Justice and Rule
Legend
For 1e and 2e, yes. It changed 21 years ago and hasn't been an appropriated term since then.
No, you see, it continues to be an appropriated term as long as you are still using that term. You don't suddenly shift definitions without changing the term itself, because the cultural momentum you've created continues on.
And again, 3.5E clearly used it (and that is clearly an opinion shared others and not just me), so not 21 years ago.
So it seems clear to the non-Jew that it's talking about a Tefillin, and the two Jews telling you that it isn't are wrong?
No, I was saying because you are Jewish you can only see it as an intentional difference, when I as a non-Jew can see someone just making that mistake because they have no clue about why that part of it is there. That's what appropriation is about: taking things. You don't necessarily take all of it, or understand what you are taking, hence why you get mistakes like that.
there is one more than dictionary definition. Tefillin just comes up first.
Wrong. The 3.5 definition provided different types of phylacteries. This keeps with a) Merriam-Webster tracing back to the Greek definition included amulets, teflllin, safeguards and guarded places and b) some dictionaries include these additional definitions as a second or third meaning
I mean, the 3.5 definition clearly starts off with mock-tefillin and then moves onto something more generalized. I don't think that's because they were using the archaic definition of the word, but rather because up until then there was a lot of variance in what a phylactery was because, well, they were trying to not invalidate years of muddled ideas of what it was. Like, @Maxperson is not wrong when he says there is an actual description of a phylactery in the DMG... but it's also clear that phylacteries have been much, much more varied than that over the years. D&D isn't exactly consistent in its fiction.
If there's anything I would point to as support for this, it's that everywhere I look up this topic on seems to think that 3E was the edition that made phylacteries more like tefillin, which I think gives us a better view of how it was actually perceived.