Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Akhenaten" in Indonesian language version.
Hoffmeier2005|
Hoffmeier 2005]], hlm. 239: "...There has been some debate whether the similarities direct or indirect borrowing... it is unlikely that "the Israelite who composed Psalm 104 borrowed directly from the sublime Egyptian 'Hymn to the Aten'," as Stager has recently claimed."; [[#CITEREF
Alter2018|
Alter 2018]], hlm. 54: "...I think there may be some likelihood, however unprovable, that our psalmist was familiar with at least an intermediate version of Akhenaton's hymn and adopted some elements from it."; [[#CITEREF
Brown2014|
Brown 2014]], hlm. 61–73: "the question of the relationship between Egyptian hymns and the Psalms remains open"
Hoffmeier, James Karl (2015). Akhenaten and the Origins of Monotheism (edisi ke-1st). Oxford; New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199792085.Day2014|
Day 2014]], hlm. 22–23: "...a significant part of the rest Of Psalm 104 (esp. vv. 20–30) is dependent on... Akhenaten's Hymn to the Sun god Aten... these parallels almost all come in the same order:..."; [[#CITEREF
Day2013|
Day 2013]], hlm. 223–224: "...this dependence is confined to vv. 20–30. Here the evidence is particularly impressive, since we have six parallels with Akhenaten's hymn... occurring in the identical order, with one exception."; [[#CITEREF
Landes2011|
Landes 2011]], hlm. 155, 178: "the hymn to Aten quoted as epigraph to this chapter—replicates the intense religiosity and even the language of the Hebrew Psalm 104. Indeed, most Egyptologists argue that this hymn inspired the psalm...", "...For some, the relationship to Hebraic monotheism seems extremely close, including the nearly verbatim passages in Psalm 104 and the "Hymn to Aten" found in one of the tombs at Akhetaten..."; [[#CITEREF
Shaw2004|
Shaw 2004]], hlm. 19: "An intriguing direct literary (and perhaps religious) link between Egypt and the Bible is Psalm 104, which has strong similarities with a hymn to the Aten"
Assmann, Jan (2020). The Invention of Religion: Faith and Covenant in the Book of Exodus. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-20319-5.It is essential that, whether the KV55 skeleton is that of Smenkhkare or some previously-unknown prince... the assumption that the KV55 bones are those of Akhenaten be rejected before it becomes "received wisdom".