RiccardoLS
I think that a one power of an image, against the written word, is that it can carry more things at once. Justice may be something and may be something else at the same time.
It may seem I'm rejecting Aristotele, and yes I am. Western philoshopy is great but even science and quantum electrodynamics had to reject it when coping with the complexity of the Universe. The solution of certain paradoxes cannot stand within what we already know, otherwise we would have already resolved them.
Dave pragmatical approach is very correct. Justice in a reading express very much what he says.
But again, I like to rty and focus on the subleties of a symbol. To answer the big question of Caridwen, my answer is: "I don't know". In the end it's you choose. Your experience catalize through the card and give shape to your sense of higher justice. If you can relate to the card your experience is ennanched. If you can't relate to the card it gests diminished.
But I think that every card - expecially Majors, that refers to something higher or deeper - is first a "question". And it becames an answer a lot later.
If I had - very personal and subjective take - to describe the riht Justie in the world of the Fay, I would think that in the Fey world, "you are what you do - you seem what you are". The second part creates a truth that I can't find in myself, nor in the real world. Justice to me is solace from the burden of having to pay for every mistake, for every shorcoming, for every weakness. For having to pay every time one accepts the minor bad, or suffer because it is the right thing. Justice is solace from the wheel. It does not set things right. It's there and gives a meaning to all that suffering and unbalance. Gives it purpose, and light. And therefore hope.
My very personal
It may seem I'm rejecting Aristotele, and yes I am. Western philoshopy is great but even science and quantum electrodynamics had to reject it when coping with the complexity of the Universe. The solution of certain paradoxes cannot stand within what we already know, otherwise we would have already resolved them.
Dave pragmatical approach is very correct. Justice in a reading express very much what he says.
But again, I like to rty and focus on the subleties of a symbol. To answer the big question of Caridwen, my answer is: "I don't know". In the end it's you choose. Your experience catalize through the card and give shape to your sense of higher justice. If you can relate to the card your experience is ennanched. If you can't relate to the card it gests diminished.
But I think that every card - expecially Majors, that refers to something higher or deeper - is first a "question". And it becames an answer a lot later.
If I had - very personal and subjective take - to describe the riht Justie in the world of the Fay, I would think that in the Fey world, "you are what you do - you seem what you are". The second part creates a truth that I can't find in myself, nor in the real world. Justice to me is solace from the burden of having to pay for every mistake, for every shorcoming, for every weakness. For having to pay every time one accepts the minor bad, or suffer because it is the right thing. Justice is solace from the wheel. It does not set things right. It's there and gives a meaning to all that suffering and unbalance. Gives it purpose, and light. And therefore hope.
My very personal