do you or do you not agree that good food nourishes the body, and that bad food poisons it? and that food that neither nourishes nor poisons it does it neither good nor ill? — Leghorn
Yes I agree with that — Pfhorrest
Can anyone think of other cases where being a kind of thing at all is conflated with being a good example of that kind of thing? — Pfhorrest
what is art?” [...] “what is good art?” — Pfhorrest
I expect usually the people ingesting poison themselves are not intending to harm their bodies and merely don’t know that it will harm their bodies. — Pfhorrest
Do you really believe that people who ingest poison on purpose, in order to commit suicide, are fewer in number than those to whom it is administered in order to commit murder? — Leghorn
It's not my place to think such things, as I am not a member of the elite who decides about such things.Do you think that there is no such thing as bad art? — Pfhorrest
Certainly. At least up until some 30 years ago, children were typically taught to distinguish between proper art and that which is not proper art. This knowledge, however, has to go hand in hand with knowing one's place in society, and knowing whether one is in the position to speak on a topic or not.Before you seemed to be saying that only the art elite is capable of making such distinctions when you wrote, "Provided it's used by the right people, the ones who are in the position to determine whether something is art or not, and whether it's good art or not." Now you're saying that any school child (provided they're schooled in Europe) knows the difference.
Can you resolve this apparent contradition? — praxis
So would you be willing to accept, for the sake of the argument, that the intent of harming the body by the ingestion of poison commonly belongs to the one ingesting it, and not to someone else? — Leghorn
Commonly, sure. — Pfhorrest
You meant to use it as poison, but you ended up using it as food. So something you meant to be poison was instead food. It was also bad poison (ineffective at doing what poison is for), and at least marginally good food (somewhat effective at doing what food is for). — Pfhorrest
So if I ingest something, thinking it is poison, with the intent of harming my body, but instead nourish it, would you say the thing I ingested is poison or food? — Leghorn
You meant to use it as poison, but you ended up using it as food. So something you meant to be poison was instead food — Pfhorrest
would you define food as something that is ingested with the intent to nourish the body? — Leghorn
Sure — Pfhorrest
In other words, whether what I ingest is food or poison depends, not on my intent in ingesting it, but rather on its effect on my health. Would you agree with that? — Leghorn
.You meant to use it as poison, but you ended up using it as food. So something you meant to be poison was instead food — Pfhorrest
It's just like how if I use a word to mean something, but that word means a a different thing to you than what I intended it to, there's conflict over what the meaning of the word is. — Pfhorrest
?You meant to use it as poison, but you ended up using it as food. So something you meant to be poison was instead food. — Pfhorrest
Nonsense. One of the most important things to know in life is to know one's place. It's amazing how much trouble one avoids that way. There's just no use in forcing oneself upon a culture or social group that doesn't want one.I'm so glad you are obedient. I would hate to think you had ideas of your own. — Tom Storm
To the extent that the use of something for some purpose makes it a thing of some kind, the conflict between intended use and effective use creates conflict in defining the kind of the thing. — Pfhorrest
either intent or effect can be used as the criterion to define it — Pfhorrest
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