Do you not see how meaningless it is to say that what makes something loved is that it is loved? — Fooloso4
First of all, this is what Socrates is saying and, in the absence of additional information, it is all we have. — Apollodorus
But if ...
2. Why is it "meaningless"? Is the definition of "beloved" or "loved" not "loved person or thing"? — Apollodorus
No, the definition of loved is not that it is loved. — Fooloso4
The salient word is “loved”, and you introduce “beloved” as an equal term — DingoJones
Beloved can be defined as something that is loved but love cannot be defined by loved. — Fooloso4
Do you recognize that what you did is dishonest? — DingoJones
Beloved can be defined as something that is loved — Fooloso4
Fooloso4 himself agreed that "beloved is defined as something that is loved". — Apollodorus
Love is not the object of the beloved. — Fooloso4
You take Socrates' criticism of Euthyphro as an endorsement. — Fooloso4
Socrates’ question is, “Is that which is pious loved by the gods because it is pious, or is it pious because it is loved by the gods? (10a). — Apollodorus
The dishonesty is entirely yours. Though, quite possibly, you aren't aware of it. — Apollodorus
In relation to the passages under discussion, there is no difference whatsoever between "loved" and "beloved". — Apollodorus
BTW, thanks for pointing out that "loved" and "beloved" are synonyms. It looks like the dictionary now agrees with you. I don't know how you managed to persuade them to change their definition, but well done.
loved (comparative more loved, superlative most loved) 1. Being the object of love
Synonyms See Thesaurus: beloved
loved – Wiktionary — Apollodorus
If what counts as good, just, and pious counts as such because it is loved by the gods, then all things loved by the gods are good, just, and pious merely as a result of being loved by the gods, and nothing is good, just, and pious unless or until it's loved by the gods. — creativesoul
In this particular scenario, humans either have no direct access to the gods and thus cannot know what is good, just, and pious, or they somehow have access to the gods in order to be able to know what they love, and by doing so also know what's good, just, and pious. — creativesoul
That would appear to be the logical implication. — Apollodorus
I personally think that we are well equipped to do much better. — creativesoul
We're just good at adhering to our own worldview. — frank
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