2011-02-07
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2011-02-07 |
Title text: 2011-02-07 |
Votey[edit]
Explanation[edit]
This explanation is either missing or incomplete. |
Transcript[edit]
This transcript was generated by a bot: The text was scraped using AWS's Textract, which may have errors. Complete transcripts describe what happens in each panel — here are some good examples to get you started (1) (2). |
- [Describe panel here]
- It's called "the paradox of the court"
- In athens, protagoras made a deal with euathlus.
- Tell you what - I'll teach you how to speak in court and you don't have to pay me till you win your first case.
- Great!
- But later, euathlus didn't bother to seek any cases.
- Hey! Get to work !
- Sorry, I was checking out this depiction of naked wrestlers on the side of an urn.
- So, protagoras sued euathlus for his payment.
- If I win, the court says you pay me. If I lose, our deal says you pay me.
- But euathlus countered.
- Not so. If I win, the court says I don't pay. If I lose, you failed to teach me, so I don't pay.
- The argument was elliptically beautiful.
- But if you win the first case, then there is new information, soi can sue a second
- Time.
- But, if you win the second case, it invalidates the first. So you see-
- Later, athens somehow lost the peloponnesian war
- But, did you kill me or did the spear? Or society? Or nature herself?
- I'm gonna kill your children and take your wife.
- Fascinating.
Votey Transcript[edit]
This transcript was generated by a bot: The text was scraped using AWS's Textract, which may have errors. Complete transcripts describe what happens in each panel — here are some good examples to get you started (1) (2). |
- [Describe panel here]
- Oh wait. It's the spear for sure.
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