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JeanryChandler wrote:After reading "Barbarians", a new twist on Hansens idea presents itself. Namely, if we accept the premise that there was something unique about Western culture which led to military victories, (and not just random locations of metals and germs) where do the true roots of the uniquely resilliant and innovative Western heritage really lie, in the Greeks and then the Romans as Hansen suggests, and as we have traditionally been taught, or among the Germans, the Celts, and the other "Barbarians" of Europe, who seem to have actually pioneered so much of the technology the Romans took credit for and incorporated into their military machine, and perhaps more importantly, held on longer to certain key cultural traditons (i.e. democracy and decentralization).
JR
Will Adamson wrote:I was taught that the Romans took elements they liked from the cultures they encountered, and that they didn't invent much past concrete. Of course this was from someone who specializes in the Minoans.
Jake_Norwood wrote:Mozart, arguably the greatest composer of "classical" music, likewise invented nothing but merged and improved upon existing musical concepts. I think the Romans did just that--they were good at amalgamation, organization, and were perfectly willing to take a good idea that wasn't their own and run with it for their own improvement.
Jake
Jake_Norwood wrote:Mozart, arguably the greatest composer of "classical" music, likewise invented nothing but merged and improved upon existing musical concepts. I think the Romans did just that--they were good at amalgamation, organization, and were perfectly willing to take a good idea that wasn't their own and run with it for their own improvement.
Jake
Jake_Norwood wrote:Bach, if I'm not mistaken, was a Baroque composer. Though yes, I prefer him to Mozart. Not that any of that was my point...
[wanders back on topic]
While I think that Terry Jones' findings are important--and taking this with a grain of salt since I haven't read his book yet--I think we should also remember that he is no more likely to be 100% correct than any other. While I'm sure that some of his conclusions about the Romans are true, I also recognize that he's got an agenda, same as anyone else.
The Romans accomplished a number of large-scale technological feats that still stand...something the celts, etc., did not. That's pretty solid.
Jake
Gene Tausk wrote:The Roman legal code was among the first (if not the first, but certainly don't quote me on this), to separate the idea of religion and law. Law became a secular concept and in theory, no Roman citizen was above the law.
This became the heart of the Western legal code (Anglo-American and Continental) which created, arguably, the first legal code which defended individual rights. This is a
The Romans answered this question for us 1000's of years ago and those of us living in the Western world should all be grateful.
Democracy as we know it is also a Western invention, from the Greeks.
There is a big difference between the elders of the tribe sitting around the campfire and deciding by vote what is good for the tribe and having thousands of people elect representatives by being classified as a citizen of a republic and voting.

Also, there are many reasons for the fall of the Western Empire and blaming it on the emperors is somewhat shortsited.
Also, Roman construction was the best of its kind. There are still Roman roads in use in Romania on which cars can be driven. Not bad for 2000 year old technology. No Celtic monument can compete with this.
This is not "bragging" (I am not a Roman so I have nothing about which to brag on this part), it is the evidence.
Democracy as we know it is also a Western invention, from the Greeks.
There is a big difference between the elders of the tribe sitting around the campfire and deciding by vote what is good for the tribe and having thousands of people elect representatives by being classified as a citizen of a republic and voting.
Also, Roman construction was the best of its kind. There are still Roman roads in use in Romania on which cars can be driven. Not bad for 2000 year old technology. No Celtic monument can compete with this.
Trial by jury is not an exclusively Norse concept. It goes back further than this and is a tribal custom in many societies. We get our modern ideas of jury trials from English law, which was, of course, influenced by Germanic law.
However, what you are describing as "trial by jury" often meant trial by combat or trial by a selection of elders of a tribe or clan, hardly a trial of jury by ones peers. What we understand as "trial by jury" which is a trial by ones peers goes back to England.
Did they have a representative system of government whereby citizens of a state (and the word "citizen" is a term of art developed by the Greeks and Romans and their idea of "citizenship" is strikingly similar to ours) could elect representatives?
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