolutionary phenomenon unless we appreciate the working of thymotic anger and the demand for recognition that accompanied communism's economic crisis."[3]

In medicine[edit]

Hyperthymiadysthymiacyclothymia, and euthymia (medicine) are mental/behavioral conditions in modern psychology.

Cultural references[edit]

  • In Miguel de Cervantes's Don Quixote the knight has been described as driven by a spirited thymos or anger when his sense of self-worth is denigrated. He only recovers balance, a sense of justice, when he comes to abide among the Sarracens. [4]
  • The Phi Theta Kappa honor society took the letter theta for thumos, representing the "aspiration" that they seek in their potential members.
  • Thymos is the name of an academic Journal of Boyhood Studies [1].
  • Thumos is the name of an American progressive doom/post-metal band whose music is based on the works of Plato [2].

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Jump up to:a b Long, A. A. Psychological Ideas in Antiquity. In: Dictionary of the History of Ideas. 1973-74 [2003]. link.
  2. ^ Homer (2003). The Iliad (Wordsworth Classics) (New ed.). Ware, Hertfordshire: England: Wordsworth Classics. ISBN 978-1853262425.
  3. ^ Fukuyama, Francis. The End of History and the Last Man. Francis Fukuyama 2006: New York, NY.
  4. ^ Frederick A. de ArmasDon Quixote among the Saracens: A Clash of Civilizations and Literary Genres. University of Toronto Press, 2011, pp. 162 ff.


======

기개

출처 : 무료 백과 사전 "Wikipedia (Wikipedia)"

기개 (키가이, 노조미 : θυμός , thymos)란, 스스로 진행해 곤란하게 맞서 가는 강한 의지 · 기성을 가리킨다. [1]

플라톤 은 ' 혼의 삼분설 '에서 이 '기개'를 '이지' '욕망'과 함께 인간의  ( 정신 )의 측면·기능의 하나로 꼽고 있다.

각주·출처 편집 ]

관련 항목 편집 ]

====
The Embodied Soul in Plato's Later Thought

Contents
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1 Thymos
Chapter 2 Appetitive Soul
Chapter 3 Rational Soul
Chapter 4 Measuring Pleasure
Chapter 5 Eudaimonia
Chapter 6 The Political Sphere
Chapter 7 Eschatology
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index Locorum
General Index


Chapter 1 - Thymos

Thumos, often translated “spirit” or “spirited part”, acts as an intermediary between reason and appetite, imposing the dictates of reason on our irrational desires and pleasures. Yet the precise nature and function of the thumos is poorly understood and it has often been the object of criticism. Those who have defended it have portrayed it as essentially honour-seeking, reflecting the social dimension of our existence. Beginning from an analysis of the Homeric thumos, this chapter argues that those who see the essence of thumos as lying in honour or self-esteem are mistaken, and that thumos represents a primitive drive for excellence or pre-eminence, with the desire for honour and recognition being merely derivative. Its sensitivity to reason is the result of the fact that it depends on a certain rational conception of goodness for orientation. Rather than being an accidental property, its sensitivity to reason is built into its very constitution.