Paideia New Testament set.These are excellent and now cheap: $174.95. Ends midnight Pasific Standard Time.click.logosmail.com/t/4779133/12530973/72230/12/?e5e2987d=NDc3OTEzMw%3d%3d&x=abd6357aSee these threads for my reviews, they are offsite:Eph Col volume in action!...1 Clem, Ignatius, Papias, RoAn example from 8:1-39. It's...1 Cor, by Pheme Perkins...New contributions in the Practical Commentary thread are welcome! If Logos is the software which is the right choice for You among the alternatives.
Other than you, I suspect most people that frequent these forums are primarily Logos users. Thanks for not advertizing (yet again) for the other software. However I'm not sure what benefit this would be to me. More so now than before. Can you articulate a case for it beyond its date? Many pearls are covered in dust, and much new scholarship is not worth the paper its printed on.
Well that's disappointing, I may be wrong but I thought Logos said the PrePub price would always be the lowest, This came in two releases, the original 7 and a 4 volume upgrade. I bought both on PrePub for $185 total.
Buyer beware I guess. Whether or not this is an expressly stated rule in the past, don't let the hype of PrePub fool you into a quick decision, the price may be cheaper later.
It's succinct where appropritate, deals with the text from many scholarly angles, there are important but not too many textual matters especially concerning multiple verses - look for example at the discussion of the ending of Ro. Deals with a few important modern English Bibles. Decently varied cross referencing to primary texts and modern scholars. Little to no Hebrew knowledge needed. Authors come from various denominational backgrounds incl. Catholic as should be expected in commentary series at this level. It's rarely verbose. Not much fluff, examples of fluff being things such as bibliographies running a dozen pages a volume which can be seen in some other commentaries. Good modern format. Better electronic in Logos than as printed matter, in order to be able to look up transliterated Greek accurately. Individual volumes are usually a bit expensive both worthwhile in some cases:
Can you articulate a case for it beyond its date?
Can you post some of the example discussion you referenced in regards to the end of Ro?
Wow...that is about $20 less than I paid with an academic discount last year. I really like the commentaries...but I wish I'd waited. [:D]
Well that's disappointing, I may be wrong but I thought Logos said the PrePub price would always be the lowest, This came in two releases, the original 7 and a 4 volume upgrade. I bought both on PrePub for $185 total. Buyer beware I guess. Whether or not this is an expressly stated rule in the past, don't let the hype of PrePub fool you into a quick decision, the price may be cheaper later.
all PrePub promises is that it is the lowest price in the orginal configuration. Individual resources can be bundled into larger collections and collections can be broken up. Unless you really want sometime NOW PrePub will not give you the lowest price.