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On Thu, 24 Sep 2009 13:11:11 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote: wrote in message .. . On Thu, 24 Sep 2009 11:50:11 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message ... On Thu, 24 Sep 2009 11:02:04 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message om... De Plume is the quintessence of sophistry. Chaos has no better ally. Sophistry and chaos are not allies. I don't use sophistry, but I would love to be called a sophist. I like the original meaning, since I'm not into deceiving anyone, unlike some on the right. In case you're not familiar: In Ancient Greece, the sophists were a group of teachers of philosophy and rhetoric. I'll go with the Greek description of chaos also: http://www.blavatsky.net/magazine/th...-Sophists.html Have a wonderful day! Actually, I'm more familiar with Sophism than you may care to believe, I have no doubt. Too, Sophism was not as treated as deferentially by the Socratics as you may care to believe. "Plato is largely responsible for the modern view of the "sophist" as a greedy instructor who uses rhetorical sleight-of-hand and ambiguities of language in order to deceive, or to support fallacious reasoning." However, I was going with the modern, popular definition. Concordantly, the "chaos" that I submitted above was not in relative to "sophism." It was relative to the subject of my first sentence. It's odd that parsing could be a difficult operation when sophistry comes so easily. I never mentioned Aristotle, and I would never assert that he was deferential to that philosophy. I'm not sure where you got that from my comment or the links. You said the two (sophism and chaos) were allies. That seems like a relativistic statement. Neither did I mention Aristotle. And why could "quintessence" not have been the ally that I was speaking of? -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access Sorry I meant Socatics. This is a method of arriving at the "truth" through questions and answers. This has something to do with sophistry, but nothing to do with chaos. I'm not a big fan of Aristotle. That's fine. I suspected that you had misstated what you had intended to say. By "Socratics," I was referring to the students of Socrates, or those subsequently influenced by his philosophies or his methods of inquiry. Those who were of the Socratic school frowned on the Sophists and may have done so with good reason. But, whether there was merit in the disdain shown by the Socratic school for the Sophists is a point of contention among those who explore these things assiduously, as I understand it. Two other prominent schools that come from that epoch are the Epicurean and Stoic. Both are worth exploring, for those interested in early philosophy, to appreciate how currently popular conceptions of the Stoic and the Epicurean differ from their original precepts. -- Posted via NewsDemon.com - Premium Uncensored Newsgroup Service -------http://www.NewsDemon.com------ Unlimited Access, Anonymous Accounts, Uncensored Broadband Access |
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