Intellectual caution often requires a robust imagination.
"The scientist does not study nature because it is useful, he studies it because he delights in it, and he delights init because it is beautiful. If nature were not beautiful, it would not be worth knowing, and if nature were not worth konwing, life would not be worth living." Henri Poincare
NB that Poincare takes mathematical induction to be based on synthetic a priori judgment.
Animals have fuzzy borders.
One may own things that do not exist and may never exist, e.g., you may by contract own the next book I write, which I never write. How this sense of 'own' relates to more standard cases of 'own' is tricky, however.
Human beings enjoy fitting themselves into a greater intelligibility. This greater intelligibility may be:
social local (family, personal 'identity')
social global (general politics, society at large)
natural local (immediate environment)
natural global (cosmic)
theistic local (relation to divine)
theistic global (role in providence).
Eusebius says that in his time 2 Peter *may* be a second epistle by Peter "for it is doubted" (HE 6.25..8) and that it is not received as canonical but has seemed useful to many and has been studied with the canonical scriptures (HE 3.3.1-2) -- i.e., it was not read in Church, as far as Eusebius knew, (= not canonical) but it was in wide use as possibly but not universally recognized as being from Peter.
The fact that Jude says spilades and 2 Peter says spiloi, as well as the fact that Jude says agapais and 2 Peter says apatais, seems to me to indicate that that the link between the two is (1) oral (either both derived from an oral source, or one derived orally from a source the other hand in writing, or one derived from hearing the other read aloud, and/or (2) entirely by memory.
Oen of the most most important functions of a head of state or head of government is to press others to have reasons for what they do, by asking the relevant questions and demanding the relevant explanations.
The human heart is only really ever held in place by goodness and truth; understanding and love are our most fundamental means of stability.
A recurring pathology in human life is assuming that being right is a license to do wrong.
1 Peter 3:18b-20 interpretations
(1) Descent into hell: cf. Acts 2:27-32, 1 Pt 4:6 with which it easily connects; associated with Alexandrians: Clement, Cyril, Athanasius
(2) Spiritual preaching through Noah: cf. 1 Pt 1:11; associated with Augustine, Bede
(3) Victory over angelic powers: based in part on comparing 1 Enoch with 1 Peter 3:18-20; more recent, see William Dalton's Christ's Proclamation to the Spirits
1 Peter 4:6 interpreations
(1) Spirits in hell: easily connects with 3:18b, 20; associated with Alexandrians
(2) spiritually dead: cf. Mt 8:22, Jn 5:25, Eph 5:14; associated with Augustine
(3) the faithful dead: fits context reasonably well; common among modern scholars
Paul's description of the church in Romans 12:7-8 arguably suggests a structure still similar to that of a synagogue at the time, particularly a Hellenistic synagogue in the diaspora.
Every mutable object has a level of description with respect to which it is immutable.
We do not start with individuals and build communities out of them; we start with communities (families, at the most basic) and build individuals out of them.
the Cross, a dark symbol of the heavenly Throne
2 Sam 6:9 // Lk 1:43
The question of who and what Jesus is comes up multiple times in Mark, and the consistent theme is that people do not, and perhaps cannot, understand the answer. What is more, it's not merely that they do not understand Jesus in his inner self (represented by His repeated withdrawal into prayer); they do not understand even His outward, public face, in His ministry.
1 Tim 6:7, 10 // Polycarp to the Phil 4:1
-- PPhil 3:2 recommends Paulin letters and so 1 Timothy was c. 130 certainly among those that he recommends, since the entire passage after 3:2 is filled with obvious allusions to Galatians, 2 Corinthians, 1 Corinthians, and likely 1 Timothy (3:8) and 2 Timothy (2:12).
natural desire argument for the external world (the tendency of our sense organs) (our kinaesthetic impulses)
Newton's Rules of Philosophy as four forms of parsimony
Locke rejects the toleration of atheism because he takes it to be inconsistent not with ordinary daily contracts but witht he social contract itself, there being on atheistic principles no higher arbiter to provide the social contract the force of a contract.
earth : law :: air : life :: fire : light :: water : love
"No one willingly believes that what he greatly admires is admirable only for him." Balfour
If it doesn't improve with training, it isn't real talent.
Civil liberties require an effective rule of law.
Believing is the beginning of loving.
"The Lord Himself dyes us in the color of his Love." SGGS 117
"The world is a garden, and my Lord God is the Gardener. / He always takes care of it -- nothing is exempt from His Care." SGGS 118
empires as utility monsters
propositional attitudes are reflective objectual attitudes
We experience paintings both holistically (as arrangement in apparent space) and sequentially (as possible rhythms for the eye).
use value, sentimental value, and moral value as coloring acceptance of tradition
Appropriate sequence is one of the central pillars of emergency response.
The problem that usually plagues attempts to read the Bible 'as literature' is that they tend to use extremely flat conceptions of 'reading as literature'. Actual readers of actual literature read in the round: this passage is read not merely as part of a texgt but also as part of an interaction between author(s) and readers; thus people read a text in light of other texts by the author, in light of other texts in the tradition, in light of other texts in the genre, in light of the presumed life of the author, in light of the readership receiving it, both as a whole and partwise with detachable parts.
One of the signs of whether you are reading something 'as literature' is whether you are reading it in a way that involves allegorization, not necessarily consistently or as a whole, but occasionally and on the fly, in an ad hoc (but not arbitrary) way. We read literature as concrete expression and comment on general principles and categories, both literal (reading about two friends as expressing and commenting on friendship in general) and figurative (reading events and scenes as emblems, objective correlates, of psychological states).
Chance is an important maker of friends
National borders are functionally a way of reducing conflict.