The distinction is crucial in a child's early education. For many children there is a phase - sometimes prolonged - when they can read the words of a paragraph but not get the meaning of it. Getting from just reading the words to getting the meaning - we use the word 'Comprehension' in the schools I've been involved with - is a crucial step, and is tested by giving children a passage to read and then asking questions about its meaning.Doesn't anyone here recognize a distinction between reading and interpreting? — tim wood
My example of the kiss, above, conveys it. If you want, you can deconstruct a kiss until there's no such thing. After all, it's a matter of muscles, skin, sense of touch (at least), hormones and endorphins. By the time you're finished, everything that makes a kiss a kiss has been analyzed away - the people aren't a part of it. And this has its place, but it has nothing to do with understanding what a kiss is as a kiss, and is even destructive to that understanding. And to be sure, there is such a thing as a kiss, and analyzing it with the wrong tools for the wrong purpose is just applied ignoranceHow do you understand the distinction between reading and interpretation, and how do think it is relevant to what I have said here? — Janus
Because no text is understood just by reading the words. — Agustino
So was fulfilled what was spoken through the prophet: “I will open My mouth in parables; I will utter things hidden since the foundation of the world.” — Matthew 13:35
So if I write "The cat is black and was a year old when she had kittens" you would not be able to understand it just by reading the text? — Sir2u
Then the "walk humbly with God". Keep God company? What? I've never been sure exactly what that means. — Bitter Crank
I don't know what that means either. Does God walk humbly and want me to do that too? I have never thought of the biblical version of God as particularly humble."Do justice, love mercy, and walk humbly with God." Hosea said. — Bitter Crank
Of course you would know what those words mean (if you did). The revelatory aspect of texts which may be experienced in the (all the more so by informed) act of interpretation consists in gaining insight into what is intended by the text; into what it is, in an overall sense, trying to convey. — Janus
I think you're being disingenuous if you claim not to know what that is intended to mean and instead offer such a flippant, obviously ridiculous, interpretation. You don't have to feel empathy with the sentiment to know that it is intended, and how it is conveyed by the words. — Janus
These passages from Leviticus 16 and Leviticus 23 are pretty straightforward about Yom Kippur. — schopenhauer1
No. I need to know, to begin with, which cat.So if I write "The cat is black and was a year old when she had kittens" you would not be able to understand it just by reading the text? — Sir2u
Not necessarily. The sentence may be code for something else for example.It means exactly what it says. — Sir2u
I've stated that it must be read in context, taking care to go back to the way it would have been understood in the Judaic culture in which it arose.So why should everything else be a mystery that has to be unraveled before it can be understood? — Sir2u
Ah yes, indeed. I've been saying this for awhile.Keeping things in context helps understanding. — Sir2u
Yes, parables are indeed a way to communicate information that cannot be communicated otherwise. What's your point?But did he ever transmit any super secret information through them? He used parables to make sure that nothing was hidden. — Sir2u
The Bible, on the other hand, is qualified as the “Word of God.” Now it’s a simple question: how does the word of God come to fall under any interpretation at all? If the words in a given sequence of words are intelligible - understandable – how do you get past that to something else and preserve the qualification?
No. I need to know, to begin with, which cat. — Agustino
Not necessarily. The sentence may be code for something else for example. — Agustino
I've stated that it must be read in context, taking care to go back to the way it would have been understood in the Judaic culture in which it arose. — Agustino
What's your point? — Agustino
One cannot interpret or understand without context.But that is only lack of data, not a way of interpretation. — Sir2u
A sentence isn't some Platonic object that lives off in some separate realm and can be understood apart from its context. The meaning of a sentence is in the intention of its author. If a monkey typed that sentence, I'd tell you it means nothing, it's gibberish. If a secret agent typed that sentence, I may think it means something different than is at first apparent. Etc.You do not need to know which cat is black to understand the sentence. — Sir2u
Nope, that's not actually the case. The Bible makes the opposite to be quite evident actually. For example:And the people that wrote the bible would have known exactly what god and Jesus were saying. — Sir2u
On the next day, as they were on their way and approaching the city, Peter went up on the housetop about the sixth hour to pray. But he became hungry and was desiring to eat; but while they were making preparations, he fell into a trance; and he saw the sky opened up, and an object like a great sheet coming down, lowered by four corners to the ground, and there were in it all kinds of four-footed animals and crawling creatures of the earth and birds of the air. A voice came to him, “Get up, Peter, kill and eat!” But Peter said, “By no means, Lord, for I have never eaten anything unholy and unclean.” Again a voice came to him a second time, “What God has cleansed, no longer consider unholy.” This happened three times, and immediately the object was taken up into the sky.
Now while Peter was greatly perplexed in mind as to what the vision which he had seen might be, behold, the men who had been sent by Cornelius, having asked directions for Simon’s house, appeared at the gate; and calling out, they were asking whether Simon, who was also called Peter, was staying there. While Peter was reflecting on the vision, the Spirit said to him, “Behold, three men are looking for you. But get up, go downstairs and accompany them without misgivings, for I have sent them Myself.” Peter went down to the men and said, “Behold, I am the one you are looking for; what is the reason for which you have come?” They said, “Cornelius, a centurion, a righteous and God-fearing man well spoken of by the entire nation of the Jews, was divinely directed by a holy angel to send for you to come to his house and hear a message from you.” So he invited them in and gave them lodging. — Acts 10:9-23
"Truly, You are a God who hides Himself, O God of Israel, Savior!"They must have written their exact words and both god and jesus must have been very careful about what they said because they wanted, needed people to understand and follow their way of thinking. So why should they include hidden meanings? — Sir2u
You have never heard of Kierkegaard's indirect communication? The point of parables is precisely that their meaning cannot be communicated otherwise, since it's not a matter of reason, but of direct perception and intuition, which requires to look and see via images as it were - to have a direct insight.A parable is not another hidden meaning and is not subject to interpretation, it is just a simpler explication of a topic so that simple people can understand. — Sir2u
Nope, that's not actually the case. The Bible makes the opposite to be quite evident actually. For example:
balh, blah.
So again, your ignorance of the Bible only shows itself. — Agustino
You have never heard of Kierkegaard's indirect communication? — Agustino
The point of parables is precisely that their meaning cannot be communicated otherwise, since it's not a matter of reason, but of direct perception and intuition, which requires to look and see via images as it were - to have a direct insight. — Agustino
"Truly, You are a God who hides Himself, O God of Israel, Savior!" — Agustino
No, he did not know what God communicated to him through the vision he had. That's why he was perplexed.Did Peter not know what god was saying to him? — Sir2u
He is a philosopher, not a guru, so he doesn't have "followers".Not even his followers agree with some of his ideas, maybe because he failed to write them clearly and wrote with hidden meanings included. — Sir2u
No. You implied that parables are just a simple way to communicate something that would otherwise be very difficult to communicate and would require one to be very educated, etc.Is that not the same thing I said? — Sir2u
I'm not saying anything, I'm just saying that the text makes it clear that God isn't the kind of being that appears very clearly at the whims and wishes of people. He is a Hidden God.Are you saying that god is the kind of being that deliberately tries to confuse the people he wants to praise and adore him? — Sir2u
Sharp! And interesting! Unless you object, I should like to call these successive "looks" dialogues-with-the-text (DT), partly because I take the efforts - the looks - to be both in good faith, and very much in the spirit of a dialogue.The Divine speaks, we hear it, what's to interpret? But your view is that of the outsider. For the insider (the believer in the Divine Being) a second, third, or fourth look at the text is a friendly, cooperating-with-God project. Interpretation isn't an adversarial process. For the believer, there can't be a conclusion of "this doesn't mean anything". Rather, it's an attempt to obtain the full meaning. — Bitter Crank
A parable is not another hidden meaning and is not subject to interpretation, it is just a simpler explication of a topic so that simple people can understand. — Sir2u
No. You implied that parables are just a simple way to communicate something that would otherwise be very difficult to communicate — Agustino
The point of parables is precisely that their meaning cannot be communicated otherwise, since it's not a matter of reason, but of direct perception and intuition, — Agustino
Yes, parables are indeed a way to communicate information that cannot be communicated otherwise. — Agustino
No, he did not know what God communicated to him through the vision he had. That's why he was perplexed. — Agustino
I'm not saying anything, I'm just saying that the text makes it clear that God isn't the kind of being that appears very clearly at the whims and wishes of people. He is a Hidden God. — Agustino
Does that mean that even the knowledgeable, the enlightened, the blessed ones don't agree on what religious texts mean. :s
That sounds just like a person that wants to keep his cushy job trying to convince everyone else that only he can do it because he is the only one that has been taught to read QBasic. — Sir2u
I think it shows the historical nature of the document and its evolution. — schopenhauer1
The dream itself contains the message.When I dream about someone I know telling me something, I understand what they are saying. Why I had the dream is another question entirely. Does the dream have a meaning is something else again. But I still understood the words that the person spoke. — Sir2u
Nope.I think what you mean when you say interpretation is guessing at or assigning other meanings which might not necessarily in line with gods words. — Sir2u
I haven't actually said that, I merely drew your attention to the fact that the Bible itself doesn't paint the picture of God that you have in your mind for the purposes of this conversation. This isn't about me or listening to me, it's about reading the Bible.Apart from actually denying that you are saying something while doings so, which in itself is ridiculous, the rest of this is the same pitiful excuse so many use to make people do things. From politicians and preachers to parents and kids, it is always the same. "You don't know so I am right, listen to me" — Sir2u
I fail to see the questions that I failed to reply. I've replied to everything it seems to me. Is there some unknowable message? I'm not sure what you mean, and why you brought unknowable messages in the discussion in the first place.I have asked you quite a few questions and for several explanations which you have failed to reply to, am I supposed to think that there is some unknowable message in you none replies or do you not think them worth replying to? — Sir2u
Oh yeah, you're actually expected to think for yourself and relate it to your own experiences, wow, who would ever do that! You should get a room for yourself and put a sticker on the door reading "kids only" :-}In the bible Jesus talks in parables, some get explained but most don't. — Sir2u
When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I set aside childish ways. — 1 Corinthians 13:11
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