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david welch wrote:Do you have to use such rampant ethnocentrism?
Can't you just enjoy other cultures without having to tear the west down?
John_Clements wrote:Yes, you are probably right, Stewart. But you know, it's often by contrasting ourselves that we better define ourselves. Sometimes you just have to say, "this is what I'm not" so that you can then say what you are. And sometimes you also have to say, "hey, I'm different, I'm special in ways and here's why."
I'm not the least insulted if someone following, say, Confucian values and Chinese culture tells me how and why they are different or believe they are better in some way. That's their prerogative. I know what my own culture's values are and what its heritage means to me, so how could I be offended?
John_Clements wrote:Sorry, but we have a little thing called an "editorial" and "free speech" in our country. If you disagree, go write your own editorial. I make no apology for pride in the achievements and values of my culture and heritage. If it makes you feel differently that's your issue and perhaps you shouldn't be on a website devoted to celebrating it.
What I claimed was that this article is filled with unfounded generalizations that have no basis in historical fact, and I think I have shown that fairly clearly
Mike Cartier wrote:you have shopwne nothing of the sort to me, i see you grapsing desperatly at isolated facts to somehow make your own generalization about Western culture being no different or in fact inferior to others.
I don't know why people have to get so pissy if you simply try express some apprecioation of what our ancestors did. Why is that such a horrible thing?
Andrew Jackson wrote:I don't know why people have to get so pissy if you simply try express some apprecioation of what our ancestors did. Why is that such a horrible thing?
The "horrible thing" is to claim that group A are better than group B because they did something laudable, when in fact it was group C (or even group B) that did it.
For example: "The Isle of Wight is a great place, as evidenced by Stonehenge".
John_Clements wrote:As I wrote, historical role-play reenactment efforts quite often result in creating a certain bubble that encircles and strives to isolate a period or era out of the lager story of Western civilization as if to imagine it somehow existed complete on its own, rather than aspects of it having been absorbed, surpassed, or extinguished over generations. The arguable lack of emphasis on the Western Humanities within higher education nowadays only aggravates this. There is the need then to draw, as it were, a “larger circle” around things by making some generalizations about just what elements define the civilization of the “West.”
The issue being missed here is that martial arts were never practice in a cultural or moral vacuum. We cannot ignore this fact. Asian martial arts typically don't and I expect no less for ours.
If my editorial commemorating the 300 Spartans and linking their actions to a larger tradition to consider in perspective, then all the better.
JC
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