<p>D1 sent this to me. I have no clue! Can anyone solve this and tell me what it means?</p>
<p>Clue: Pandora, Socrates, Jeopardy, but Jesus knew and said so- Luke 11:9</p>
<p>D1 sent this to me. I have no clue! Can anyone solve this and tell me what it means?</p>
<p>Clue: Pandora, Socrates, Jeopardy, but Jesus knew and said so- Luke 11:9</p>
<p>hmmm, must have something to do with asking questions–the Socratic method of teaching, Jeopardy’s answering with a question, the bible verse "Ask, and it shall be given to you… But how does Pandora fit in? She opened the vessel and let the blessings out. This is a tough one!</p>
<p>Didn’t Pandora ask: “what’s in this box?”</p>
<p>Yeah, I got as far as you guys. Pandora is known as “all-giving” . I think it has to do with asking and being given the answer, too.</p>
<p>So maybe that’s it–you just have to ask D1 and she’ll give you the answer. Slightly off topic, but did a little Pandora research, and once again, the woman gets the bad rap! She was the first woman, opened the jar (after being told not to) and let out all the miseries or blessings, depending on your research. Eve, anyone?</p>
<p>I asked my son… and he said the answer is “Ask”.</p>
<p>Pretty easy to google the Bible passage: And I say unto you, Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you.</p>
<p>Pandora opened the box and let all the bad things fly out. She slammed it shut in time to retain one thing for humanity: hope.</p>
<p>Sounds like something like “thinking outside the box.”</p>
<p>Ohhhh…good idea Consolation!</p>
<p>Consolation: I always thought that the message of Pandora was that she needed to open the box a second time to let hope out, since she’d let all the other stuff out. I notice that’s not the interpretation Wikipedia gives.</p>