led the world in conquest — Lionino
The strategy of the weak, because it is weak, is to demonise the consequences of the strongest, even though the weak, if it were in the position of the strong, would have acted much much worse. — Lionino
The story of creation was not actually a christian idea, it came from African tribes and was already ancient when the christians adopted it.
The western part of the Roman empire was broken down into many little kingdoms that over centuries became larger with only one king and developed the feudal system of government.
Christianity expanded and became the major religion in western Europe and separated for the Orthodox church in the east.
Over the centuries both the church and the lords eventually became so corrupt that the peasants revolted against both.
During the Early and High Middle ages, most advancements came about through the inventiveness of the peasants, better farming methods and tool technology, the use of wind and water power.
The Late Middle Ages was when the started to re-discover the ideas of the ancient Greeks and that started the renaissance. — Sir2u
This was all centuries after West Rome came apart, and what does Genesis have to do with it?
The thread doesn't have a clear topic. — Lionino
You will find comprehensive answers here:
The Theological Origins of Modernity, Michael Gillespie
And you don't even have to read the whole thing.
https://www.amazon.com/Theological-Origins-Modernity-Michael-Gillespie/dp/0226293467/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2W2DQ8DXXV8C0&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.G5iRyE9Wgb6mk6RP_S0uCt9RcZdxPmXw1qJw3WOuHEAmq5QU0qX7u7_8N_FKT6JtULdBVuCTIymlheuzkZoql3SiQBnUpQ8cm1r1kenATO19A2D4BcwW1b_ZxEF1ZbFXclZqM-QpJ84Kbacm9_kxlYPuEB9UMmV-vUOhR-ufB09Thv66GfImc8CLLRpzOjl9AoNEjdTs7gTyjHYbzRVaCzdD_P_oqyhizYONfEfUS8k.1hAKMATODsRXIHEP06_vuvR9b87bDJMLtoJJGRAtY4o&dib_tag=se&keywords=The+Theological+Origins+of+Modernity&qid=1715787555&sprefix=the+theological+origins+of+modernity%2Caps%2C108&sr=8-1
Or if you're lucky, your local library. — tim wood
But before it truly could, the bubonic plague and the Mongol invasions started. — Tzeentch
Oh, Europe's just fine. You needn't worry about it. — Ciceronianus
So that's a good thing now? — Outlander
What if someone "conquests" you of your wallet and blood pressure levels by way of a stabbing on your next morning walk? Don't call 911 or bother other people now. — Outlander
along with the Greek and Roman classics — Athena
Greek and Roman classics are not part of anybody's culture except the people who speak their languages — that doesn't apply to most here —, and the reason for that is exactly Scholastics — Lionino
it's a real cultural heritage — Wayfarer
Reading something exactly does make it part of my culture - and maybe that is the source of your confusion. Of course it does not make me Japanese, but no one ever claimed it would or could.Reading something doesn't make it part of your culture, you are not Japanese because you read Mishima. — Lionino
I thought to comment on this but then recognized it does not make any sense that I can find. Try again?It is beyond you just like it is beyond all of us to really understand the Great Wall of China — it is not our story. The prime difference in the latter case is that there aren't hordes trying to steal that heritage because they have no ancient history. — Lionino
Greek and Roman classics are not part of anybody's culture except the people who speak their languages — that doesn't apply to most here —, and the reason for that is exactly Scholastics. When it comes to the Bible, it is true, our morality is heavily Christianised whether we want it or not, whether we are atheist or evangelical. — Lionino
That's something that someone who has never been to Europe would say. Of it, Rome and Greece are places that exist outside of history books, they can be seen physically today, the glory is still there — someone who ignores it today would ignore it back then too. — Lionino
Reading something exactly does make it part of my culture — tim wood
Greeks cannot read the Iliad in original Greek, any more than English speakers Beowulf — tim wood
it does not make any sense — tim wood
In sum, your claims, perhaps having a grain of truth, are disqualified by the extravagance of them — tim wood
nay, those over whom I rule are Britons, men that do not know how to till the soil or ply a trade, but are thoroughly versed in the art of war and hold all things in common, even children and wives, so that the latter possess the same dignity as the men.
I do not think you can expect any literary or musical talent from them (the captives from the wars in Britannia) — Cicero
Njal's Saga an excellent example of such a journey: a text that is at first alien and remote, that with reading becomes vividly alive. — tim wood
"Scholastics" with a capital "S"? What do you mean by that? — tim wood
And as to the Bible, clearly you're babbling. On your own account the Bible is not/cannot be read today, and thus any "Christianization" of ethics cannot be biblical. — tim wood
And anyway, I prefer the term "civilizing." As in the civilizing of ethics. Which, on consideration, less than half the world is concerned with. — tim wood
The Mongolian Empire was more advanced than Eastern Rome and France in the 1300s? — Lionino
That rarely happens.I don't think you have any clue what you are saying.
It is a compliment, unless you want to admit to being a hypocrite, lightly bringing up the Mongol Empire "as more advanced" without any condemnation of Gengis Khan being a mass rapist and his reign killing off almost 20% of the whole population of Eurasia, estimated around 37.75–60 million. — Lionino
Paris is a dump, London is beyond gone, Lisbon and Brussels are approaching a point of no return. Europe is busted. The belief that it is fine doesn't stand a one-week trip to De Hague. — Lionino
Again, Romans and Greeks abhorred most peoples around them and would have abhorred you too. They are not part of your culture. Your culture stands for everything opposite to their values — sexual deviancy, worship of minorities, effeminacy, worship of weakness and criminality, artistic decadence, and countless others. — Lionino
Honestly, I am quite skeptical of how much of this is true, given by how many parallels there are. And if it is true, I would imagine that the story comes from contact with Christian missionaries.
It may seem like I am playing hard to catch but I studied a bit of anthropology and some red flags are being raised for me. — Lionino
You will, then, be good enough to make clear exactly what does happen when I - or anyone - reads a book.Reading something exactly does make it part of my culture
— tim wood
No it doesn't. — Lionino
I had occasion to place my copy of the Iliad before a Greek, because (at that time) I thought he could help me with a bit of translation/understanding. And he graciously explained that he could not, because he couldn't read it, making clear that he could not read any of it. But what's the point? What is your point, exactly? As it happened, I could read more of it than he could.Greeks cannot read the Iliad in original Greek, any more than English speakers Beowulf
— tim wood
Not comparable. Beowulf is in a different language than modern English. — Lionino
The fact is that it's two different words depending on capitalization. I simply wanted clarification as to what you were referring to. And the attempt to reconcile Pagan and Christian beliefs/dogma/thought was already underway with Constantine, c., 330 AD.You are just arguing for the sake of arguing. Example:
"Scholastics" with a capital "S"? What do you mean by that?
— tim wood
As if the capitalisation of a word that may be capitalised somehow undermines the understanding of something. — Lionino
I wasn't referring to any quality of your thought, but to my being unable to discern whatever that thought might have been. You referred to the Great Wall, and then, it seemed, suggested that either the Great Wall had nothing to do with thieving hordes, or something else didn't, either way I couldn't make sense of it.it does not make any sense
— tim wood
It doesn't make sense to those who.... — Lionino
Paris is a dump, London is beyond gone, Lisbon and Brussels are approaching a point of no return. Europe is busted. The belief that it is fine doesn't stand a one-week trip to De Hague. — Lionino
You will, then, be good enough to make clear exactly what does happen when I - or anyone - reads a book. — tim wood
understand notions of purity existed in Roman culture but they seemed to be very selective and not at all universal & dependent on social class. — BitconnectCarlos
Sorry, I will amend my statement:
...someone who has not been to Europe in the past 10 years would say.
Paris is a dump, London is beyond gone, Lisbon and Brussels are approaching a point of no return. Europe is busted. The belief that it is fine doesn't stand a one-week trip to De Hague. — Lionino
It is another episode on TPF of Europe-bashing. — Lionino
Sorry that Europeans led the world in science and technology — Lionino
I see his point. Your sayingby[you are] allowing the written words and storiesof those much like yourselfto enrich your lifeand instill the values they were meant to instill and have instilled unto those who were presently involved in the story,you yourself are now effectively part of that story, or at least able to gleam a sufficient amount of experience and culture from said tales to a comparable degree of those who lived in/during said times and to place yourself within the story as if you yourself were there. — Outlander
Which is in sum to say almost nothing at all. Let's take his example of Yukio Mishima. According to him, not being Japanese, I won't "get" Mishima. In a trivial sense, some truth. But let's look a little deeper. What does it mean to be Japanese, in this sense? Obviously to be a person born in Japan of Japanese parents - if there is any other definition, I am unaware of it. Does that mean the Japanese person will get Mishima in ways that others cannot? This implies that being Japanese is implicitly something shared by Japanese people apart from the mere fact of their being Japanese. And while many share many things, nothing is universal; Japan is multi-layered every-which-way, from Ainu in the North to Okinawans in the South. To say they're all alike in ways different from other people, that allows them a special appreciation of their own literature withheld from others, while containing a grain of truth, is mainly nonsense. Just as, beyond the mere fact of being American, nothing is universal about Americans, although many of us will share many things.He is saying that's still more living vicariously, a lesser depth or dimension than that of those who the story was literally about or involved chiefly due to the fact such tales despite any level of detail and depth of perspective will always fall short to that of a person who was born and raised in such a time as that was literally their reality and all they've ever known from birth til death, a reality that cannot be "visited" and "unvisited" the way we can choose to read or not read a book and so remains more of a cultural enrichment or immersion activity similar to a trip to another country as opposed to full on cultural transcendence and ultimate understanding. — Outlander
sex-hating — Ciceronianus
I don't think the ancients were as consumed by the thought of sexual deviancy as we are, or have been, since the remarkable, sex-hating, Paul of Tarsus began to contribute to what Christianity became. — Ciceronianus
ditto with the classics. But with this qualification: they are all long dead and long gone. — tim wood
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