I find the deflationary theory lacks the connection with (or "content" of) the world that I normally associate with the use of the word "truth". — Luke
Independent exploration is criticism to a theocracy. Don't forget also that Rushdie is viewed as an apostate which in itself calls for the death penalty. — Tom Storm
the example of an abacus — TheVeryIdea
Some information people would say there is mattering in what happens to matter. — schopenhauer1
"Tin. Roof. Rusted!" — 180 Proof
Did you ever wake up with a song, not in your heart but running through your head...?
The tune just fine but the words...
This morning it was, "I can't stand the pain. On my window. Rain"
The song:
I Can't Stand the Rain - Ann Peebles (1974) — Amity
I guess I should read it again. It's (at least superficially) about Satan, known as Shaitan in Islam. And many other things.As to how it reads, like any book, even the cover and title can trigger.
So perhaps not an either/or but both depending on interpretation. — Amity
The Satanic Verses are words of "satanic suggestion" which the Islamic prophet Muhammad is alleged to have mistaken for divine revelation.[1] The verses praise the three pagan Meccan goddesses: al-Lāt, al-'Uzzá, and Manāt and can be read in early prophetic biographies of Muhammad by al-Wāqidī, Ibn Sa'd and the tafsir of al-Tabarī. The first use of the expression in English is attributed to Sir William Muir in 1858.[2]
The incident is accepted as true by modern scholars of Islamic studies, under the criterion of embarrassment, citing the implausibility of early Muslim biographers fabricating a story so unflattering about their prophet.[3][4] It was accepted by religious authorities for the first two centuries of the Islamic era, but was later rejected by some religious scholars (Ulama) as incompatible with Muhammad's perfection ('isma), implying that Muhammad is infallible and therefore cannot be fooled by Satan.[...]
There are numerous accounts of the incident, which differ in the construction and detail of the narrative, but they may be broadly collated to produce a basic account.[5] The different versions of the story are recorded in early tafsirs (Quranic commentaries) and biographies of the Prophet, such as Ibn Ishaq's.[6] In its essential form, the story reports that Muhammad longed to convert his kinsmen and neighbors of Mecca to Islam. As he was reciting these verses of Sūrat an-Najm,[7] considered a revelation from the angel Gabriel:
"Have you thought of al-Lāt and al-'Uzzá? And about the third deity, al-Manāt?"
–Quran 53:19–20
Satan tempted him to utter the following line:
"These are the exalted gharāniq, whose intercession is hoped for."
Al-Lāt, al-'Uzzā and Manāt were three goddesses worshipped by the Meccans. Discerning the precise meaning of the word gharāniq has proven difficult, as it is a hapax legomenon (i.e. used only once in the text).
Commentators wrote that it meant "the cranes". The Arabic word does generally mean a "crane" – appearing in the singular as ghirnīq, ghurnūq, ghirnawq and ghurnayq, and the word has cousin forms in other words for birds, including "raven, crow" and "eagle".[8] Taken as a segment, "exalted gharāniq" has been translated by Orientalist William Muir to mean "exalted women", while contemporary academic Muhammad Manazir Ahsan has translated the same segment as "high-soaring ones (deities)". Thus, whether the phrase had intended to attribute a divine nature to the three "idols" is a matter of dispute.[9]
In either case, scholars generally agree on the meaning of the second half of the verse, "whose intercession is hoped for", and this by itself would contradict a core tenet of what would become orthodox Islamic doctrine, namely that no saint or deity – nor Muhammad himself – can intercede for Muslims.
That point was covered in a recent Guardian article.
Basically, it doesn't matter the contents, it's the principle...the mere fact of criticism. — Amity
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini never read Salman Rushdie’s book “The Satanic Verses,” his son Ahmed told me in Tehran, in the early nineteen-nineties.
. I spoke to two Sunni collogues of mine. Their response about what happened to Rushdie was - "You mock Islam, what do you expect? He's lucky to still be alive." Were they against the attack? "I wound't do it myself, but I understand the anger." — Tom Storm
Police are investigating a threat against JK Rowling that was made after she posted her reaction on social media to the attack on Salman Rushdie.
Rowling tweeted on Friday: “Horrifying news. Feeling very sick right now. Let him be OK.”
A Twitter user under the name Meer Asif Asiz replied: “Don’t worry you are next.”
1) Political: There is no religious justification for the act but my condemnation would be unpopular with my flock. — Baden
The stuff that binds all of us is just clear water (for us.) But the stuff that binds most of us is, I claim, what the greats, among other things, make explicit and therefore optional. (That which is closest is hardest to see, like forgetting your glasses are on your nose.) — Pie
We punish one another for dishonesty or irrelevance or incoherence. We simultaneously enforce tribal norms and attempt installing new ones. — Pie
While a certain combativeness or competitiveness may serve the pursuit of better beliefs, I speculate that too much just locks everyone up in their safe space, only able to repeat what they find obvious or not. — Pie
We know that Nietzsche is not trying to insult or trick us. There is no trust or failure of trust involve. — Pie
One can always ask for elaboration after all. — Pie
An important distinction, in my view, is that between reading the dead and chatting with the living. — Pie
Concision is a fascinating issues. Terseness is typically good (so say the style books), but it can also suggests that the listener is not worth more than a quick remark. Do we find it easier to trust the verbose ? Because their primary motive, being understood, is so clear ? They value us, as ears at least, while the aphorist may take us for a mere target, performing for others at our expense perhaps and not for our illuminate.
To what degree is philosophy caught up in the desire to humiliate ? As Nietzsche might put, the dialogue can be a knife fight. — Pie
The story in John is told as a matter of truth, but in truth it is historically dubious. — Fooloso4
FWIW, there's a passage in Aurelius about barking dogs. The godlike man does not judge, does not get caught in up in merely human notions of good and evil.
Such notions are toys for mere monkeys ? — Pie
Saussure is one of my favorite thinkers. Good recommendation ! But bad social gesture. — Pie
Truth, one might say is redundant just as long as it is adhered to, but what is needed is an account of falsehood, which is parasitic on a community of truth tellers. — unenlightened
It is realistic, it's exactly what the Cuban Missile crisis was, which no one really criticises US decisions about. — boethius
You have argued here that rooting for and supporting the Ukrainians was more morally disgusting than bombing the Ukrainians.
— Olivier5
Which I have not argued. — boethius
So what is the MOST disgusting of the two: to aggress your neighbour in such a war, or to cheerlead the victims trying to defend themselves?
— Olivier5
Cheerleading others to fight for your own virtue-signalling on social media is far more disgusting.
Actually fighting a war, at least there's skin in the game."Courage of your convictions" as they say in French. — boethius
I just explained at length the realistic option to protect Ukraine by "supporting Ukraine" which is to form a formal military alliance inside or outside NATO and send boots on the ground to do, or be prepared to do, actual fighting to protect Ukraine. — boethius
There seems to be a genuine incapacity to understand the realist position I and others have defended here as well as presented by John Mearsheimer. — boethius
I'm far the first to gripe about the mysteries of the correspondence theory of truth. I'm just asking how you navigate or tolerate them (the traditional criticisms, and the one in particular that I tried to articulate.) — Pie
What is this representational, optical metaphor doing or trying to do ? — Pie
Yet the 'meaning' is just the more or less tentatively embraced 'structure of reality.' — Pie
there is a similar open-ended-ness in play. — Pie
Presumably it's 'we especially rational and charming people who agree with Pie'... — Pie
a certain time-independence — Pie