This sort of analysis of I & II Samuel has fallen into disrepute, because of both the unity of style and dramatic elements use throughout the books of Samuel and because, if these stories are supposed to be "propaganda," they are pretty terrible at that role. The entire second half of the David story is a tragedy, one where David's shortcomings play the key role. Things like the literary echo of David, as a now feeble old man being confused by the sound of conflict outside during the coup attempt at the start of I Kings, as recalling/echoing the situation of the priest Eli at the opening of I Samuel, seems hardly the incidental work of "splicing propaganda narratives." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Are you assuming that God exists?
— Janus
No, I am not. Fictional entities have essences, just as much as real entities do.
Because if God is merely a human idea, something imaginary, it seems strange to say that it is impossible to understand it.
— Janus
No essence can be understood. — Arcane Sandwich
There's nothing incoherent about the idea of a single unique essence. It's called pantheism. Spinoza was a pantheist, unlike Descartes, for example. — Arcane Sandwich
It's possible. Kant didn't believe in intellectual intuition, yet Meillassoux does. In After Finitude, he says: — Arcane Sandwich
I'm confused here because you say even fictional entities have essences and then say that no essence can be understood. — Janus
The first statement seems to suggest that an essence cannot be some intrinsic thing like being because fictional entities have no substantive being beyond what is said or imagined about them, and also what is said or imagined can presumably be understood. — Janus
But the idea of an essence as a set of defining or identifying characteristics would also seem to be ruled out because such sets must surely be understandable. — Janus
Whether or not Spinoza was a pantheist is a matter of interpretation. An alternative would be to see him as an acosmist. Spinoza held a distinction between 'natura naturata' and 'natura naturans' with the former being the manifest nature we experience via the senses and the latter being something like creative nature or the laws of nature that give rise to manifest nature. — Janus
It's possible. Kant didn't believe in intellectual intuition, yet Meillassoux does. In After Finitude, he says: — Arcane Sandwich
Correct, and Hegel tried to reintroduce it. Yet the historicist character of Hegel's thought is not compatible with Spinoza's system of thought. — Janus
Speaking of Divinity, we have it that Divine Inspiration is the source for the writing of the two foundational chapters of the Bible, Genesis 1 and Genesis 2, among other of the myriad claims layered upon the hoped-for Supernatural…
As evolution obliterates Eden's immutable human formation, 'Divine Inspiration's claim falls flat.
The Victorians and the rest of the world were shocked when the 'On the Origin of the Species' came out in 1859, quickly followed by the 'Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam'. 'Denial' was the best course of action for the wishers and the believers, as it still is today, somewhat, for church attendance is dropping, even in the once stable northeast. — PoeticUniverse
(The ship was named the Beagle) — PoeticUniverse
You sound angry now. — Arcane Sandwich
the Elfin Queen — Arcane Sandwich
Great AI art: — PoeticUniverse
An oxymoron. Machines are incapable of creating art, because they are art themselves. — Arcane Sandwich
more great AI art: — PoeticUniverse
Nothing to comment here, from me. I neither agree nor disagree with those statements. — Arcane Sandwich
Deleuze says he was an atheist. — Arcane Sandwich
As far as I'm concerned, Hegel's concept of the Absolute Spirit is the Ultimate Truth about Reality itself. I do not intend that as a polemic. It is simply what I believe. — Arcane Sandwich
Real art: — PoeticUniverse
I can't claim to have understood the idea of Absolute Spirit. or the 'end of history'. — Janus
The Victorians and the rest of the world were shocked when the 'On the Origin of the Species' came out in 1859 — PoeticUniverse
If the misery of our poor be not caused by nature, but by our social institutions, then great is our sin. — Charles Darwin
21
Rescue me from the mouth of the lions;
save me from the horns of the wild oxen. — Psalm 22:1
It's talking about a memory as ancient as the Paleolithic, when everyone was a nomadic hunter-gatherer. This makes it more ancient than anything anyone else has to say. Bring your favorite poets to this discussion, quote Emily D. for all I care. I believe what Pslam 22:1, part 21 says: There was a time when lions were our natural predators, there was a time when the wild oxen could kill us when we were just minding our own business. — Arcane Sandwich
Right! I agree with this perspective. That's part of the awe. — Moliere
This sort of analysis of I & II Samuel has fallen into disrepute, because of both the unity of style and dramatic elements use throughout the books of Samuel and because, if these stories are supposed to be "propaganda," they are pretty terrible at that role. The entire second half of the David story is a tragedy, one where David's shortcomings play the key role. Things like the literary echo of David, as a now feeble old man being confused by the sound of conflict outside during the coup attempt at the start of I Kings, as recalling/echoing the situation of the priest Eli at the opening of I Samuel, seems hardly the incidental work of "splicing propaganda narratives." — Count Timothy von Icarus
And deservedly so. Samuel is a rich text. It was originally one book. An unflinching look at David, for sure. If I had to pick a couple texts that could be closer to "propaganda" I would maybe say Joshua and perhaps 1 & 2 Maccabees. Still I hate that label "propaganda" because these texts are more complicated than that; still, when we compare Joshua to our knowledge of that period something's gotta bend. I do tend to be more on the historical-critical side of things but I do try to remain open to other methods. Conservative Judaism is more open to modern scholarship, while Orthodox Judaism is much more skeptical of the historical-critical approach and relies more on its own tradition. — BitconnectCarlos
Bring your favorite poets to this discussion, quote Emily D. for all I care. — Moliere
Plato's cave allegory — Arcane Sandwich
Plato's cave allegory — Arcane Sandwich
More like that we are 3D shadows of the 4D Block universe. — PoeticUniverse
That sounds like nonsense. — Arcane Sandwich
But it is analogous nonsense. Plato had 2D and 3D going on. — PoeticUniverse
Not really. Plato is 4D, through and through. — Arcane Sandwich
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