J Marwood wrote:Axel Pettersson wrote:I have not been able to follow this due to studies so excuse me if I jump straight in and fall short, but how come the article discussed here has changed its content since I first read it? editing is cool, but should it not be labelled to be so if it has been?
I would certainly think it should.
Either way, imho there is truly a western culture/western civilization (someting my generally social liberal pl sci professors has told me atleast, and usually in a appreciative tone, which I like), and it is not bound by geography but by ideas, whereby asking where, physically, this "western" exist makes no sense to me.
Thanks Axel, this is helpful. If 'The west' is defined by ideas rtaher than by geography, then what are these ideas? And from where do they come?
I am in no way a scholar in history first of all, and these suggestions are my own.
It doesn't have to be something wrong in that though, as "western" is what you decide to define it as. Geographicly you can define it in many ways, also historically and (as I do in this case) depending on different ideas and how they have been implemented.
Democracy to me is a distinctly Western idea. From Athens and forward in history. You can spot some form of democracy in the Italian city states during the rennaissance (though, the demos was not everyone but a specific group,between them they practiced forms of democracy) and then on through the Enlightenment. All this in Europe, which during this time (roughly) could be the elusive "West."
There are many kind of democracies though, and what we have in Sweden, or what there is in India, Brazil or the US has little in common with classical Athens (I wonder if they would aknowledge us as democratic at all, really).
This was something I could notice without putting it against other cultures. If I want to measure cultures when it comes to for example as written in the article (as I saw it first):
"... architecture, engineering, scientific and medical inquiry, philosophy, literature, music, theater, sculpture, painting, cuisine, sports, jurisprudence, military science, exploration, and so many other areas of the humanities."
I think I would have to be very much subjective, so much that I do not think I would be able to make a meaningfull discussion. That of cource is me, if others can argue that this kind of cuisine or art is superior to that, they of cource should.
Edit: The way I argue I can in no way say wether an idea is born western or adapted as western by showing where it came from geographicly, as I excluded Geography as a frame for defining the West. It is possible if you describe the culture it was developed in as western, of cource. Jesus is an emensly important figure nomatter how we chose to define "West", but the culture he was born in can hardly be described as Western (I leave that to the ones with knowledge)