Forty Two wrote:Exi5tentialist wrote:Forty Two wrote:I don't trust Jihadis as much as you do.
I don't trust them at all, but Musselmens' views on what the Koran means are pieces of evidence as to what they do mean.
Why are you calling them Musselmen? It's really outdated and silly, and it looks like a deliberate attempt to evoke reactionary responses in people, like saying moslems not muslims.
Whatever meaning your taking is your own mind's invention, isn't it?
Well, you earlier you acknowledged that it was a matter of degree. Now you're saying it's absolute.
I still don't know why you use antiquated terms like moslems and musselmen. It's a really reactionary use of language - that's an invention of my mind, of course, and now you've read it a part of you has invented the same concept, and probably feels a little threatened by it, which is why you're getting all defensive.
Exi5tentialist wrote:
You say you don't trust them at all yet you trust them enough to take their views as evidence. I don't trust them even that much. I spit in their faces when they say this is the meaning of the koran.
Why? The meaning of the Qu'ran is whatever is in your mind, and their mind. Surely, your mind is not objectively superior to theirs, or is it?[/quote]
No, it's subjectively superior to the beheaders and stoners. Your mind is too.
If, indeed, you are saying we can't know what the meaning of the Koran is, because Mahomet or whomever wrote it is dead, then that applies to you, too. You're just imposing your own biases and creating a meaning in your head, just like the Jihadis are.
Since I'm saying that we can have some reliable interpretation of words that survives the mind that wrote them, I use commonalities and consistencies among interpretations as evidence and indicia of meaning, as well as common usages, and such. Your meaning of a given passage may well be persuasive, but that will be for you to argue. The Jihadis make their argument. They seem to have a good argument that the Koran and Hadith teach that the punishment for apostasy from Islam is death. If you spit at that, then make your case.
If you send me a message containing solely the number 7, the meaning of number 7 is in your mind. When I read it, I create the meaning of number 7 in my mind too. Number 7 may actually be the number of the left luggage box at Victoria Station where you have secreted a large sum of money for me to pick up, perhaps years later. But that doesn't stop the meaning of number 7 being in your mind, and it doesn't stop me having to invent my own meaning for it.
The Jihadis' meaning of the Koran is theirs. My meaning of the Koran is mine. I always have difficulty attaching meaning to it when I read it. I don't know why.
Forty Two wrote:
Exi5tentialist wrote:
I don't "trust" a Pentacostal minister either, but when the prevailing view of Pentacostals as to the meaning of a passage is X, then that is the meaning they ascribe.
Well yeah, but is it correct?
Depends on what "it" is, and so we'd have to look at a given passage and see what the indicia of meaning are. Some passages are vague and confusing, others quite clear. There is no one answer applicable to every writing.
Not least because everyone has to invent their own meaning to attach to it.
Forty Two wrote:
Exi5tentialist wrote:
I don't consider Jihadis to be less Moslem than Moslem.
Oh Gawd, I hadn't actually read this far when I made my comment above about people saying "moslems".
What's the issue, why are you doing all this throwback stuff?
Calling it "throwback stuff" is just your own bias and xenophobia being conjured up in your own mind. It's nothing to do with me, the writer, right?
Yes, it is. I'm just wondering if there's anything else you can write that might enable me to conjure up different meanings.
Forty Two wrote:
Even if I typed what I intended to mean, it's still you just reading words on a page and conjuring your own meaning, right?
Yes, of course.
Forty Two wrote:
Exi5tentialist wrote:
I think they are buying into the same post-religious belief the messages can come from the past. If they stopped and thought for a moment, they would recognise, as I do, that the consciousness that wrote the Koran is dead, therefore the stonings and beheadings are an idea of their own invention. That would leave the meaning of the Koran as a quaint academic speculation, which is what it is. You, and they, are assuming a connection to the past that doesn't exist.
I do not assume a connection to the past. I assume an imperfect understanding of the meaning of words on a page which nevertheless is to one degree or another, depending on the passage in question, reliable and understandable.
That's a connection to the past.
Forty Two wrote: In other words, when a person writes "Jack kicked the ball" we do, as you say, create the meaning in our heads. But, the reality is that the agreement among all human heads as to what is meant by the sentence "Jack kicked the ball" is so uniformly in agreement, and an argument from common usage so strong, that we can reliably conclude that a person named Jack made contact with a ball with his foot. The mind who wrote the sentence may be long dead, but the words on the page survived. Maybe the author meant that Jack swung a bat and hit a coconut. We can never really know. But, with some reliability we can conclude that the words mean that Jacks foot hit a ball, can't we?
As with the number 7, apparent accuracy does not create a communication process.
Forty Two wrote:
Exi5tentialist wrote:
We can conclude that they mean that in our heads, yes. But if you're taking it further. You're saying that past meanings is motivating people to murder people.
Sometimes, yes. When a woman was killed because words on a page said thou shalt not suffer a witch to live, then is the interpretation of the passage wrong? Or, is the reality that people in modern times should be concluding that the meaning of the words on the page is that witches should be killed, but that we ought not follow that rule because it is stupid?
We should first acknowledge that the meaning of the words was invented by the reader. From that all things flow.
From your argument, it sounds like we should be saying "we don't know that they really meant for witches to be killed" because the mind that wrote the passage is dead. However, isn't the reality that they really did mean for witches to be killed, but now that we know there aren't witches, we really ought not be killing witchy women.
Again, the meaning invented by the reader must inevitably be different from the meaning invented by the writer. The moment you lock the two things together as one meaning, is the moment you open yourself to a sea of bad faith arguments dreamt up by modern reactionaries using heritage as an excuse.