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17317977 No.17317977 [Reply] [Original]

Pleroma = Plenitude = Pūrṇam = Puruṣa

>> No.17318097

everyone here is too dumb to know what you mean

>> No.17318122

>>17317977
Ahh... yes!

>> No.17318133
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17318133

>The archaic words for knowledge were sophia, eidenai, and suniemi — which mean, respectively: masterful crafts experience or proficiency in an art; familiarity with something gained on the basis of having seen or inspected it; and hearing something in a way that means at once obeying it. [817] None of these is anything like ontological or epistemological knowledge as we understand it, or the kind of ethical knowing that presupposes them. Knowledge was synonymous with polymathos, and the supreme knower was the polymath: “The wider their experience, the greater the number of adventures, of things seen, heard, read, the greater their knowledge.” [818] Thus, the fundamental turn takes place when a Pre-Socratic thinker such as Heraclitus utters the judgment: “Learning of many things [polymathy] does not teach understanding/intelligence.”

>> No.17318161
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17318161

>>17318097
no I get it

>> No.17318162

>>17317977
Now i get it. Thanks, bigbrained anoneios

>> No.17318203

>>17317977
I sort of get this, but what do you mean by plenitude?

>> No.17318359 [DELETED] 
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17318359

>>17317977