- Sun Nov 13, 2016 4:43 pm
#30517
Hello! Can someone please help me out in understanding this passage ?? A couple of lines threw me off that made it that much more difficult for me to complete my VIEWSTAMP analysis.
I have no idea what the passage is trying to say, in lines 30-35 when it says: "Movement leader James Wright, for example, in his discussion of arguments in the Iliad, barely touches on law, and then so generally as to render himself vulnerable to Posner's devastating remark that 'any argument can be analogized to a legal dispute.'"
1) What does "and then so generally" and "render himself vulnerable" mean here?
2)Why/how is the remark "devastating?"
3)Why would Posner say "any argument can be analogized to a legal dispute?" That does not seem to fit with the rest of his critique of the movement.
Also,
I have no idea what the author of the passage meant by "...while leaving it to others to draw the conclusion from his cogent analysis that it is an entirely factitious undertaking, deserving of no intellectual respect whatsoever." That's so confusing -- that made me think that Posner was only saying those few positive things about it because he felt like he had to because of the growth of the movement but that ultimately he thinks (& the author agrees) it's totally worthless. It makes it sound like he's almost being sarcastic about confirming the actual integrity or intellectual merit of the movement. But the explanation in the Course book says that Posner "finds flaws" but "recognizes the success."
Help, anyone, please ! Thanks.
I have no idea what the passage is trying to say, in lines 30-35 when it says: "Movement leader James Wright, for example, in his discussion of arguments in the Iliad, barely touches on law, and then so generally as to render himself vulnerable to Posner's devastating remark that 'any argument can be analogized to a legal dispute.'"
1) What does "and then so generally" and "render himself vulnerable" mean here?
2)Why/how is the remark "devastating?"
3)Why would Posner say "any argument can be analogized to a legal dispute?" That does not seem to fit with the rest of his critique of the movement.
Also,
I have no idea what the author of the passage meant by "...while leaving it to others to draw the conclusion from his cogent analysis that it is an entirely factitious undertaking, deserving of no intellectual respect whatsoever." That's so confusing -- that made me think that Posner was only saying those few positive things about it because he felt like he had to because of the growth of the movement but that ultimately he thinks (& the author agrees) it's totally worthless. It makes it sound like he's almost being sarcastic about confirming the actual integrity or intellectual merit of the movement. But the explanation in the Course book says that Posner "finds flaws" but "recognizes the success."
Help, anyone, please ! Thanks.