Nerdy History Rant.

Jebus

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So anyway, I'm cramming Classical History and there's something bugging me.

Naturally, all Classical History professors are all orgasmic about the Classical time period. They keep on whining how it was the greatest period mankind has ever known - which they can do as much as they want by me, because that doesn't really bother me. What really bothers me is this:

The fact that they keep on saying that the Greco-Roman civilization was the beginning of Western civilization.

Because in my opinion, it isn't. Granted, you have some things that, with a lot of imagination, might seem a lot like present day culture/institutions: the Athenian democracy, for instance, or the Roman bureaucracy. Yet, I don't consider the Greco-Roman civilization to be Western at all.

For one, they were obviously more focused on the East than they were on the West - or the North-West- of Europe, where the Western Civilization was eventually formed. Their culture 'started' and was incredibly much influenced by Eastern civilizations, like the Egyptians or Babylonians. Therefore, unless you want to go as far as to consider them the base of Western civ - which would be so godawefully wrong - I can't really consider the Greco-Romans Western either.
Secondly, the differences between the Greco-Romani and 'us' are way more legio than the similarities. This probably relates to my first point anyway.

Thirdly, there is absolutely no continuous line to be drawn from the Greco-Romani to modern day culture. The democratic tradition, for example, was never based on Athens example, but grew organically out of the typically proto-Western feudal system. Same with everything, really: the humanists from the Italian renaissance were always shouting out they were the rebirth of the Greco-Roman civilization - but in my humble opinion they only opened themselves up to old Greco-Roman writers/thinkers because Western civilization had evolved to the point where the same values and reasonings would've been valued anyway. And they did so with none, or minimal, Greco-Roman influence.

It's all a feely-goody thing, really. The Greek and Roman civilizations are generally held in great esteem, so we must be their cultural heirs, right? Sometimes, I wished the Westerners would wake up and embrace the time period where Western civilization was really born - in the dynamics of the Medieval feudal dynamics. And I hate the name 'Medieval' in the first place. Same as 'Classic'.

Meh. Back to cramming.
 
Your arguments seem a bit odd...

Jebus said:
Because in my opinion, it isn't.

Let me start of with something snide;
Gee, a history professors opinion against a simpe student's opinion. According to your logic of "I'm a student, hence I'm always more right than the uneducated", you should always be wrong if you disagree with your professors. But what the hey...

Jebus said:
For one, they were obviously more focused on the East than they were on the West - or the North-West- of Europe, where the Western Civilization was eventually formed. Their culture 'started' and was incredibly much influenced by Eastern civilizations, like the Egyptians or Babylonians. Therefore, unless you want to go as far as to consider them the base of Western civ - which would be so godawefully wrong - I can't really consider the Greco-Romans Western either.

Are you saying historical roots are tied to locations? That Holland can't have roots in Rome because it isn't physically in Rome? Or are you saying that a culture can't influence another culture because it focuses more on a certain location? GB was focused on its internal affairs during the colonial days, yet I'd say it influences the US.

Jebus said:
Secondly, the differences between the Greco-Romani and 'us' are way more legio than the similarities. This probably relates to my first point anyway.

True, but unless there's a specific culture that existed before Roman times that infuences us more than them, they're still our "biggest influence".

Hmmm, maybe the Slavs?

Jebus said:
Thirdly, there is absolutely no continuous line to be drawn from the Greco-Romani to modern day culture.

And yet there is. Take, for instance, the fact that Christianity was tied heavily to the Roman Empire, which influenced the Papal States rather heavily, not to mention Byzantium (no, wait, "Eastern")

Jebus said:
It's all a feely-goody thing, really. The Greek and Roman civilizations are generally held in great esteem, so we must be their cultural heirs, right? Sometimes, I wished the Westerners would wake up and embrace the time period where Western civilization was really born - in the dynamics of the Medieval feudal dynamics. And I hate the name 'Medieval' in the first place. Same as 'Classic'.

Despite the above things, I do agree with you. I think the whole Greco-Roman thing is just a result of the Renaissance and the big rediscovery of cultures.

In that sense it's hard to deny the influence of those cultures upon ours. Our culture was in fact, even if it hadn't inherited anything from Rome, stuffed full of Greek and Roman cultures by the circle-jerking philosophers and leaders of the Renaissance-day. How much it influenced is indeed a question...

Don't you do anthropology, man? I would've thought anthropologists would automatically reject such a rediculuous notion as one culture being "the greatest influence" on another. But then again, I really hate anthropology
 
As a History student about to graduate, all I can say is that I totally disagree with every single thing you said, Jeb.

First:
The democratic tradition, for example, was never based on Athens example, but grew organically out of the typically proto-Western feudal system.

That is wrong. There's no such thing as proto western feudal system, unless you imply the transiction to the NATIONAL STATE system. There you can find short distance roots to our western civilization. Not in the feudal system. No way.

Second:
For one, they were obviously more focused on the East than they were on the West - or the North-West- of Europe, where the Western Civilization was eventually formed.

The fact that most part of liberal thought, illuminism, renaissance culture sprung from a re-discovery of Ancient Greece an Rome, contradicts this point; the western civilization formed in Germany, France, UK, etc... based on the example of the Classical culture. Places don't matter, really.

Third:
Secondly, the differences between the Greco-Romani and 'us' are way more legio than the similarities. This probably relates to my first point anyway.

Nonsense. Are you so similar with feudal, say, Poland? Do you even know what you are talking about? I don' think so, other wise you would bring up factual and objective examples, not some preposterous hypothesis drawn from lack of study and excess of pop-culture.

Not that I dislike your theory, it's simply inconsistent as Bush's explanation for the war in Iraq. Or probably your teachers are assholes, and the passed you partial and superficial notions. Either way, I am right. And don't say I'm megalomaniac cause it isn't true. Maybe.
 
There´s nothing wrong with a critical view of all the preconceptions that we`re fed in the academia, no matter how established they are; having said that Hellenic Philosophy and Jus Romanum are the basis of the western civilization, Jebus, and you won`t convince me of anything else, i`m afraid.
 
[Maybe slight of topic and not connected to culture, but...]

If you are saying, that there is no continuous line to be drawn from Romans to modern day culture, then I think it's wrong. Why cant you draw a straight line? Maybe because the cultures were heavily *influenced* by Roman culture, not directly modified versions of it.

And secondly - no straight line?

Then why does Roman law is considered the basis of modern-day law and is (at least in Poland) an obligatory subject on law & administration studies?

Oh, and by the way - how come demcracy was to grow out of FEUDALISM???

Which is VERY undemocratic???
 
Nonsense, Brios. Everyone knows the Slavs are the basis of every culture on the planet.

Recent studies reveal Slavic genes in Inuit populations.
 
Yeah, there's like, you know, this theory... And it's gonna, like, blow our notions about history, and, hum, it says, you know, like Slaves or Slavs or Slavonic or Slavons, were Bulgars or Bulgarians or Bulgs, and they, you know, were like, totally awesome, an they like reeeeally slay! Yeah, uhm, you know... Hey, fuck, I read it on the NMA forums so it must be true!
 
I don't really understand the diffirence between West and East. It's forced and almost entirely arbitrary, and never really made any sense without some overabundance of national/continental/racial pride.
 
Elric said:
Bulgars or Bulgarians or Bulgs

Bulges?

Ba-da bum *ching*

Uskiewooskie said:
I don't really understand the diffirence between West and East.

Do you mean Eastern Europe or Middle East?

All cultural lines are arbitrary, even borders between countries are, no shit Eastern and Western lines don't make much sense. DOES NOBODY STUDY ANTHROLOPOGY ANYMORE?!
 
Allright, so perhaps I should've written it out more.

Forgive me for the random order in which I will reply to your posts, but it was necessary to form some coherence in my answers. Also, note that I have tried to answer to any criticism directed to me - even though I might have not quoted your criticism or responded directly to it. So you might have to read all of it :)

Kharn said:
Let me start of with something snide;
Gee, a history professors opinion against a simpe student's opinion. According to your logic of "I'm a student, hence I'm always more right than the uneducated", you should always be wrong if you disagree with your professors. But what the hey...

Where did I get this reputation? For the tenthousanth time: I have never used my academic education in any argument.

The closest I got to what you say I said (whoa) would we something more along the lines of "I'm a history student, hence I have more chance of knowing stuff about history than the average plebejan" - which kinda makes sense.

Kharn said:
Are you saying historical roots are tied to locations? That Holland can't have roots in Rome because it isn't physically in Rome? Or are you saying that a culture can't influence another culture because it focuses more on a certain location? GB was focused on its internal affairs during the colonial days, yet I'd say it influences the US.

I wouldn't underestimate the way locations affect cultures. The temperate climate in Greece was, for example, vital for the kind of public life led there. Just like the various mountain ranges were essential in the creation of the Polis-system. In the flat, colder plains of north-western Europe, such life wasn't possible, hence why a new kind of, less public, civilization emerged there in the later Medieval period. Greece was not located in the West, although it did plant some Western colonies, and didn't become 'Western' untill some thirty years ago.

Secondly, Greek leaders looked eastward, not westward. Other than raw materials and food supplies, there was nothing to be found in the West. Hence, when Alexander set out to build his empire, he built it in the Middle East and Africa. There was no contact with the West at all, and Alexander proved quite willing to adapt Greek culture to Eastern forms in order to make a lasting empire. Too much emphasis on classical Greece as 'Western' really distorts what the Greeks thought of themselves.

Futhermore, the Greek culture affected culture in Eastern Europe and even in the Middle East more than in the West. Western civilization owes to the Greeks, but it cannot look to classical Greece as "theirs", in the sense of providing an exclusive badge of Western cultural identity. Aristoteles, for instance, was adapted by the Arabs and Byzantines way before it was adapted by the West - who adapted Aristoteles in part to the reputation they learned from Arab and Byzantine sources. Greek cultural styles affected Turkey and Russia just as much as they affected France or Italy. All of this means that Greece can be seen as a Western... progenitor (if that's the right word), it was simply not just a Western progenitor. It is really misleading to think of a straight line from Greece to the West, as if the purpose of Greek history was to provide ingredients for the Western cultural recipe.

And there is another problem with linking Greece and Rome to Western culture: Greece and Rome weren't as recogniseable Western as, say, Classical China is so recogniseable Chinese. Western civ stands to Greece like Japan stands to China: both are heavy cultural borrowers, yet noone would think of starting the history of Japan in China.

Kharn said:
True, but unless there's a specific culture that existed before Roman times that infuences us more than them, they're still our "biggest influence".

Hmmm, maybe the Slavs?

My point is that Western civ simply doens't go that far back: western civilization grew from the typical medieval European social landscape.

I mean really, where are the lines from Greece and Rome to the modern west to be drawn? There is very little linkage, for instance, between Greek and Roman sociall forms and the later western ones. Greeks and Romans has farmers, patricians, aristocrats and nobility, but so does almost every civilization in some part of it history. The Roman empire had a sort of capitalism in the first century of the imperial period, but almost every culture had that in some part of it's history. Furthermore, Roman economy was for a large part based on slavery, a phenomonon that, although it lived on slightly and in a greatly reduced form after the Roman empire fell, never became a distinct caracteristic of Western society. Nor is there much relationship to merchant positions and values in Greece and Rome as their vital positions in Western culture later on. And although the aristocracy in the West would long after Rome's fall admire classical culture, the foundations of Western aristocracy were very different from the Greco-Roman aristocracy. And while aristocrats of both classical and Western civilizations stressed military values, there forms of warfare were also quite different, etc. etc.


Mikael Grizzly said:
Then why does Roman law is considered the basis of modern-day law and is (at least in Poland) an obligatory subject on law & administration studies?

Roman did help form the Western law system since its re-discovery in the 11th and 12th century, but it's imporant to remember that the common law and jurisprudence reigned supreme in Europe - and that every single region, no matter how small (even cities) had their own law system.
Great territorial law-systems didn't really emerge untill Napoleonic times, and by then the old Roman law books were already so heavily modified they could rarely still be seen as Roman. So, what I'm trying to say is that although Roman law did heavily influence the way the Western law-system was built up - Roman law in its original form never has, and was impossible to implement on Western society because of its distinctively different nature.

Kharn said:
Jebus said:
Thirdly, there is absolutely no continuous line to be drawn from the Greco-Romani to modern day culture.
And yet there is. Take, for instance, the fact that Christianity was tied heavily to the Roman Empire, which influenced the Papal States rather heavily, not to mention Byzantium (no, wait, "Eastern")

One could argue that Christianity only really took hold when the Roman civilization was already falling apart.
Actually, probably the most overwhelming difference between Greco-Roman and Western culture is the lack of single, all-encompassing religion. The various civil religious festivals and the huge allegory of gods was truly important to most Greeks and Romans. Western civilization would recieve its first clear definition through christian culture - a culture that was, although gaining in popularity in the late classical period, not defining for Greco-Roman civilization. I'd guess people would much sooner identify Romans with Jupiter and Apollo than Christianity.

Also remember that, although the medieval church was based heavily on the Roman civitate-system, that system would also never be distinctive for Western culture - unless perhaps in early modern Italy. If anything, political organisation of the West is defined in nationstates rather than that.

Also, I never defined Greco-Roman civilization as 'Eastern'. Greco-Roman civilization is Greco-Roman civilization, and it ended oficially when the Byzantine empire fell - although it had already *really* died when the Western Roman empire fell.

Elric said:
Jebus said:
The democratic tradition, for example, was never based on Athens example, but grew organically out of the typically proto-Western feudal system.

That is wrong. There's no such thing as proto western feudal system, unless you imply the transiction to the NATIONAL STATE system. There you can find short distance roots to our western civilization. Not in the feudal system. No way.

Mikael Grizzly said:
Oh, and by the way - how come demcracy was to grow out of FEUDALISM???

Which is VERY undemocratic???

First of all, about the link between Classical democray and modern Western democracy:

Classical democracy was thouroughly different from modern. It involved direct citizen participation, not elected representatives like with us. But the real problem with linking classical democracy to modern democracy is that democracy in the classical age was, all in all, more the exception that the rule and that the democracies that excisted were only temporary, and vanished without a direct trace in Western civilization later on.
When in modern times people began to cry out for democracy, they never pointed back to, for instance, Athens (except perhaps for some, marginal, exceptions). If anything, the cry for Western democracy was based on the Christian teachings of all men having a soul and the presumed equality of the Garden of Eden, the eyes of God, and in the afterlife.
When the democratic uprisings happened in the Late Medieval, Early Modern and even Modern times, elite thinkers did refer back to the ancient times - but their thinkings did not start the stirrings.

About the link between the feudal system and modern democracy:

I never said the current political systems were based on feudal systems - I said they grew organically out of them, in a sort of action-reaction, Hegel way. The cry for more power to the people was largely caused by the fact that in the urban revolution the city dwellers and patricians didn't feel related to the feudal system anymore, and indeed the feudal system was detrimental to the Late Medieval city economy.
But, since you are a history student too, you probably know what I'm talking about here, and I won't waste time typing this whole dynamic out.

Briosafreak said:
having said that Hellenic Philosophy and Jus Romanum are the basis of the western civilization, Jebus, and you won`t convince me of anything else, i`m afraid.

Are they really? Or is western civilization based on Christian philosophy, and urban and economical dynamics in the Late Medieval European period?

The only real link I see between the Greco-Roman period and the Western civilisation is in the so-called 'High Culture' of high philosophy and art. However, that's largely debateable too.

Elric said:
Do you even know what you are talking about? I don' think so, other wise you would bring up factual and objective examples, not some preposterous hypothesis drawn from lack of study and excess of pop-culture.

Not that I dislike your theory, it's simply inconsistent as Bush's explanation for the war in Iraq. Or probably your teachers are assholes, and the passed you partial and superficial notions. Either way, I am right.

Now now, that was rather harsh and uncalled for. Don't assume other people are moronic and uneducated just because they don't happen to share your views. I've taken largely the same intellectual bases you have, yet drawn a largely different conclusion for it.
And mine is more critical.

Which makes me cooler.

Closing Statement

Of course there was a legacy. Either directly, or more commonly through later revival, Greco-Roman features did influence Western civilization. The question is the amount of selectivity involved. Russia and India have in the same vein also borrowed heavily from modern Western culture, but who would go so far as to call them 'Western'?

There is simply the sheer memory of greatness. Even Westerners who have little in common with the Greco-Roman empires - be it ethnically or territorially - might feel pride over the glories of Athenian culture or the grandeur of the Roman empire. Therefore, there is often an emotional reaction to claim that civilization as 'ours', in order to sanctify and add prestige to the Western civilization to draw a line back to great past cultures. And this memory complicates the debate about how much of Greco-Roman civilization really survived in Western civilization.


damn you all for taking this much time away from my cramming.
 
Do you mean Eastern Europe or Middle East?
Both. Everything. Whole division of cultures or continents or anything is bullshit.

All cultural lines are arbitrary, even borders between countries are, no shit Eastern and Western lines don't make much sense.
Okeypokey. I get that. But to be honest I don't see any clear lines between East and West anymore.

DOES NOBODY STUDY ANTHROLOPOGY ANYMORE?!
*raises hand*
Used to live blocks away from the UofC. Study it a lot. UofC rejects the notion of Western Civilization too.
 
Russia and India have in the same vein also borrowed heavily from modern Western culture, but who would go so far as to call them 'Western'?

No, you call them Russian or Indian, right? Because "Eastern" is such a rediculously general simplification for vastly different cultures and civilizations. Are you saying that the only cultures that are truly Western are the Germanics? Then why not call them Germanic cultures?

Or, alternatively, why generalize an entire continent that draws from a plethora of influences (influences that don't apply in all locations)? I remember you saying that European culture draws the heaviest from France, which while seemingly true, doesn't apply increadibly beyond France itself and it's global influences. How do the Germans or the Dutch feel about inheriting French philosophies?
 
Anyway, Jebus, you think *Feudalism* is Western? Christianity? I would not call either Judea or the Sassanid Empire Western, or rather I think YOU would not.
 
Bradylama said:
Russia and India have in the same vein also borrowed heavily from modern Western culture, but who would go so far as to call them 'Western'?

No, you call them Russian or Indian, right? Because "Eastern" is such a rediculously general simplification for vastly different cultures and civilizations. Are you saying that the only cultures that are truly Western are the Germanics? Then why not call them Germanic cultures?

Yes, Russians have a Russian culture and India have a Indian civiliization. Did I ever call them 'Eastern'? I don't think so.
The only reason why I call Western civilization Western civilization is because you can hardly call it 'European civilization' when it's spread around the globe that much. 'Eastern' civilization applies to the classical middle east, with the parthians, the sassanids, the Arabs, etc. etc. It's what they called 'the East' - hence the name.
Also, together with this:

Bradylama said:
Or, alternatively, why generalize an entire continent that draws from a plethora of influences (influences that don't apply in all locations)? I remember you saying that European culture draws the heaviest from France, which while seemingly true, doesn't apply increadibly beyond France itself and it's global influences. How do the Germans or the Dutch feel about inheriting French philosophies?

It appears to me you are reacting out if ignorance.
The word 'civilization' here refers to a certain set of coherences (like shared values) and shared institutions (like representative democracy) that link a society or certain societies together. Some civilizations can be small, some can be large, depending on how much it has been spread. Japanese civilization, for instance, is spread over a very small area (Japan, and perhaps South Korea) - yet its coherences (perhaps not institutions) are noticibly different from ours and unique. Same goes for India; same goes, to a degree, for China.

In Western culture, you can easily see that these coherences do apply to several nations. It naturally applies to several countries in N.-W. Europe and N. America, and in the last century countries like Spain, Greece, and more recently Poland, the Chech republic and others have become obviously Western as well - after an excursion into coherences and values that didn't really tie in with the Western values.

So while there are certain countries with a culture that is unique for that country and can be defined only by that country - countries that are usually relatively large like Russia, India or China - you cannot define French or German civilizations as 'unique': it's pretty obvious they have the same coherences and values. The similiarities sometimes become vague between countries, like the latests rifts between Europe and the USA, for instance; yet one cannot deny that the coherences and values Westerners all share are clearly defineable and different from other civilizations.

Hey, don't blame me, this is the way scientific history works.

CCR said:
Anyway, Jebus, you think *Feudalism* is Western? Christianity? I would not call either Judea or the Sassanid Empire Western, or rather I think YOU would not.

I never called Feudalism Western. I called feudalism proto-Western.
Feudalism is not what defines our current Western civilization, it is what our set of coherences and values grew out of.
Also, as I said before, a few shared values, or a few shared political systems, like you're bringing up here, does not make a common civilization.




But is this the best you can come up with? Semantic attacks out of ignorance and not reading what I said?
 
Jebus said:
But is this the best you can come up with? Semantic attacks out of ignorance and not reading what I said?

Dude, look at who you're arguing with.
 
The Art Of History

The Art Of History



One could ( - take names and kick ass- ) define terms and codify the argument of history into a trendy jargon and sweep all academe. Especially if the charisma of a 'star' evokes the social juggernaut of a 'leadership cult'.

Philosophy, sociology, psychology, et al, all the 'soft' sciences have these 'branded' schools of world view. These 'Calvin Kliens' of fashionable ---- fascism ----
marching down our streets and strong arming our fragile 'human' condition into the brave new World Order (TM).

History digests better if one plays out the dramas of wars and kings.

History digresses better when it's self absorbed in the building of technological 'trees'.

Whether that tech tree describes vertical expansion of the 19th Century steel industry OR the resulting laws and government agencies of a constitutional republic, that channeled the , energies , of these 'robber baron' corporations, it could be 'seen' as a whole dynamic social economic system. More dialectic than drama, but still, possibly, of higher entertainment VALUE then any given Sweeps Week of "Reality Programming".


Corporate dynasties as 'Robber barons', feudal imagery and the 'telling' of history.
I guess it matters what words one chooses.

Using the word 'feudal' can convey the double edged nature of the social contract one has with their nation state.
That pledge of allegiance becomes ones' 'oath of fealty'. In exchange, the liege lord, our constitutional construct, will provide the appropriate protections, .... unless it's home invasion --- then you are on your own (a local policeman suggested BOTH a shotgun [presuming one is in a 2nd Amendment jurisdiction] and the ability to speed dial - a traceable - 9-1-1).

When our local leadership cults take on the attitude that ""I AM THE STATE"", when
mortal beings make claim to this 'divine right' of leadership, their religious duty (to prosper), we see the molding of
facts, of history, to support governing policies, the shaping of facts to fit the ruling ideology.

What do we KNOW about the reality, the facts, and what do we BELIEVE?
Isn't this coming down to where you go, or DON"T GO, to church on sabbath day X of your prevailing chronological demarkation.?

The recent shaping of the facts to fit the policy, whether it's WMD or Social Security ....

Well, is that Machiavellian spin, or History; the ziet geist of ''vision'' impaired men, or POLITICS?

In the context of ideologies,
In the conflict for hegemony, can History exist?



Depends on who writes, or REwrites, the "history''.







4too
 
Malkavian said:
Jebus said:
But is this the best you can come up with? Semantic attacks out of ignorance and not reading what I said?

Dude, look at who you're arguing with.

What's that supposed to mean? Btw, does it add anything useful to the thread?

Jebus:
The thing you said I disagree with the most, is the fact that Greeks and Romans are not linked to us because mainly they were focused on the East. So what? I don't get how that could be of interference to our connection with their culture.
And about our contemporary concept of democracy, it's directly taken from the French Revolution, which was intellectually started by thinkers and authors who explicitly looked to Roman-Greek istitutions and laws.
 
Elric said:
What's that supposed to mean? Btw, does it add anything useful to the thread?

Malkavian was referring to John, who has a bit of a reputation when it comes to debates here.

Elric said:
The thing you said I disagree with the most, is the fact that Greeks and Romans are not linked to us because mainly they were focused on the East. So what? I don't get how that could be of interference to our connection with their culture.

Oooh, oooh, I do, I do!

We claim that the Greco-Roman culture is uniquely ours. If we claim "this is the base of our civilization", we're claiming it is a part of our civilization. The most important part, in fact.

That is contradicted by the fact that Greco-Roman culture, especially Greek culture, had more influence on Eastern Europe and the Middle East than it did on us. As such, Greek culture would be the base of Eastern culture.

Troubles arise if you then claim it was also at the base of Western culture, since these cultures historically differ significantly

Elric said:
And about our contemporary concept of democracy, it's directly taken from the French Revolution, which was intellectually started by thinkers and authors who explicitly looked to Roman-Greek istitutions and laws.

Really, and I thought the West had a democratic institution before the French revolution? The USA! Duh!

Not to mention Poland's constitution, which was made before the French Revolution (and only a year before the third (?) partition, poor Poland)
 
Elric said:
Malkavian said:
Jebus said:
But is this the best you can come up with? Semantic attacks out of ignorance and not reading what I said?

Dude, look at who you're arguing with.

What's that supposed to mean? Btw, does it add anything useful to the thread?

He wasn't talking about you.

That, and admins pretty much get to say whatever the hell they want.

Jebus:
The thing you said I disagree with the most, is the fact that Greeks and Romans are not linked to us because mainly they were focused on the East. So what? I don't get how that could be of interference to our connection with their culture.

I never said 'mainly'. I meant that if you look at which culture has the most ties to and has continued the Greek legacy the most, it isn't the West. And that creates some problems, as I have listed above.

And about our contemporary concept of democracy, it's directly taken from the French Revolution, which was intellectually started by thinkers and authors who explicitly looked to Roman-Greek istitutions and laws.

You really think so? You really think that the peasants revolted and the Bastille was taken because the French intellectuals told the peasants about Athenian democracy?

Doubtfull. The intellectuals compared the evolutions the system was making to Greco-Roman institutions, yes, but the memory of those Greco-Roman institutions wasn't what caused the stirrings. I highly doubt the average Frenchman in 1789 even knew what Athenian democracy was all about. If he even knew what Athens was.

Secondly, our concept of democracy isn't 'directly taken' from the French revolution. Democratic evolutions had been going on loooooong before that (interrupted by Absolutism in some countries - although absolutism was also quite important for the formation of our present nationstate system). Our concepts of democracy are for a large part based on the medieval evolutions I pointed out before, British parliamentary traditioin, etc. etc.
I'm not saying the French revolution didn't have a big impact on it all, though.
 
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