We learn to love others as our neighbors by doing good to and for them.
the duty to aid others in the fulfillment of their duties
(1) Everything requires possibilities adequate to its own possibility.
(2) Possibilities require actualities with respect to which they are possible.
-- a horror story in which an otherwise normal narrator repeatedly puts himself/herself in danger due to having caught a mental infection
'It's disgusting' is a perfectly good reason, in most situations, for refusing to have anything to do with something.
To operationalize something requires first attending to the reasons why we take it to exist so as to be operationalized.
kennings (Jackson Crawford)
determinant + headword, e.g., raven + wine
Kennings do not merely describe; the headword must replace the word intended with something not merely descriptive.
There are typical kenning topics (men, women, weapons, elements, seasons, body parts, gold, ravens).
Not to be confused with heiti (alternate names), e.g., calling a woman Frigg, which however are sometimes used as parts of kennings.
Kennings are properly for occasional poems; they are only rarely used in narrative poetry like the Poetic Edda, with raven-related kennings (using 'raven' or about ravens) being the primary exception (presumably because of their easy recognizability).
Kennings can incorporate kennings (e.g., fire of the eel's road: eel's road = water, fire of water = gold).
the I as subject, the I as object of itself, the I as projected to be the object of others, the I as projected to represent others as subject
-- all of these are many-layered
the subjective anticipation of the self as objective, the objective recollection of the self as subjective
Everything that comes to be knwon is already implicit in what is already possessed.
We feel forward toward that which we take to be ourselves.
"The success of philosophy depends on its ability to combine the rationalist's intention of radicality and consistency with the empiricist's intention of concreteness." Patočka
"...man is not only a finite being, part of the world, but also a being which *has a world* which has knowledge of the world."
"Human life is not a life lived in and for itself; it is a living with others and with regard to them."
"The whole of being appears to us, always, in a certain mood-coloring; though the mood is in fact always our own inner 'state', it colors surrounding things at the same time, so that our objective environment, too, seems to partake of it."
Phenomenological method is essentially a method of the same and the different; this is what gives it its occasional quasi-Platonistic feel.
Given a tendency, recognized as such, we can often jump to an approximation of that to which it tends; and, indeed, this is required for beginning to have full understanding of the tendency.
The govenring principle of Malebranche's The Search After Truth is the radical contingency of mind-body union, as exemplified in error. Malebranche explicitly recognizes that this depreciates any conception of the soul as form of the body (LO xxxiv). It also leads to a conception of philosophy as dying until one dies (LO xxxvi-xxxvii).
The pursuit of elimianting error quickly reaches diminishing returns.
The possibilities for a thing are either inherent to it or received from something else.
The Church is inherently vocational.
The social often crosses the natural/artificial divide.
the Church as home away from home
'Home' as a name of God
Faced with liturgy, we respond with hymn.
We use models only after we have identified relevant causal information from the situation.
It is important to critical thinking to recognize that you also are intellectually crippled, and your intellectual agility is an adaptation to this.
Pardes: Song 4:13, Ecc 2:5, Neh 2:8
Trypho in Justin Martyr's Dialogue 7.9 rejects Christian interpretation because Christians hold that angels sinned and revolted from God.
Mal 2:7 -- priest // angel
Pirkei Avot 4:1 & the cardinal virtues
Ex 24:9-11 & Eucharist
Creativity in the mind is often a lot of fragments and a system of goals.
suggestive moral reasons, inclining moral reasons, definitive moral reasons
world as indefinitely expansive object of shared thought and action
The ideal demand for unification of our experience in terms of the world is in some sense a demand we receive from the world, as a final cause of inquiry. Part of the whole, we find ourselves in an order that tends to be, or at least suggests, the whole, and our most obvious possible role in that order includes knowing something of the whole and acting in light of that knowing.
affordance as an experience of possibility
--all experience is in some sense an experience of possibility, but affordance has a currently- counterfactual as well as presently-factual character
We experience the actual not merely as actual but as possible, but these are distinct experiences in our experience, however united.
affordance & action as involving the possible as available
volitional use & ourself as available for action
As measurers of time, we have a sense of ourselves as in some way beyond or outside any particular given measure of time. The same is true of space.
The body is experienced as a (broad) now as well as a (broad) here.
the flow of time as the narrativization of the temporally measured
the world as the domain of possible becoming and perishing
In talking about the 'flow of time', we are 'spatializing' time jsut as much as when we talk of it as lines and points and dimensions.
In the flow of change, we measure temporally and locally, and therefore by metonymy treat the measurement as flowing; this gives the local measurement a temporal character and the temporal measurement a local character.
"Ignosce Christe quod fui
Quod sum potenti corrige
Mei misertus dextera.
Quod sum futurus dirige." Robert Southwell
Virtue is important even for solving systemic problems, but if your plan for solving a systemic problem is to scold and punish people for being nonvirtuous, you have already failed.
Every person has many selves; we organize our lives by selves.
traditions as cultures of allusions
Pr 30:8 NIV 'daily bread'; NKJV 'the food allotted to me'; NRSV 'the food that I need'; HCSB 'the food I need'; D-R 'the necessaries of life'; ASV 'the food that is needful for me' with note, 'Hebrew the bread of my portion'; CJB 'the food I need today'; ESV 'the food that is needful for me'
Hebrew: lechem huqqi: prescribed/appointed bread
-- NIV seems on right track here in drawing on Lord's Prayer associations.
Everything in Proverbs 30 is concerned with some aspect or other of accepting limits and wanting the appropriate amount.
Pr 30:31 -- rooster/magpie/greyhound/charger
-- the Hebrew actually has along the lines of 'the agile girt in loins'; translators have been assuming an idiomatic expression for some kind of animal, but the literal meaning seems the point.
In order to interpret data, you need to know something about the causal process by which it was reached.
(actual possible effects -> nonactual possible effects (counterfactuals)) --> causes
Social institutions have developed in power and flexibility by increasingly being personified.
All legal systems exist before they are fully effective.