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Spelunking in Plato's Cave
- Joan Marie
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Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Plato's cave is a really strange and fun place to explore the unanswerable questions of life.
I have made a certain assumption though when I go spelunking and I am just wondering if others share it.
The way it works is, you ask a question, draw a card, then explain how that card (or cards, it's up to you) answer the question at hand. Then discussion ensues. Wonderful.
Here's where my assumption comes in. I don't pretend (myself anyway) to truly "answer" the question at hand. I often assume the tone of an expert though, just for fun, like any good debate-team member.
In debate, typically you are assigned a position on a topic (pro or con) and your job is to create an argument that supports that position. It doesn't necessarily reflect your actual views. That is the challenge, and the fun of it.
So if the given topic is something like "Trees are more important than cars" and you get assigned to argue that, no cars are more important, if you have language skills and a wily imagination, you can make a pretty compelling argument for cars even if you don't believe it at all.
Thankfully, the topics explored in Plato's Cave are always a lot more nuanced than that, so you don't have to take on the persona of a super-villain to play. But it is the card(s) you draw that "assign" your position on the subject, right? Or maybe, you have a strong view on the answer and you use whatever card you draw to extrapolate support for your argument.
This is how I see it anyway. And once the "argument" is stated, then the discussion ensues to support or dismantle that argument and that's where all this wonderful discourse takes place. It like a thought-generating exercise, a mind-sharpener. Personally I enjoy the writing exercise of it, putting my thoughts and ideas into words in a convincing or entertaining way.
I guess my point is mostly for people who see Plato's Cave and mistake it for some kind of intellectual sparring match, when really, although dealing with serious questions, is all meant in fun. No one is actually "right," however to play the game, you have to position yourself as if you are. And that's the fun of it.
I have made a certain assumption though when I go spelunking and I am just wondering if others share it.
The way it works is, you ask a question, draw a card, then explain how that card (or cards, it's up to you) answer the question at hand. Then discussion ensues. Wonderful.
Here's where my assumption comes in. I don't pretend (myself anyway) to truly "answer" the question at hand. I often assume the tone of an expert though, just for fun, like any good debate-team member.
In debate, typically you are assigned a position on a topic (pro or con) and your job is to create an argument that supports that position. It doesn't necessarily reflect your actual views. That is the challenge, and the fun of it.
So if the given topic is something like "Trees are more important than cars" and you get assigned to argue that, no cars are more important, if you have language skills and a wily imagination, you can make a pretty compelling argument for cars even if you don't believe it at all.
Thankfully, the topics explored in Plato's Cave are always a lot more nuanced than that, so you don't have to take on the persona of a super-villain to play. But it is the card(s) you draw that "assign" your position on the subject, right? Or maybe, you have a strong view on the answer and you use whatever card you draw to extrapolate support for your argument.
This is how I see it anyway. And once the "argument" is stated, then the discussion ensues to support or dismantle that argument and that's where all this wonderful discourse takes place. It like a thought-generating exercise, a mind-sharpener. Personally I enjoy the writing exercise of it, putting my thoughts and ideas into words in a convincing or entertaining way.
I guess my point is mostly for people who see Plato's Cave and mistake it for some kind of intellectual sparring match, when really, although dealing with serious questions, is all meant in fun. No one is actually "right," however to play the game, you have to position yourself as if you are. And that's the fun of it.
Button Soup Tarot, Star & Crown Oracle available @: Rabbit's Moon Tarot
Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
It's indeed a lot of fun and is the best thing that has happened in the Tarot since sliced bread (sliced by the sword held in the hand of Justice). But I think the intellectual sparring that takes place is also great. And that this intellectual sparring is part of the fun. Serious fun. The threads have really made me think long and hard about certain issues and I still dream sometimes of Trolleys hurtling down the railway tracks.
Rumi was asked “which music sound is haram?” Rumi replied, "The sound of tablespoons playing in the pots of the rich, which are heard by the ears of the poor and hungry." (haram means forbidden)
- chiscotheque
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Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
for me, the former is true. i often have opinions about things, but i try to let the cards speak for themselves. i suspect, however, that the way i phrase the answers as i see them may lead people to believe that i fully feel and believe the line of argument i am taking up. further, when people sometimes query my reading, i tend to defend my position - not so much from a personal investment with the sentiment expressed as such, but more to explain the hows and whys of my argument. all this said, there are a number of qualifiers; namely, try as one may to avoid one's own bias, it's nevertheless always there. also, one can simply be wrong about a reading, as with any tarot reading. a subsidiary error can occur by getting too entrenched defending one's initial interpretation and not modifying one's outlook. i use my own decks because i know them from the inside out and feel most comfortable with them, especially when the questions are tough. i feel more sure of my bearings, like if my spouse told me her dream - i'd feel much more secure interpreting what it maybe meant than if someone who was only an acquaintance wanted me to interpret their dream. in the end, of course, PC hopefully gets people thinking - thinking philosophically and thinking about tarot in new ways. having fun is the windfall - after all, we' ain't actually about to solve any age-old existential questions, are we?Joan Marie wrote: ↑12 Apr 2020, 08:04
... it's the card(s) you draw that "assign" your position on the subject, right? Or maybe, you have a strong view on the answer and you use whatever card you draw to extrapolate support for your argument.
.
- Joan Marie
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Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Exactly. This is what I was getting at.chiscotheque wrote: ↑13 Apr 2020, 00:50 i often have opinions about things, but i try to let the cards speak for themselves. i suspect, however, that the way i phrase the answers as i see them may lead people to believe that i fully feel and believe the line of argument i am taking up. further, when people sometimes query my reading, i tend to defend my position - not so much from a personal investment with the sentiment expressed as such, but more to explain the hows and whys of my argument.
I wonder sometimes if people don't pop into The Cave, and mistake what they see to be a kind of entrenched debate, when really it's just people having some fun using tarot cards to discuss unanswerable and age-old existential questions.
I wouldn't change a thing! I would just like to see more people realise what fun it is.
Button Soup Tarot, Star & Crown Oracle available @: Rabbit's Moon Tarot
Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Oh, that's a shame. I was thinking we'd land up soon with the number 42 and our questionings would be over.chiscotheque wrote: ↑13 Apr 2020, 00:50 after all, we' ain't actually about to solve any age-old existential questions, are we?
I'm disappointed.
Rumi was asked “which music sound is haram?” Rumi replied, "The sound of tablespoons playing in the pots of the rich, which are heard by the ears of the poor and hungry." (haram means forbidden)
- dodalisque
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Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Eek! I have been haunted by the number 42 for the past year or so. It has been EVERYWHERE around me cropping up in the most unlikely places. Does the number 42 have some kind of special symbolic significance? The number has pestered me so much that I have been reading the TdM lately with a 42 card deck - Majors + Courts + Aces. Which is also a nice excuse to enable me to ignore those pesky pips. I'm surprised this 42 card deck isn't more popular - lots of faces, expressions, actions. But the bigger spreads do tend to look like a crowded railway platform.
- dodalisque
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Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Well apart from the number 42 being in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy the "Answer to the Ultimate Question of Life, the Universe, and Everything", calculated by an enormous supercomputer named Deep Thought over a period of 7.5 million years, there are also many symbolic significances, at least according to this website : https://thephoenixenigma.com/the-number-42/. I didn't double check their indications though so I can't vouch for it all.dodalisque wrote: ↑14 Apr 2020, 17:30Eek! I have been haunted by the number 42 for the past year or so. It has been EVERYWHERE around me cropping up in the most unlikely places. Does the number 42 have some kind of special symbolic significance? The number has pestered me so much that I have been reading the TdM lately with a 42 card deck - Majors + Courts + Aces. Which is also a nice excuse to enable me to ignore those pesky pips. I'm surprised this 42 card deck isn't more popular - lots of faces, expressions, actions. But the bigger spreads do tend to look like a crowded railway platform.
Rumi was asked “which music sound is haram?” Rumi replied, "The sound of tablespoons playing in the pots of the rich, which are heard by the ears of the poor and hungry." (haram means forbidden)
Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
42 is Deep Thought's answer to the question of the meaning of Life, the Universe and Everything. (Deep Thought is/was a computer designed specifically to answer this question). I can't remember how long it took - millennia I think.dodalisque wrote: ↑14 Apr 2020, 17:30Eek! I have been haunted by the number 42 for the past year or so. It has been EVERYWHERE around me cropping up in the most unlikely places. Does the number 42 have some kind of special symbolic significance? The number has pestered me so much that I have been reading the TdM lately with a 42 card deck - Majors + Courts + Aces. Which is also a nice excuse to enable me to ignore those pesky pips. I'm surprised this 42 card deck isn't more popular - lots of faces, expressions, actions. But the bigger spreads do tend to look like a crowded railway platform.
All that we see or seem
Is but a dream within a dream...
Edgar Allan Poe
Fig Tree Press
Pen's shop at MPC
Is but a dream within a dream...
Edgar Allan Poe
Fig Tree Press
Pen's shop at MPC
Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Pen: we were posting at the same time!
Took a bit longer than a few millenia though for Deep Thought to figure it out. I love that movie!!!
Took a bit longer than a few millenia though for Deep Thought to figure it out. I love that movie!!!
Rumi was asked “which music sound is haram?” Rumi replied, "The sound of tablespoons playing in the pots of the rich, which are heard by the ears of the poor and hungry." (haram means forbidden)
Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
I just realized that and tried to delete my post but wasn't allowed to as you'd replied to it!!! I don't think I saw the movie, only the original series, which was brilliant. Peter Jones was wondrous as the voice of the book and I'll never forget that the dolphins were clever enough to leave before Earth was demolished, or how the mice had been experimenting on humans for years without anyone knowing!
All that we see or seem
Is but a dream within a dream...
Edgar Allan Poe
Fig Tree Press
Pen's shop at MPC
Is but a dream within a dream...
Edgar Allan Poe
Fig Tree Press
Pen's shop at MPC
- Joan Marie
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Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
It should be, but it isn't .
Button Soup Tarot, Star & Crown Oracle available @: Rabbit's Moon Tarot
Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
I went to look a bit more at the website I referenced which gives the siginficances of the no 42.
It's a rather startling website, you may like to have a look. https://thephoenixenigma.com/
It's a rather startling website, you may like to have a look. https://thephoenixenigma.com/
Rumi was asked “which music sound is haram?” Rumi replied, "The sound of tablespoons playing in the pots of the rich, which are heard by the ears of the poor and hungry." (haram means forbidden)
- dodalisque
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Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Thanks, Diana. This is amazing stuff. I feel quite proud of my subconscious for having chosen such a significant number to make all these synchronicities possible. My wife and I celebrated our 42nd anniversary in January. Maybe all the other 42s were just a way of reminding me of that, and the number 42 will leave me alone now. Though the sudden appearance of your email seems to suggest the opposite. The actor Jim Carey, who is mostly known for off-the-wall slapstick humor, had a similar experience in his own life with the number 23 and wrote a film script about it that was turned into the psychological drama "The Number 23". I never saw it, maybe I should.Diana wrote: ↑14 Apr 2020, 19:33 I went to look a bit more at the website I referenced which gives the siginficances of the no 42.
It's a rather startling website, you may like to have a look. https://thephoenixenigma.com/
- dodalisque
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Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Speak for yourself.chiscotheque wrote: ↑13 Apr 2020, 00:50 having fun is the windfall - after all, we' ain't actually about to solve any age-old existential questions, are we?
- chiscotheque
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Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
i'm not really qualified.
that website is interesting. actually, everything's interesting if your spend time with it. the gematria for mecca is 42 - i wonder what else? it's no wonder that Dodalisque likes 42, since he's all 6's and 7's (6x7=42). i've always had an undiagnosed connection to the number 1026.
- dodalisque
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Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
1026 = 10 + (2+6) = ten + eight = tenaciouschiscotheque wrote: ↑14 Apr 2020, 20:20i'm not really qualified.
that website is interesting. actually, everything's interesting if your spend time with it. the gematria for mecca is 42 - i wonder what else? it's no wonder that Dodalisque likes 42, since he's all 6's and 7's (6x7=42). i've always had an undiagnosed connection to the number 1026.
Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
dodalisque tried a Dr. House thing, but I'll see if I can come up with something better. It may take some time. Possibly 1026 minutes/hours/weeks.....chiscotheque wrote: ↑14 Apr 2020, 20:20 i've always had an undiagnosed connection to the number 1026.
Rumi was asked “which music sound is haram?” Rumi replied, "The sound of tablespoons playing in the pots of the rich, which are heard by the ears of the poor and hungry." (haram means forbidden)
- dodalisque
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Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Hmmn, 10 = wunder...something/tense/tents/trenchDiana wrote: ↑14 Apr 2020, 21:41dodalisque tried a Dr. House thing, but I'll see if I can come up with something better. It may take some time. Possibly 1026 minutes/hours/weeks.....chiscotheque wrote: ↑14 Apr 2020, 20:20 i've always had an undiagnosed connection to the number 1026.
2 = tooth/toot (i.e.fart)/tomb
6 = sex/sick/sticks/sucks/sacks ....there's an idea out there somewhere. I don't know if we'll beat his "6s and 7s". It's not always smart to get in a pun battle with this guy. I flatly refuse to play him at Scrabble.
Don't fall for it, Diana. He's trying to distract us, so we don't notice what rubbish he's spouting. But I'll pay you $5 per insult if you come up with anything.
Keep it clean, by which I mean grammatically correct, but the ruder the better.
Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Oh no, chiscotheque is my Cult of Tarot guru. I could never do anything of the sort!dodalisque wrote: ↑14 Apr 2020, 22:13 It's not always smart to get in a pun battle with this guy. I flatly refuse to play him at Scrabble.
Don't fall for it, Diana. He's trying to distract us, so we don't notice what rubbish he's spouting. But I'll pay you $5 per insult if you come up with anything.
Keep it clean, by which I mean grammatically correct, but the ruder the better.
And I will do all I can to help him diagnose his 1026 issue. There must certainly be some kind of dark saying behind this number. Perhaps one as yet undiscovered.
Rumi was asked “which music sound is haram?” Rumi replied, "The sound of tablespoons playing in the pots of the rich, which are heard by the ears of the poor and hungry." (haram means forbidden)
Re: Spelunking in Plato's Cave
Fascinating stuff - thanks Diana!Diana wrote: ↑14 Apr 2020, 19:33 I went to look a bit more at the website I referenced which gives the siginficances of the no 42.
It's a rather startling website, you may like to have a look. https://thephoenixenigma.com/
All that we see or seem
Is but a dream within a dream...
Edgar Allan Poe
Fig Tree Press
Pen's shop at MPC
Is but a dream within a dream...
Edgar Allan Poe
Fig Tree Press
Pen's shop at MPC