Many articles have been written concerning Moses and scholarship generally regards him as a divinely ‘elected’ leader of Judaism. The principle of parsimony has contributed a great deal towards united and simplified explanations of what kind of leader Moses was. For many biblical scholars, Moses possessed a wide array of skills and thus stands out as the foremost personality of the pre-Christian world. He headed a race comprising slaves and led them out of servitude in Egypt in what were exceedingly trying circumstances, to their promised land. However, if we apply the thinking of Plato, Schopenhauer or even Wittgenstein, we should apply a principle of specification and look at different types of discourse. This paper consequently approache...