Please remember, if your daughter isn't a virgin on her wedding night, she is to be stonned to death on her father's porch. I've always considered this especially pious advice. — Tom Storm
Suppose a man meets a young woman, a virgin who is engaged to be married, and he has sexual intercourse with her. If this happens within a town, you must take both of them to the gates of that town and stone them to death. The woman is guilty because she did not scream for help. The man must die because he violated another man’s wife. In this way, you will purge this evil from among you.
But if out in the country a man happens to meet a girl pledged to be married and rapes her, only the man who has done this shall die. Do nothing to the girl; she has committed no sin deserving death. (22:25-26)
Precisely, Euthyphro's dilemma is about what constitutes good and bad. Is it Divine command or is it not? — TheMadFool
As you correctly pointed out and as Fooloso4 was forced to admit, "pious" = "loved by the Gods". — Apollodorus
It is clear that you have not read the dialogue or the OP. It is not something I was forced to admit, it is the premise of the dialogue. — Fooloso4
the equation beloved of God = pious is insufficient without the possession of knowledge of God. — Fooloso4
Do you understand that the Hebrew laws about rape weren't about piety? — frank
He neither understands nor does he want to because he's got another agenda which is to use Socrates to ridicule religion in general and Abrahamic religion in particular. — Apollodorus
Do you understand that the Hebrew laws about rape weren't about piety? — frank
What we find here is that pious obedience must be tempered to avoid injustice. — Fooloso4
What we find here is that pious obedience must be tempered to avoid injustice. — Fooloso4
The world (cosmos) itself was created by God — Apollodorus
not accidental or coincidental but intrinsic — Wayfarer
(Seems a bit like kicking the can down the road.) — jorndoe
The reasoning was that impiety, of the sort Socrates encouraged, was the reason the Athenian gods had abandoned them. — frank
Or perhaps vice versa, given that "god" seems to function in this thread as a place-holder for our "best self" ....
Another point: I've been confused with the use of "pious" as meaning "beloved of God" in this thread. This is not the case in French or Italian, — Olivier5
The pious often expects a reward for his piety. — Olivier5
piety is not a sufficient guide to doing what is right. And so piety does not equal what is loved by God. — Fooloso4
The Book of Job — Olivier5
Socrates focus remains on the human things. — Fooloso4
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