“You are not me,” said Chuang Tzu. “So how do you know that I do not know that the fish are enjoying themselves?" — ENOAH
We fish don't wear human-imposed collective names. We are individuals of our kind. Only humans stick labels on other beings and place them in some artificial hierarchy. — Vera Mont
What do you mean by "We are individuals of our kind"? — Agree-to-Disagree
Huizi [his friend] said, “I’m not you, so I certainly don’t know what you know. And since you’re not a fish, you don’t know what fish like. There, perfect!”
Zhuangzi said, “Let’s go back to the beginning. When you asked how I knew what fish like, you had to know I knew already in order to ask. I know it by the Hao River—that’s how.
Only as I know things myself do I know them.
My earlier comment about epistemology was in jest, and yet that seems to have been your read on these Daoist "parables." — ENOAH
[CV, p. 47].The language used by philosophers is already deformed, as though by shoes that are too tight.
He (if he existed and there's any truth in the gospels) was not interested in other nations - his teaching was exported years after his death. He was concerned with reforming the Judaism of his time. Something like Martin Luther with a state of Christianity that he considered corrupt. Jesus is a singularly Jewish character, no matter that Paul and Christian proselytizers co-opted him and European artists systematically lightened his complexion.I read Jesus without any Christian background (obviously) and I just can't get over the strangeness of the character. — BitconnectCarlos
Or his own, for that matter. Asceticism was a well established practice among the many prophets of the time, as it was also in India, among Buddhist monks.But Jesus never seems to care about his followers' physical life or well-being. — BitconnectCarlos
Jesus first came for the Jews but he later sent his disciples out among the nations. — Moses
That's more an accusation that he consorts with the common people. I make it two actual instances of indulgence: the wedding in Cana and the farewell supper. Not a strict ascetic, I agree, but mostly they seemed to be as the fowls of the air, trusting God to feed them, or fasting in the desert or subsisting on a few loaves and fishes or plucking corn along the roadside - on the (gasp!) Sabbath. Cursing the fig tree sounds to me as if he were hungry and pissed off that it had no fruit. (Makes him sound less than divine, that bit.)I dont read Jesus as an ascetic because of passages like Matt 11:19. — Moses
:up:I read Robert Alter's biblical translation — BitconnectCarlos
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