Do you define yourself as anti-materialist? — Olivier5
What would be the relevance of the Naxos reference? — Olivier5
(4d)it was no matter even if he should die.
I don't think it has anything to do specifically with Naxos .... I have no definitive answer. — Fooloso4
But it could well be that Jesus just invented whatever location came to mind, not even aware that there weren't many Samaritan's outside of Galilee. — Olivier5
It could well be the case as a theoretical hypothesis, but unlikely as it wasn't Jesus who was telling the story. — Apollodorus
That makes no difference. Whoever invented the story might have chosen whatever location came to his mind. — Olivier5
If it wasn't Jesus who wrote the story, then it wasn't he who "invented" the story. — Apollodorus
No offense, but Umberto Eco said somewhere that there can be such a thing as over-interpretation. — Olivier5
A text is an open-ended universe where the interpreter can discover infinite interconnections.
Language is unable to grasp a unique and preexisting meaning — on the contrary, language’s duty is to show that what we can speak of is only the coincidence of the opposites.
Language (and authors’) fate is nevertheless redeemed by the pneumatic reader who, being able to realize and to show that Being is drift, corrects the error of the author-Demiurge and understands what the hylics (those who thinks that texts can have a definite meaning) are condemned to ignore.
Language mirrors the inadequacy of thought: our being-in-the world is nothing else than being incapable of finding any transcendental meaning.
Language (and authors’) fate is nevertheless redeemed by the pneumatic reader who, being able to realize and to show that Being is drift, corrects the error of the author-Demiurge and understands what the hylics (those who thinks that texts can have a definite meaning) are condemned to ignore.
To salvage the text — that is, to transform it from an illusion of meaning to the awareness that meaning is infinite — the reader must suspect that every line of it conceals another secret meaning;
words, instead of saying, hide the untold; the glory of the reader is to discover that texts can say everything, except what their author wanted them to mean; as soon as a pretended meaning is
allegedly discovered, we are sure that it is not the real one; the real one is the further one and so on and so forth; the hylics — the losers — are those who end the process by saying “I understood.”
The Real Reader is the one who understands that the secret of a text is its emptyness.
Likewise, Euthyphro being real or not is a meaningless detail which makes no difference whatsoever to the philosophical meaning of the story. — Olivier5
God is unimpressed by empty, ritualistic piety, be that from the high priest, the levite or Euthyphro; He loves justice best, even when it comes from the impious. — Olivier5
Euthyphro being real or not is a meaningless detail which makes no difference whatsoever to the philosophical meaning of the story. — Olivier5
Why isn't it Jesus' story? — frank
It isn't Jesus relating it. — Apollodorus
The dialogues are all inventions. — Fooloso4
How about starting a thread on it and get Amity to delete all comments that we choose to disagree with? :grin: — Apollodorus
Euthyphro’s lawsuit is made stranger yet by the realization that he is prosecuting his father for events that must have taken place at least five years earlier; Athens lost possession of the island of Naxos in 404, at the conclusion of the Peloponnesian War. Socrates was tried in 399. Bearing in mind the absence of temporal and spatial contiguity with the polluting event, it is hard to escape the inference that something else led Euthyphro to open up this can of worms ...
Like Meletus, Euthyphro is resurrecting old grudges to support his ambitions and prospects. He is impiously digging up matters from the past for his selfish advantage.
How about starting a thread on it and get Amity to delete all comments that we choose to disagree with? :grin:
— Apollodorus
Again with this. Boring crap :yawn:
Deletions can only be done by a moderator who judges any full-of-shit posts flagged.
I am not the only one but guess I am now on the tag team's 'hit list'.
Unfortunately, I can't flag this off topic post but I will do others...and this should disappear. — Amity
I gave some some suggestions as to what the relevance might be.Fooloso4 What would be the relevance of the Naxos reference? — Olivier5
And Fourth, I responded to what you and Apollodorus said. But now that I show that this is a real concern in the literature and that my suggestions are not without support, you want to just drop it and move on. — Fooloso4
But now that I show that this is a real concern in the literature and that my suggestions are not without support, you want to just drop it and move on. — Fooloso4
A bit of emotional intelligence says: if you want others to listen to you, be a listener. I've found that to be true, haven't you? — frank
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