A lot of debate is about lockdown for social interaction, but the question is what impact will it all have for the arts, culture and the philosophical underpinning underlying Western culture and other cultures? Are we at the brink of a collapse or a new, transitional point in culture and human thought? — Jack Cummins
Were we there in 1918-1920?Are we at the brink of a collapse or a new, transitional point in culture and human thought? — Jack Cummins
Of course I realise that there have been times of large deaths in former ages but this is the biggest we have known in our lives, and I think it is likely to have the impact of both World Wars. — Jack Cummins
Humanity has been "on the brink" for eons. The Fall of the Roman Empire __Gibbon 1776 ; The Decline of the West __ Spengler 1926. As a species in a wild world, we live dangerously. But so far, we have survived our own follies, and nature's wrath. If history is any guide, we won't be aware of the "Fall" until much later, in retrospect. Plagues come & go, Pandemics rise & fall, but life goes on. Looking backward, pessimists see doom & gloom, while forward-looking optimists see wonderful opportunities. Both are part right and part wrong, but only time will tell which. :smile:Are we at the brink of a collapse or a new, transitional point in culture and human thought? — Jack Cummins
Surely, while philosophy is involved in looking at beliefs and values it cannot be in ivory tower blockaded from the pressing concerns facing humanity. — Jack Cummins
In the US, there are sizable groups of people who are planning, and stockpiling, for a Race War or Civil War. And if Trump loses the presidential election, they may be motivated to use guns rather than ballots to bring about the regressive change they think is necessary : i.e. back to when the superior race, and/or religion, was in control of society. If they succeed, against high odds, the current social & ecological decline may continue for the near future.However, just one thing I will stress is that I was not implying that the pandemic alone could trigger a cultural collapse. But if anything I should be pleased by some reassurance that we are not on the verge of collapse, because that is my fear. — Jack Cummins
The link in my post investigated the history & validity of the quote, and others like it. Personally, I'm not concerned with what was "actually said" in cuneiform marks on clay tablets. It's the general feeling of exasperation with human nature and our imperfect world that resonates with me. Even so, I remain optimistic about the continuing progression of evolution, with or without homo sapiens. :smile:Very small point: since the Assyrians didn't write books, I wonder what the tablet - if the quote is genuine - actually said. — tim wood
'Change' and not 'collapse' would likely be the appropriate way to look at this.But I am wondering about the changes because although 'collapse' was perhaps an over dramatic word I do believe that previous pandemics probably did have far reaching effects, and the virus is not over yet. — Jack Cummins
This is the critical point, when the technological pillars of our world cease to function and are cast aside. For example the internet, or electrical computers. If for example we descend into a hundred years of warring groups, internet servers will rapidly become compromised, education could easily become compromised, we might rapidly lose the capability to operate such systems. So how can such knowledge be preserved in such a way that it is not lost entirely, not long I suspect. Over the a hundred years of war infra-structure like electrical generation, oil refining, vehicle production could all be lost.Cultural collapse will come when the older generation (whichever generation that is) can not successfully transmit a coherent culture to its children because that culture has been rendered obsolete and irrelevant for the newly existing conditions.
The first thing is to realize that people and societies take diseases quite calmly, — ssu
With the kids sing out the future
Maybe kids don't need the masters
Before people prayed in the Church sermon that "disease and pestilence" wouldn't come. Not anymore, but now we have seen they are still there.Of course people would have preferred to miss a particular plague, but disease continually carried off friends and family, so longevity wasn't typical. All of which is NOT to say people were casual about losing parents and children or indifferent to death. — Bitter Crank
Fortunately, most people tend to be moderate & conciliatory in their views, and inclined to favor to the idea of social & cultural progress, rather than regress. Besides, modern societies are too homogeneous to split neatly into Left vs Right, or White vs Black, or Christian vs Islamic. — Gnomon
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