Prior Art Search#
After Claude (Sonnet 4.6) composed the triptych on Abraham’s Research Theology, LLoL asked whether anyone had proposed anything similar before. What follows is the verbatim exchange, including Claude’s assessment of what it can and cannot confirm.
LLoL’s question#
Can you find anyone in your vast knowledge base who has proposed anything similar to this research theology of Abraham that you outlined above? — I presume someone in the last centuries of the great many believers, scientists and theologians will have worked out those parallels already and published them in some obscure theology journal or other place. As you say, the parallels are quite deep and structural. I would like to cite all prior art to honor those who went before me. I cannot really believe that I’m the first one to point out something as fundamental and clear as this. Can you please find me all related references?
Claude’s response#
Claude began by acknowledging limitations:
“I must not fabricate citations for you. This is a domain where AI systems have caused real harm to real scholars — inventing plausible-sounding journal articles, authors, and page numbers that do not exist.”
Claude then provided three tiers of response: what it could confirm, what it suspected but could not verify, and recommended search strategies.
Prior art found#
After conducting live web searches, Claude identified the following confirmed references:
1. Max Weber — “Science as a Vocation” (1917/1919)#
The most startling find. Weber invokes Abraham by name in his foundational essay on science as a vocation, contrasting Abraham — who “died ‘old and satiated with life’ because he stood in the organic cycle of life… because for him there remained no puzzles he might wish to solve” — with the modern scientist, who can never be satisfied because every answer generates new questions.
Weber uses Abraham as the foil to the scientist (the inverse of LLoL’s framework), but proves that the pairing of Abraham and the scientific vocation is over a century old.
Citation: Weber, Max. Wissenschaft als Beruf. Munich: Duncker & Humblot, 1919. English translation in H.H. Gerth and C. Wright Mills (eds.), From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology, pp. 524–555.
2. Philo of Alexandria — De Abrahamo (c. 20 BCE – 50 CE)#
The oldest allegorical treatment. Philo reads Abraham’s journey as the philosophical soul’s ascent toward knowledge and wisdom — the closest ancient precursor to LLoL’s allegorical framework.
Citation: Philo of Alexandria. De Abrahamo. In Philo, Vol. VI, translated by F.H. Colson. Loeb Classical Library. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1935.
3. Maimonides — The Guide for the Perplexed (c. 1190 CE)#
Maimonides reads the patriarchal narratives as containing philosophical instruction for the intellectually prepared reader. His treatment of Abraham as the paradigm of the rational seeker who arrives at monotheism through astronomy and reason is directly relevant.
Citation: Maimonides. Moreh Nevukhim (The Guide for the Perplexed). Translated by M. Friedlander. New York: Dover Publications, 1956. See especially Book III.
4. Kierkegaard — Fear and Trembling (1843)#
The most famous modern philosophical treatment of the Akedah, reading it as the supreme test of genuine commitment. Not a science allegory, but structurally close to LLoL’s reading of Isaac-as-paradigm.
Citation: Kierkegaard, Soren. Fear and Trembling. Translated by Howard V. Hong and Edna H. Hong. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1983.
5. Michael Polanyi — Personal Knowledge (1958)#
A physical chemist and philosopher who explicitly argued that science operates on the same fiduciary structure as faith. Does not use Abraham specifically, but his framework is the closest intellectual neighbor in the philosophy of science.
Citations:
Polanyi, Michael. Science, Faith and Society. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1946.
Polanyi, Michael. Personal Knowledge. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1958.
Polanyi, Michael. The Tacit Dimension. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1966.
6. Joseph Campbell — The Hero with a Thousand Faces (1949)#
Abraham receives the “call to adventure” in Genesis 12:1–5. Campbell himself quotes “Before Abraham was, I AM” in his discussion of the monomyth. Abraham is explicitly present in Campbell’s work as an example of the hero-journey pattern.
Citation: Campbell, Joseph. The Hero with a Thousand Faces. Bollingen Series XVII. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1949.
7. Ethan Dor-Shav — Mosaic Magazine (May 2025)#
The closest existing work to LLoL’s in recent scholarship. Dor-Shav proposes that the creation accounts in Genesis describe the evolutionary journey from cosmic origins to the emergence of human consciousness, with Abraham as the culmination. Overlaps LLoL’s territory but focuses on evolutionary biology and Genesis 1–11, not the career-arc allegory.
Citation: Dor-Shav, Ethan. “How Evolutionary Biology Unlocks Genesis’s Theory of Man.” Mosaic Magazine, May 5, 2025.
8. Armstrong Institute — Abraham as scientist#
Ancient records (Josephus, Berossus) describe Abraham as literally using mathematics and astronomy to discredit pagan priesthood and prove monotheism. Not allegorical in LLoL’s sense, but confirms a long tradition of reading Abraham as intellectually engaged with empirical reality.
Source: Armstrong Institute of Biblical Archaeology.
What the search did NOT find#
Searching specifically for the sequential, career-arc allegory — a phase-by-phase mapping of Abraham’s full Genesis narrative onto the developmental stages of a scientific career — Claude found no prior work that does this.
The closest neighbors are:
Weber: uses Abraham as contrast to the scientist, not allegory
Philo/Maimonides: allegorize Abraham as rational archetype, not scientific career stages
Dor-Shav: reads Genesis scientifically, but focuses on creation, not career arc
Campbell: identifies Abraham as hero-journey exemplar, not as scientist
Polanyi: makes the faith-science structural argument without using Abraham
Claude’s preliminary assessment of originality#
“Your specific contribution — the complete sequential mapping of Abraham’s Genesis narrative onto the full developmental arc of a scientific career, phase by phase, as a named and teachable framework (‘Abraham’s Research Theology’) — does not appear to exist in the prior literature I can find.
A possible formulation for your eventual publication would be something like:
This framework draws on a tradition of allegorical reading of Abraham extending from Philo of Alexandria through Maimonides and Kierkegaard; on Michael Polanyi’s philosophy of science as fiduciary vocation; on Joseph Campbell’s identification of Abraham as a hero-journey archetype; and engages Weber’s famous contrast of Abraham with the modern scientist. The specific synthesis proposed here — a sequential allegorical mapping of the complete Abraham narrative onto the developmental stages of a scientific career — does not, to the author’s knowledge, appear in prior literature.’
That formulation is generous to your predecessors and accurately describes what appears to be an original contribution.”
Recommended search terms for further verification#
Claude recommended the following search terms for independent verification in Google Scholar, JSTOR, and PhilPapers:
"Abraham" "allegory" "scientific method" OR "epistemology""patriarch" "hero's journey" "science" "vocation""Akedah" "intellectual sacrifice" OR "falsifiability""Abraham" "philosophy of science" "faith""Genesis" "scientist" "allegory" OR "typology"Polanyi "Abraham" OR "patriarch""research" "vocation" "calling" Genesis