The Greek term for Form is eidos. It means the kind of thing something is, the look or shape of a thing. Eidos is closely related to idea. — Fooloso4
- the modern concepts of love as such are comparable in Greek to those in English
- the words in the Greek language spoken by, for instance, Socrates, were directly and precisely mappable to other old European and Middle-Eastern languages such as Etruscan, Phoenecian, Babylonian, and Celtic
- the concepts were different, then are the very thoughts of humans then and now so different, that a close translation is impossible?
- the cause of the shift of meanings was needed, to hone the precision of the language, or has the precision of mapping between words' meanings and the real world's objects, actions and ideas eroded in comparative meanings but the shift progressed without any conscious human intervention? — god must be atheist
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