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Mike Sega wrote:But the point of the article is to also see the ideas that led the Spartans, with all of their flaws, to willingly throw themselves at impossible odds. We can see this in many people using many thought processes in justifying it. Here, we can see the noble ideas that connect to our own values in our Western Civilization. Does this mean that the same values are not held by say individuals in China now? No. it just means that we can see a continuum, and that the good in the 300 sacrificing themselves for the better of their society is good. Western Civilization has put together a lot that is honorable, and being the work of humans, a lot that isn't. But we strive that the sum tally is on the plus side. That is the bar we should strive for. And no, the Spartan society was not ideal. Slavery is an abomination.
You know, Great Great Great .....Grandpa did many things I do not agree with. Many things he didn't know about. But he did do some things very well that I can admire him for.
John_Clements wrote:Is it just me, or does it seem like a certain loss of "cultural confidence" in some of our colleagues affects their ability to see certain things in terms of the historical values, ethics, morals, pride, honor, and the positive influences these things had on the fighting men who developed and practiced the combatives we now study?
It seems as if some of them hold disdain for the very culture they want to dress up and play fight within. It would explain a lot.
Mr Clements has still to provide any justification for his claim that Turkey cannot claim decent from Greece, that "Western Civilization alone produced the concepts of scientific inquiry, religious tolerance, individual liberty, economic freedom, and the rule of law" and the other points that Ms Boyden raised.
...
we can revisit this topic and look at exactly what has come to us directly from ancient Greece, what came from other cultures and what was created from scratch but inspired by older cultures, such as the ancient mediterraneans.
Christopher Eastwood wrote:If the only thing you care about is martial arts, then why study with ARMA? There must be some affinity you have for the Western aspect of the group. John, as our fearless leader, is merely reminding us to take pride in that western aspect.
ARMA is a lone voice in the world and so it is incumbent upon us to take up the call to stand up for the qualities in our art and in the culture that spawned it in the face of those who would dismiss it and denigrate the entirety of the western world to nothing more than a silly group of "rich, white men" who exhibited unwarranted arrogance. That is what led to the loss of this art form in the first place: ignoring the virtues of the past in favor of the fads of the present.
Martin_Wilkinson wrote:ARMA is a lone voice?
You're saying that ARMA is the only HEMA group out there?
Martin_Wilkinson wrote:ARMA is a lone voice?
You're saying that ARMA is the only HEMA group out there?
david welch wrote:Martin_Wilkinson wrote:ARMA is a lone voice?
You're saying that ARMA is the only HEMA group out there?
They are one of the only ones that would have the balls to run this article.
Nice change from the "Western Civ: does it exist, and if, should we bother to defend it?" you see in most of academia.
John_Clements wrote:...apparently when a “white guy” dares writing in general about his heritage and culture he is typically accused of ethnocentrism, xenophobia, political in-correctness and even racism
John_Clements wrote:I cannot fathom that someone could pursue interest in "historical Western martial arts" but be unable to understand what that "historical Western" is???
JC
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