Just wonderful
May. 5th, 2008 11:32 amThey say that sports are a microcosm of the world. That by watching them we get to see the possible, and that we can be uplifted by that.
Well, they are right.
I am overwhelmed, and to be honest, grateful to the ump who made the wrong call.
Well, they are right.
I am overwhelmed, and to be honest, grateful to the ump who made the wrong call.
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Date: 2008-05-05 07:48 pm (UTC)I'm crying.
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Date: 2008-05-05 07:54 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-05 08:00 pm (UTC)I took a net break, and was caught full-on with that story.
Uplifting, yes. Despite the punnishness involved in that particular characterization of it. It's also part of what I've come to see as the "Washington nice", the thing that makes living in rural WA a particular pleasure. People seem to go the extra mile. Or three. Anyhow, I've printed it out and will bring it to my 92-year old friend, who used to LOVE baseball (no softball for Ruth!) when she was just a ten year old redhead...
Thanks for posting it.
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Date: 2008-05-05 08:27 pm (UTC)War is sometimes necessary, and when engaged in - surely it is meaningful. But it is only one of the forces that bestows meaning. Every person present on that field (or witness to it via the net) has had meaning injected into their life now, more meaning than they had before.
I hope my uncle understands.
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Date: 2008-05-05 08:40 pm (UTC)While it's going on, war is meaninful, and those who interact with it are affected by it, but that's the case with any endeavor, so the title is tautological, and the presentation seems to be evil.
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Date: 2008-05-05 08:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-05 08:43 pm (UTC)But the truth is that I can't get beyond that title, either. The book is waiting for a moment when I can look at it and NOT get mad.
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Date: 2008-05-05 08:46 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-05 08:52 pm (UTC)It's moments like that which remind me why I believe baseball is really the sport that reflects our national character...
mojo sends
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Date: 2008-05-05 08:59 pm (UTC)Simultaneously, I spoke English at home, and kept up with reading through special classes and a single-minded obsession with being American.
I've published in both languages - journalism, poetry, and translations (both how-to and novels). The only thing I've ever done in Hebrew that I haven't (yet) done in English is publish books. (Two books. About dog care.)
If you have any Hebrew questions you want to ask - I'm your man.
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Date: 2008-05-05 09:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-05 09:08 pm (UTC)So, (I asked this at ML, but then the crash came).
I don't know how to spell it in Hebrew, so I can't throw you the specific word; but I have a best guess. I need to ask this in parts, so if you can answer the one bit, and then the next, and then the last, that would help.
1: How does Hebrew define cud (as in what cows chew).
2: Is the word gerah cud?
3: Does it include the meaning of by anus, to saw-catch-chew-destroy.
Thanks.
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Date: 2008-05-05 10:55 pm (UTC)2. The word is indeed gerah (which is either גרה if you use diacritics for vowels, or גירה if you choose the standard, vowelless orthography.)
1. The phrase for chewing cud (to chew cud) is lehaalot gerah (literally, to bring up the gerah). The specific word for cud may have some etymological relationship to the word for a single grain (garger or gar'in - גרגר, גרעין, and to agora אגורה, which is a small-denomination coin). There is also an Accadian relationship (the word in Accadian is Giru.) It refers to anything that you've brought beyond your teeth and is still in your mouth (Even Shoshan says that it could be used to refer to food that is stuck in your teeth).
Interestingly, there is another etymology, which relates to the upper torso: it is also called gera, and is related to garon, the neck (the inside of the neck. The outside is tzavar).
3. Modern Hebrew does not relate cud-chewing to anything done by anus, nor to saw-catch-chew-destroy. However, the word for provoking or challenging someone is hitgara (התגרה) (years of reading about graylag geese come crashing to the fore... ...they use neck motions for warning as well as for courtship). Basically, the word for cud relates to various words for aggression, so that catches the "destroy" word.
And I'm not *that* funny looking... ...even for a man.
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Date: 2008-05-05 11:28 pm (UTC)I can't think of anything in football (any type), basketball, or hockey like that. Free throws and penalty kicks come closest, I guess, but their outcome is far from determined.
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Date: 2008-05-06 12:32 am (UTC)(I don't know enough about cricket to say if there's an analogous play situation.)
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Date: 2008-05-06 12:55 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-06 01:59 am (UTC)(Those qualities aren't , of course, limited to the young, and their expression of them certainly owes much to adult/parental/teacher influences, but our culture seems to encourage adults to "outgrow" many things I think we'd do better to stick with.)
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Date: 2008-05-06 02:45 am (UTC)he would have liked this story too.
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Date: 2008-05-06 03:15 am (UTC)I'm guessing that you're asking because you're arguing with creationists, and wish to point out that the Bible claims that rabbits and hyraxes chew their cud, whereas in fact they don't.
The counterclaim is that the phrase l'ha'alot gerah, used in the Bible, refers not just to chewing cud of the sort that ungulates do, but also to the sort of regurgitating and re-chewing that rabbits do.
Unfortunately, this is a hard question to answer. The Bible, even if written by God, was still written in a human language, and one that's 2000+ years old. If people at the time didn't know about the distinction, there isn't going to be a word for the distinction for God to use. Now perhaps God could have made up a word, but even if the Bible is still true and relevant today, it needed to be comprehensible to the people to whom it was given, 2000+ years ago, or else it never would have made it to today.
Then of course there is the claim in the Bible that insects walk on four legs. I have always understood this as a figure of speech meaning that they walk in a horizontal position, rather than upright; on the grounds that even if the Bible was written by humans, any idiot can count the legs on an ant. Of course, that's a non-literal reading, right there.
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Date: 2008-05-06 03:21 am (UTC)Because rabbits, hyrax and guinea pigs don't regurgitate, they collect some fecal matter into a cecal ouch (just off the colon, near the anus) and eat it as it passes.
So, it seems, at leas one concordance therefore defines "cud" as something "sawn from the anus". Talking with some talmudic types the explanation was, "the people who wrote that up, didn't really understand what they were seeing."
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Date: 2008-05-06 03:33 am (UTC):)
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Date: 2008-05-06 03:39 am (UTC)The facts of the case are still basically the same, though: Whoever wrote the Bible claimed that both cows and rabbits chew their cud. Does this mean that 1) they didn't know about the distinction, or 2) perhaps the same phrase was used for both processes, or 3)someone who did know about the distinction was writing for an audience of people who didn't, and didn't want to confuse them.
I think 2 or 3 or some combination thereof is possible.
However, I'm confused why someone would want to define "cud" as something "sawn from the anus." All that gets you is that rabbits chew their cud but cows don't.
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Date: 2008-05-06 03:45 am (UTC)Thus, you see, both cows and rabbits do "chew the cud," and the inerrancy of the bible is retained.
Save that he says he doesn't believe the bible to be inerrant; except when it is.
It's a very frustrating conversation; if you are looking for reasoned debate. It has, however, been very good for practicing my explanatory powers.
I can point you to it, should you wish to read along at home; some really good writing was done.
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Date: 2008-05-06 03:47 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-06 03:53 am (UTC)It's long, but looking at the most recent comment (702) mostly dead, as the creationist seems to have quit the field.
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Date: 2008-05-06 04:38 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-05-06 05:06 am (UTC)Sorry I missed the question on ML! I find it difficult to follow the open threads - when work gets busy, I lose my place and tend to give up. How do you follow up on reading, anyhow?
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Date: 2008-05-06 05:22 am (UTC)To be fair, I do read quickly. I do a lot of work on the computer (since I went to digital photography) and so I check every too often; use the trick of clicking the bottom comment in the thread when I'm done, and then just look upstream in the "last 100 comments" link.
Even at that, I lose comments if I go more than about 12 hours,and there are threads I just stop reading (Little Brother, for example).
Open threads took me awhile to get the hang of, but they are probably my favorite discussions nowadays, because each of them grows in it's own way, even when ideas carry from one to the next.
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Date: 2008-05-06 05:26 am (UTC)But even so, I end up spending easily 1/3 or my online reading time at ML (1600 wpm notwithstanding; there are many threads, and each thread that I feel is active gets linked as above). I wish there were technology that made keeping my place easier... easier than what I'm using.
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Date: 2008-05-06 05:34 am (UTC)It seems that the creationist was basically saying some combination of 2 and 3 already, but what I don't understand is if you're willing to grant some scientific incompletenesses in the text because of the original audience, why not in the creation story, too? But that's been gone over I suppose, even if not satisfactorily answered.
The book that I would look at for definitions of Biblical words is the Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon, which is old. I studied Semitic linguistics in university and we routinely used books a hundred years old or so; a lot of the best work was being done in the field at that time, stuff that hasn't been superseded although some improvements in knowledge have been made. It's only in the last five years or so that a Talmudic dictionary that could replace the Jastrow has been released, for instance.
In any case, this is what the Brown-Driver-Briggs has to say: grr drag, drag away. It cites a use in Kings as meaning "sawn with the saw" which is probably where Strong is getting the "sawn" part of "sawn from the anus." I would make a suggestion as to where he's getting the "anus" part, but it's kind of obvious.
gerah cud, only in legislation of clean and unclean animals. There's a suggestion that it's related to an Arabic word, jirrah and that it's an onomatopoeia for chewing.
There's more, but it occurs to me that if "l'ha'alot gerah" means "to bring up something that is chewed," the obvious place where this falls apart in rabbits is not in the "gerah" part but in the "l'ha'alot" part.
Anyway.
I do think that in real life people sometimes speak, or write, literally, and sometimes less-than-literally, and other people have to make judgments about which is which all the time, and it really is a sort of you-know-it-when-you-see-it kind of thing, so I'm not sure why this would not apply to the Bible as well. Of course, people also make incorrect judgments about this sort of thing all the time, and that would also apply to the Bible.
You said you believe in the God of Abraham and Moses, in re: arguing with God. How do you feel about the God of Job? Just curious. I can see the God of Job being used as an argument against either science or creationism, but He's pretty arrogant either way.
Also, the creationist is wrong about the bit about a thousand years being like a single day to God being in the New Testament, unless the Psalms are in the New Testament. Which they're not. Not that it really matters to this argument either way.
Commenting here to avoid commenting there.
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Date: 2008-05-06 05:54 am (UTC)As to my slam at Strong, it was cheap, and mostly because the problem with strong isn't so much that the lexicons of 100 years ago are bad, but that the biblical thinking has changed a lot, and the problem of literalistic rectification was/is a big problem with the Christian works of the time.
Evidence is wrong about a lot of things; not least that he uses the same phrase to show the "literal" nature of the bible being scientifically correct, and then using it to show that large parts are purely poetic.
In his mind there are multitudes.
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Date: 2008-05-06 04:19 pm (UTC)Although I am an admittedly pro-baseball guy, just so I don't look like I'm trying to hide my bias.
mojo sends
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Date: 2008-05-06 06:06 pm (UTC)When I was a child, he was my soccer coach, and he did his best to instill in his players basic notions of 'fair play' and 'good sportsmanship'.
In soccer, we don't really get opportunities like this to show it, but - for example, when Team A puts the ball out of play because they have a player down and the ref won't stop play, traditionally Team B puts the ball back in play to Team A because...well, that's only right.
I can't find it now that I'm looking for it - I remember a NCAA tournament men's basketball game where one of the Cindarella teams' lead scorers blew out his knee (torn ACL?). He was, really, the man who had put the team in the tournament, and a senior - not good enough to get into the NBA, so this was his last real 'public' game. Anyhow, at the end of the game - I think this was their first game of the tournament - they subbed him in. The opposing team fouled him so he could go to the free throw line and get himself in the records for having made a shot in the tournament. It was, I think, a similar kind of sportsmanship.
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Date: 2008-05-07 02:31 am (UTC)But I'll agree that baseball (at least at the highschool level, which this example was) seems to be more strongly influenced than most (soccer is Since My time, but might be similar, in the U.S.) by the benign aspects of having been played with friends since relatively early childhood.
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Date: 2008-05-07 03:58 am (UTC)I do think this example is something which does require that it take place in competition. I also think there is some level of emotional investment which physical sport has, that other competitions don't.
All who compete (I used to both shoot, and run) seriously, know their limits. For some things those limits are purely personal (shooting is one of those things which no one can really affect your performance in), for others (running is one) there are things which can go wrong.
And in those moments, there is a shared sense of the moment. At the end of of "Cool Runnings" when they pick up the broken bobsled and carry across the finish line... that spirit gets to one.
You can't do that in cards.
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Date: 2008-05-10 03:15 pm (UTC)I used to hate all sports as a kid, not only because of the jerky jocks and how they were treated by the adults as if they were actually better at everything and not just physical activity, but I was old enough to know what was going on when Len Bias O.D.ed and thereafter thought that all athletes were idiots who ultimately disappointed. It was when my parents making me watch...an unnamed team...*cough*...during the 1998 baseball season that I learned the joy of watching a group of people play as a team. (I really can't watch most basketball still because of the damned grandstanding and focus on individuals rather than the team play. Sports at their best are still about putting the group ahead of self.)
This story, however, is an example the best thing I've found about sports: the chance for people to put aside rivalries and act like gracious human beings.
While I enjoy watching the higher-tension games the old baseball rivalries provide, I absolutely detest the meanness of the fans' behavior (and, unfortunately, some of the players') during these games. They're missing the whole damned point (in my weird unjock mind). Maybe if we could figure out a way to text the link to all sports fans (and players), we'd get less of the jerkiness I'd picked up on as a kid and more of the sportsmanship that these wonderful young women showed.