Justice and Rule
Legend
Again, still forever waiting for that affirmative argument as to why it has to be named "phylactery" that doesn't boil down to traditionalism or the slippery slope.
I don't disagree, @Justice and Rule , but...could we maybe not bait the trolls?Again, still forever waiting for that affirmative argument as to why it has to be named "phylactery" that doesn't boil down to traditionalism or the slippery slope.
I don't disagree, @Justice and Rule , but...could we maybe not bait the trolls?
Tradition is as good a reason to keep it as "we don't want to offend a people that aren't offended" is for changing it.Again, still forever waiting for that affirmative argument as to why it has to be named "phylactery" that doesn't boil down to traditionalism or the slippery slope.
Tradition is as good a reason to keep it as "we don't want to offend a people that aren't offended" is for changing it.
No, it really, really isn't. Like, this argument is so ridiculous that there's nothing I can compare it too. Trying to avoid offense or remove appropriated words from a hobby is not at all on the same level as keeping around a sacred cow just because it's a sacred cow.Tradition is as good a reason to keep it as "we don't want to offend a people that aren't offended" is for changing it.
Tradition is neither a good reason to keep/change something, nor a bad reason to keep/change something. Tradition just is.I mean, it's not. In fact, it's really the reverse; tradition is inevitably a bad reason to not change things because it only refers to habit.
Except that it does match and reflect it, so their stated reason is highly suspect.But more than that, Paizo didn't talk about "offending people": they felt the word didn't actually reflect or properly reference the item, thus they went with a name that conceptually matched what was being talked about. The whole "offending people" thing is a strawman.
As has been shown repeatedly in this thread, the word is neither appropriated, nor offensive to the people who it hasn't been appropriated from.No, it really, really isn't. Like, this argument is so ridiculous that there's nothing I can compare it too. Trying to avoid offense or remove appropriated words from a hobby is not at all on the same level as keeping around a sacred cow just because it's a sacred cow.
Useless sacred cows have next to no chance of improving the world, while removing problematic terms does.
Tradition is neither a good reason to keep/change something, nor a bad reason to keep/change something. Tradition just is.
Except that it does match and reflect it, so their stated reason is highly suspect.
As has been shown repeatedly in this thread, the word is neither appropriated, nor offensive to the people who it hasn't been appropriated from.