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Old 08-30-2007, 08:05 AM   #31
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For all you Eurocentrists with your "Rome-good/Rome-bad" dichotomies, here are three Wiki paragraphs about the truly greastest civilisation of the period, namely China:

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The subsequent Han Dynasty ruled China between 206 BCE and 220 CE, and created a lasting Han cultural identity among its populace that would last to the present day. The Han Dynasty expanded China's territory considerably with military campaigns reaching Korea, Vietnam, Mongolia and Central Asia, and also helped establish the Silk Road in Central Asia.

After Han's collapse, another period of disunion followed, including the highly chivalric period of the Three Kingdoms. Independent Chinese states of this period also opened diplomatic relations with Japan, introducing the Chinese writing system there. In 580 CE, China was reunited under the Sui. However, the Sui Dynasty was short-lived after a failure in the Goguryeo-Sui Wars (598-614) weakened it.


A 10th or 11th century Longquan stoneware vase from Zhejiang province, during the Song Dynasty.Under the succeeding Tang and Song dynasties, Chinese technology and culture reached its zenith. The Song dynasty was the first government in world history to issue paper money and the first Chinese polity to establish a permanent standing navy. Between the 10th and 11th centuries, the population of China doubled in size. This growth came about through expanded rice cultivation in central and southern China, along with the production of abundant food surpluses. Within its borders, the Northern Song Dynasty had a population of some 100 million people. The Song Dynasty was a culturally rich period in China for the arts, philosophy, and social life. Landscape art and portrait paintings were brought to new levels of maturity and complexity since the Tang Dynasty, and social elites gathered to view art, share their own, and make trades of precious artworks. Philosophers such as Cheng Yi and Chu Hsi reinvigorated Confucianism with new commentary, infused Buddhist ideals, and emphasis on new organization of classic texts that brought about the core doctrine of Neo-Confucianism.
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Old 08-30-2007, 08:16 AM   #32
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What do you opine about the Byzantines? This discussion is one sided towards western Europe. After the fall of Rome and before the crusades, Constantinople was the best place to be (and they were Orth. Xpian BTW).
Of course, Byzantium was the place to be 5th - 11th centuries. It is a great pity that the two most romantic settings in the world are Venice and Constantinople and that the former was pretty much responcible for the destruction of the latter.

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Read chapter one of God's Philosophers: How the Medieval World Laid the Foundations of Modern Science
Westerners were always scoundrels as compared to the Greeks, pre or post Rome, until the end of WWII, then a little better after decolonization (the French in Argelia were terrible), and much better after the cold war (until GWB).

I remember Francisco de Goya y Lucientes, the Spaniard, did a painting called "El sueño de la razón engendra monstruos" = "The dream of reason begets monsters", referring to the Napoleonic invasions and the French discourse of reason much abused by them. I believe an awful lot of things Westerners touched became "monsters", including their religion. We remember the inquisitions, the wars of religion, the murderous and torturing intolerance in the name of God and we don't want to forget. Religion does beget good and bad, and I don't think science is the brainchild of religion, but many scientists had to rationalize their love for truth-from-observation under religious guises, some for love of their lives, and others from simple cognitive dissonance. Now they don't have to, now they're free to be or not be religious and they tend to be choosing a farewell to the deity.
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Old 08-30-2007, 08:24 AM   #33
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For all you Eurocentrists with your "Rome-good/Rome-bad" dichotomies, here are three Wiki paragraphs about the truly greastest civilisation of the period, namely China:
Frankly most places were greater than western Europe of the time. In fact science and philosophy were better under the muslims in Spain than after they kicked them out, in great part because of mandatory Catholicism and their paranoia.

I agree with muslims in one thing at least: Christianity is all splintered up because of their amazingly complicated theology, and the efforts authorities have to do to keep folks in line with orthodoxy because of it.

Yes, we do owe a lot to Christianity. If it hadn't been that complicated and incoherent, modern science might have taken longer to flourish (we may point towards the broken geography of Europe as another powerful cause).
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Old 08-30-2007, 08:25 AM   #34
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Byzantium was a backwater compared to Beijing
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Old 08-30-2007, 08:28 AM   #35
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Westerners were always scoundrels as compared to the Greeks, pre or post Rome, until the end of WWII, then a little better after decolonization (the French in Argelia were terrible), and much better after the cold war (until GWB).
"Scoundrels "maybe but you have to admit that these "Western scoundrels " were able to do something that the "more sophisticated" Greeks were unable to do.
Namely create a long lasting Empire that for all its' faults still has an influence today.
Alexander the Greats "empire" rapidly disintegrated into chaos and in-fighting between his generals and while the Roman Empire did have it's Civil Wars in spite of this remained recognizably Roman, whereas the empire Alexander created in the East became several fractured smaller empires.
In fact I would go further and say that it was very much the "cross pollination" of Greek AND Roman (Western scoundrelish) culture that enabled the Eastern Byzantine Empire to survive for as long as it did .
(Please note I am not in any way "attacking Greek culture " I obviously know of the huge debt that Roman culture had to the Greeks)
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Old 08-30-2007, 08:42 AM   #36
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Look, I love to beat a horse demised so... The Romans had a fine empire which collapsed under the weight of it's own inertia, Greek Civilisation and Hebrew Religious culture forms the basis of western culture. Byzantium carried the torch of Western Civilization until passing it Renaissance Europe.
The Christianized barbarians of Western Europe were just that, babaric, uncouth, superstitious. Their culture had some nice medeival moments (usually adorned with rapine and destruction, owing to their barbaric roots) but so many learned persons on this thread seem totally oblivious to THE CHINESE CULTURE...whose continuous (if intermittant dynastic) march of invention, conquest, innovation and spleandor rivals, at least, and probably surpasses all the achievements of any of the aforementioned cultural hegemonies.
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Old 08-30-2007, 08:48 AM   #37
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Enoch it's not so much that we are denigrating Chinese culture but rather the fact that in discussing a particular period in Western history it is completely irrelevant ,not that I am saying that in the overall history of the world that Chinese culture is insignificant.
Just that it is meaningless in this context the same way that if we were discussing Chinese culture then the works of Tacitus would be an irrelevance
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Old 08-30-2007, 08:50 AM   #38
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so many learned persons on this thread seem totally oblivious to THE CHINESE CULTURE...whose continuous (if intermittant dynastic) march of invention, conquest, innovation and spleandor rivals, at least, and probably surpasses all the achievements of any of the aforementioned cultural hegemonies.
Yes. The really odd thing is that modern science arose in Christian Western Europe in the sixteenth/seventeenth centuries and not in China. Why the Chinese never developed science is one of the great unanswered questions of history. Even Joseph Needham didn't seem to know, although he tenditively blames their metaphysics.

Best wishes

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Old 08-30-2007, 08:56 AM   #39
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The really odd thing is that modern science arose in Christian Western Europe in the sixteenth/seventeenth centuries and not in China. Why the Chinese never developed science is one of the great unanswered questions of history. Even Joseph Needham didn't seem to know, although he tenditively blames their metaphysics.
Unanswered? What about the Greeks?
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Old 08-30-2007, 09:10 AM   #40
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Unanswered? What about the Greeks?
Well, they certainly didn't develop modern science, if that is what you mean.

But why not is another great unanswered question.

Like the Chinese they seemed to have blind spots which meant their undoubtedly impressive achievements were not developed into the admittedly difficult conceptual framework which allows modern science to form. The divorce between mathematics and natural philosophy, the lack of much experiment and their beholdenness to Aristotelain dogma all seemed to hold them back. Also, the tiny number of Greek philosophers and the lack of any official program in the subject was another serious problem that meant the subject didn't develop critical mass.

Best wishes

James

Read chapter one of God's Philosophers: How the Medieval World Laid the Foundations of Modern Science
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