The twisted irony is the biblical scholars have long noted that the modern conception of and etymological "Apple" shares little or no similarity with the metaphorical representation of "choice" depicted in the opening passages of Torah/the Hebrew Bible/the Christian Bible's Old Testament/the Qur'an (which itself was massively influenced by the former works after Muhammad ran across Nazarene refugees/adherents of a strict Messianic Jewish tradition of Christianity whom Christian scholars such as Jerome referenced in their writings). To my understanding, the metaphor was originally made with regards to a fruit commonly identified with either sub-Saharan Africa, North africa, or Southwest Asia (the fertile crescent). The notion of the modern concept of the American/British "apple" being the token or metaphor for choice regarding human nature, development, "separation" from our natural state or more, all these things have been written on for more than two thousand years, and I highly encourage folks to dive deep and broad into the plethora of exegesis on the topic.
Do banana next
philipp amthor am wochenende be like
The twisted irony is the biblical scholars have long noted that the modern conception of and etymological "Apple" shares little or no similarity with the metaphorical representation of "choice" depicted in the opening passages of Torah/the Hebrew Bible/the Christian Bible's Old Testament/the Qur'an (which itself was massively influenced by the former works after Muhammad ran across Nazarene refugees/adherents of a strict Messianic Jewish tradition of Christianity whom Christian scholars such as Jerome referenced in their writings).
To my understanding, the metaphor was originally made with regards to a fruit commonly identified with either sub-Saharan Africa, North africa, or Southwest Asia (the fertile crescent).
The notion of the modern concept of the American/British "apple" being the token or metaphor for choice regarding human nature, development, "separation" from our natural state or more, all these things have been written on for more than two thousand years, and I highly encourage folks to dive deep and broad into the plethora of exegesis on the topic.