The point being that to apply the word "state" to these ancient governments, when you clearly meant it in the modern sense, is wrong because they are not what we understand states in the modern sense to be. — Benkei
Here is where we find for the first time the feeling of "nationalism" I belong to x State because my identity, culture, customs, language were born here — javi2541997
But I think it is just another trap. — javi2541997
Yes, probably today we will not die in our works for the conditions or lack of rights — javi2541997
Nevertheless, this is organisation is so secret that we cannot clearly put historical information on the table and then prove it. This is why is full of truths and myths/legends. — javi2541997
The spirit of the salon is further from Max Stirner than from Jessica Fletcher ... thankfully. — Miguel Hernández
Masonry — javi2541997
The "state" is a 15th century concept. — Benkei
They changed the way of thinking but not the role since the Roman Empire. — javi2541997
I disagree. — Valentinus
And he more or less accepted that he was guilty as charged. — Valentinus
They use the term "people of color" a lot in the news over the last few years, but usually it is in the context of African-Americans. What makes the terms "people of color" different from "colored people" which is more derogatory? And isn't using a racial term that so directly emphasizes skin color a particularly divisive category? I'm a white guy and it just seems a bit offensive to call one or two groups of people "people of color" when all along I never thought of myself as albino. Aren't we all "people of color?" — TiredThinker
Elites always have been one of the troubles that we the citizens have to face in the government. When you deposit your vote in an urn you think you are doing it to change the government for better. Nevertheless the reality is so different. We have to face some interests or powers that are literally occult from our eyes.
Exactly in this point we can point some classical organisations as Elites: richest, lords, masons, etc... — javi2541997
"belonging to the very distant past and no longer in existence" is a useful definition when the word is used FORMALLY.
The Roman Empire is ancient, because it is in the distant past AND it no longer exists. The Papacy is not ancient because, even though it is, what--1500 years old [becoming more significant after the collapse of the RE around 500 AD]--it is still very much in existence. The League of Nations is not ancient. While it no longer exists, it was founded only 100 years ago. — Bitter Crank
Athens was a polis. — Benkei
It is rather limited if people do view history as if people in the past were always in worse conditions. — Jack Cummins
There were difficult periods, such as th, but there were great civilisations in the past, especially the Romans, Greeks and Egyptians. — Jack Cummins
If history and anthropology were the same disciplines, why would we teach them separately? Doesn't history teach more than just about humans? — TaySan
But is due to about how complex the society is. — javi2541997
- can you provide any examples where a robust egoist system has been achieved or close to being achieved? — Tom Storm
“Society is produced by our wants and government by our wickedness; the former promotes our happiness positively by uniting our affections, the latter negatively by restraining our vices”. — NOS4A2
Athens had a democratic form of government. Athens wasn't a state. — Benkei
I wish one day we can say we are allowed to live in individualism. — javi2541997
Karl Marx — javi2541997
I am a Hobbsian. — Tom Storm
but I am a bit troubled by your use of the word, 'perversity'. — Jack Cummins
At the moment, it appears to me to be rather abstract. — Jack Cummins
Not sure I follow this. Can you express this via an example in action even if theoretical. — Tom Storm
I would say selfishness, fear, balance and moderation into the nature of humankind. Every citizen wants to be "free" but how free? This is when the government appears.
The system of "rule of law" will limit us in the behaviour inside of the state. Therefore, the government wants to put limits in our nature. — javi2541997
We may be talking about the top of the hierarchy of power, especially those who make the decisions. — Jack Cummins
This statement presumes that success in interactions is bilateral. — simeonz
I am not going to be a security guard and escort them out, if they found their way in here they can find their own way out.
And that goes for anyone that thinks that this place should either live up to its name or change it. — Sir2u
Some people don't recognize a joke when it falls on their head. — Sir2u
To anyone who feels dissatisfied with the forum I have a word of advice.
The exit door is the same size as the entrance door, should not not have any problems passing through either. Just do everyone else a favor while passing through. — Sir2u
If happiness results in sadness, why be happy? — synthesis
On the grounds of what do you think that our philosophical resistance is not futile in the long run? — baker
You speak of the fall of civilisation of Rome, but there may have been civilisations and cycles long before this. — Jack Cummins
Atlantis — Jack Cummins
So all our philosophical resistance is futile. — baker
"That modern secular individuals are prone to cling on to beliefs about science, in the same way that their ancestors turned to the gods, carries no judgment on the value of science as a method but simply highlights the human motivation to believe." — Pantagruel
An interesting point of view but the way I see it, the world's technology is known to only a small segment of humanity, there maybe, at the most, only a few million (scientists, technologists, machinists, roboticists) of us who can, if forced to, rebuild the technological infrastructure from scratch and I haven't even mentioned those involved in the supply chain of raw materials; the rest, the majority, know next to nothing about technology. The chances are, if a global catastrophe does occur, those who survive will be technologically illiterate and hence the stone age scenario is a real possibility. — TheMadFool
in short, asteroid impacts and nuclear holocausts bring about their effects suddenly instead of gradually like how it happened in the past. — TheMadFool
terms of harmony, equilibrium with one's environment, we get an F. — TheMadFool
It appears that, the way I see it, a certain level of destructive ability or power if you will, once attained and used, the past and the future are identical. There's a reflection symmetry between the past and the future, the line of symmetry being the ultimate world-ending weapon or event if one takes into consideration such things as giant asteroids. In our case, according to some, nuclear weapons have the power to, well, "...send us back to the stone age..." i.e. at the moment we unleash all atomic weapons, the future will resemble the past, humanity's future would be indistinguishable from its past - stone age. — TheMadFool
religions — baker