Author: Ralph E. Kenyon, Jr. (diogenes) Wednesday, August 13, 2008 - 11:12 pm |
See this. |
Author: Ralph E. Kenyon, Jr. (diogenes) Thursday, August 14, 2008 - 11:21 pm |
Originally only heads of state got "assassinated". But the application of the term seems to have been creeping down the hierachy of prominance. Any judge in Irac killed by the insurgents is being called an assassination. Even rival heads of organized crime are said to be "assassinated". |
Author: Ralph E. Kenyon, Jr. (diogenes) Friday, August 15, 2008 - 08:52 am |
Ben, your question about the historic evolution of the word seems to try to apply a strict division to a fuzzy evaluation that varies with individual to individual. I might suggest that a lexicographer might abstract and trend and arbitrarily choose a point to mark the distinction. In this case the "map" very significantly reflects the map maker. Your question can not be answered as an "absolute", because it asks for what becomes a concensus opinion of map-makers - users of the term. |
Author: Ralph E. Kenyon, Jr. (diogenes) Friday, August 15, 2008 - 11:18 pm |
Assassins may have done the killings, but Wikipedia also states: The earliest known literary use of ... "assassination" is in The Tragedy of Macbeth by William Shakespeare (1605).[6][7]. |
Author: Ralph E. Kenyon, Jr. (diogenes) Tuesday, August 19, 2008 - 10:25 am |
No, my use of quotes around the word make the context opague rather than transparent. Without the quotes the word transparently refers to the act; but with the quotes the context is no longer transparent; it refers to what was said, in this case the word; and I was referring to the use of the word applied to the act. You had the relationship between quotes and transparency backwards. Who in Shakespere was said to be "assassinated"? Henry VI. Was he not a head of state? According to the time-binding record, the first use of the word 'assassinated' or 'assassination' referred to the killing of a head of state, albeit in a work of fiction. Prior to that many assassins killed many a person for many ideological reasons and just for money, but the act had not yet been labeled "assassination". |