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    Interpreting law is inherently a political act. — Carmelics
    Home/Philosophy of Language
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    Supports→Medieval Jewish and Islamic philosophers employed esotericism for political reasons, not merely gnostic ones.

    Interpreting law is inherently a political act.

    Democracy & GovernancePhilosophy of Language
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    Interpreting law is further from philosophy than interpreting dogma, placing phi...Medieval Jewish and Islamic philosophers employed esotericism for political reas...Revelation in Judaism and Islam deals fundamentally with law and the correct soc...The marginal character of philosophy in these societies made it politically dang...

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    SEP: medieval-literary
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    Many late classical and medieval philosophical texts contain esoteric elements. The desire to hide the real message of a text in its earlier forms springs from some form of gnosticism. Gnostic sects, needing to protect their knowledge from dissemination among non-initiates, hid their true message in ways that could only be deciphered by those who possessed the secret knowledge. Leo Strauss makes the additional argument that the motives for esotericism in Jewish and Islamic medieval thinkers are

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