frank         
         
frank         
         It's the accountability — Outlander
Machine guns. Bombs and Missiles. Industrial Project Management. Mass Media. The shrinking of the world as a shared — Paine
Ennui — Paine
Outlander         
         How would you assess accountability? — frank
Paine         
         Do you agree that scientism was also a factor? — frank
BC         
         I think it was the latter. — frank
Which makes more sense to you? — frank
jorndoe         
         
T Clark         
         In terms of scale, the greatest crimes of humanity against itself were during the 20th Century. — frank
T Clark         
         imagine if Torquemada had acquired logistics/resources we know of today, more power. I'm thinking cruelties would have been higher accordingly. — jorndoe
Vera Mont         
         crimes of humanity against itself — frank
jorndoe         
         
Tom Storm         
         Or maybe this view places too much importance on ideas. Maybe these events were the outcome of a multitude of diverse agendas.
Which makes more sense to you? — frank
Tzeentch         
         
frank         
         In the big picture, people have not changed. — BC
Yep — Banno
Humans are killer apes — Tom Storm
frank         
         Totalitarianism was a completely new phenomenon in the beginning of the 20th century, so it was not "business as usual" - something clearly changed.
Scientism may have played a role with its promise of final answers and singular truths. It is a way of thinking which is apparent in especially the Soviet system, where society as a whole was treated literally as a scientific equation with their planned economy. — Tzeentch
Tzeentch         
         
T Clark         
         "There are various estimates of the number of victims of the Spanish Inquisition during Torquemada's reign as Grand Inquisitor. Hernando del Pulgar, Queen Isabella's secretary, wrote that 2,000 executions took place throughout the entirety of her reign, which extended well beyond Torquemada's death.[20]" — jorndoe
T Clark         
         Humans are killer apes. :wink: If I had to guess, I'd say people had diverse reasons for doing vile things, mild and terrible, even within the one egregious phenomenon like Nazism. Perhaps a web of interrelated factors. But I think it's fair to say that tribalism and our obsession with identifying ultimate truth, whether it be in politics or religion, along with our ready willingness to kill to defend such truths, seems to be at the root of many of these matters. — Tom Storm
javi2541997         
         From what I could see, including in the Wikipedia article you linked, there are differences in opinion about how many died resulting from the inquisitions actions. I think there would be agreement that the numbers were much less than those killed in the conquest of the new world, which was taking place at about the same time. — T Clark
jorndoe         
         
Paine         
         That is an interesting question.And anomie? — BC
Tzeentch         
         From what I could see, including in the Wikipedia article you linked, there are differences in opinion about how many died resulting from the inquisitions actions. I think there would be agreement that the numbers were much less than those killed in the conquest of the new world, which was taking place at about the same time. — T Clark
Paine         
         That's what I was getting at. The particular kind of immorality that created the Holocaust, for instance, could it have been related to a weak moral anchor? — frank
If you are thinking of a Nietzschean narrative of nihilism from loss of faith, it is interesting to consider the intellectuals who were drawn to Naziism as a rejection of modern values that exclude a 'spiritual' life:
In April 1933, Heidegger took on the rectorship of Freiburg University, and joined the Nazi Party with great public fanfare the following month. He supported a political revolution which, he believed, by teaching the Germans discipline and an “instinct for the ultimate”, would prepare the way for a “deeper … spiritual” revolution. What this was really about, he insisted, was that “exposed to the most extreme questionableness of its own existence, this people [should] will … to be a spiritual people”. If the Party did not “sacrifice itself as a transitional phenomenon”, he grandly declared, but instead pretended to be “complete, eternal truth dropped from heaven”, it was “an aberration and a folly”.
The Notebooks document Heidegger’s increasingly bitter realization that Hitler and his chief ideologue Rosenberg wanted nothing to do with this idealism: Germanness, to them, was a matter of race and territory, not of spiritual destiny. — Judith Wolfe
Vera Mont         
         Or maybe this view places too much importance on ideas. Maybe these events were the outcome of a multitude of diverse agendas. — frank
Totalitarianism was a completely new phenomenon in the beginning of the 20th century, so it was not "business as usual" - something clearly changed. — Tzeentch
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