Richard Jernigan -> RE: Join The Greek Revolution (Jun. 28 2011 2:16:16)
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ORIGINAL: Ruphus Hi Richard, Your conclusion that humans just had to be the way they are, skips a couple of relevant items. # Parallel to chimpansees there has been the development of bonobos. Check them out to think of the correpsonding alternative to our cultural development. Indeed, I thought of the bonobos when I mentioned chimpanzees. We have been far more violent and hierarchical than the bonobos, so I thought chimpanzees the more apt reference. quote:
In concern of ancient examples of flat hierarchy and democratic society the Happara culture gives a very interesting example. Do you mean "Harappa"? Google doesn't turn up anything on "Happara". If you do mean "Harappa" I would point out that it is dangerous to draw conclusions about extinct civilizations from the remains of artifacts, buildings and civic works alone. The two leading pioneer scholars of the Mayan civilization, Sylvanus Morley and J. Eric S. Thompson in his earlier work influenced by Morley, portrayed the classic Maya as peaceful, artistic and scientific, in contrast to the bloodier empires of central Mexico. Once the Mayan script was deciphered and historical inscriptions could be read it was clear that warfare, conquest and the capture and sacrifice of prisoners was just as prevalent with the Maya as it was with other Mesoamerican cultures. The script of the Harappan civilization has never been deciphered. It seems to me that many ideas of Harappan culture are as much a projection of our own ideas and desires as they are deducible from firm evidence. quote:
There have also been ( and still exist ) other rather indigene examples like for instance with some North-American native tribes or populations on pacific islands, but as an urban example might be appearing more related, Happara makes a really valuable informational ressource. I wrote "large scale". quote:
While collecting supports for the idea of the inevtably evil, try to not cut corners on relevant details. I didn't say humans were evil. I meant to say that we are as we are, and we ought to take that into account. There is no "solution" to human hierarchy, and the exploitation of the lower members by the upper. What we need to do is to recognize the implications of hierarchy and the potential for exploitation, and to work constantly to keep the potential for abuses in check. quote:
What the economic prosperity in the US is concerned it must be taken into consideration that this was no closed economical cycle, but a cockaigne of affluence which just allowed enough crumbs for the undedogs. Starting with an occupied continent that was recklessly / thoughtlessly ferreted through like no other, going on with free slavery labour and finally with mineral ressources from half the world for close to nada until lately. With the fading of the free ressource stream from abroad after all ringing in the regression of the US household since the early eighties. You mistook my intention entirely. I was pointing out that the American electorate appears to be distracted from the seriousness of the present situation by the trappings of "prosperity", and also distracted from the implications of continuing on the present course. We are distracted by quite a few other things as well. quote:
If you wanted to conclude I didn't want to conclude any such thing. quote:
that a socially unbalanced situation like in the USA yet allowed economical prosperity for everyone there, a provide of a closed economical cycle in the first place would be needed; which there was none. Wholy, one would need to count in the international colateral damages of that prosperity, which again would illuminate the actual waste, clearing off, margin and destruction the US economizing represented in general terms. I am not totally unconscious. You are attacking a position I never advanced. quote:
Also, you could consider relativity. Brezhnev´s car collection could likely be aquired by just a handful of monthly incomes of e.g. a German nobody in parliament, not to mention dimensions of social and pecuniary discrepancy under capitalism. Besides of that I suppose that Brezhnev´s cars were states property that he could not take with him when resigned. I, on the other hand, suppose they belonged to him personally, and he took them with him. quote:
Same about differenciating essentials. Marxism ( whether -Leninism or whatever ) cannot be oligarchy by its very principles. In fact oligarchy and social-capitalism in the SU was one of the prime indicators that it was far from anything socialism. Precisely. quote:
That common yet obsolete myth about evil human nature is only keeping people from realizing actual options. I only wonder how sturdy that tale is. No matter what examples and hints be named, no matter what reports on scientifical background and latest scientifical works, which all make clear how such alleged "nature" is contradicting the actual precondition of humans ... People still keep following the superficial stereotype of selfish and short-sighted men by nature. You are the one bringing up myths of "evil", not I. Humans lie, cheat, steal, rape and murder. Does that make us "evil"? Or are these tendencies that we must work constantly to keep in check? Thinking that we had invented a "solution" to dishonesty, rape and murder would only distract us from the real problem. quote:
Is such meta really inevitable while pondering on a society of equal rights and cooperation? Yes. quote:
I think that your intelligent observations of actual handicaps like this: "The transformation of anti-colonial heroes into corrupt and violent oligarchs has proceeded with sorrowful regularity" are enough of alarming plot on their own to be intensively occupied with. In psychological and institutional sight, in question of how corruption works and what makes susceptible to it, is a very interesting, rich and progressive matter to deal with. - And one that is being dealt the least with. Or does anyone despite its urgent need see a broad and serious public discussion on cause & effect, hence prevention of curruption anywhere? Instead we are seeing constant coverings of corruptions iceberg tips, day in day out. I claim that there are so much more useful points to visit in place of resignation mantras like the myth of human´s evil nature. Where do you get all this "evil" stuff from? The example that I gave of those further back on the supply chain discriminating against those further along is not "evil". The people doing it are fine, friendly, respectable folk like you and me. I knew many of them at Kwajalein. I took them sailing on my boat and had a beer with them afterward. The position they were in just meant they had to be checked up on regularly. The checkout clerks at the store were required to use cash registers not because they were evil, but because experience taught it was the wise thing to do. quote:
Human nature, if you will, has before all made us possible for the ~ 7 mio years before those last 6000, with its actual quality partially resuming yet until today with certain cultures, and in everbody´s unconsciousness and drives. And if there be a tomorrow it will only be with us timely corresponding to our actual shaping; which again is everything but the chimpanzee low brow path of the unnatural status quo. Seriously, check out on actual observations of the social being of Bonobos, of surecatta ( if I´m spelling that right ), wolves, elephants, wales Wolves and elephants are both hierarchical and territorial. A functioning wolf pack is a rigid hierarchy. The alpha male is the absolute monarch. He determines the ranks of the other wolves, which in turn determines things like who gets to eat what and when. The second ranking pack member is always the alpha female. The alpha pair are the only wolves that get to have sex. Any surplus meat produced by the other wolves goes toward raising the alpha pair's offspring. Wolves are warriors in defending their own territory, and cooperate magnificently as predators. Wolves show affection and bonding play across ranks, building pack solidarity. They also show respect and fear to their superiors in rank. Wolves were the first animals we domesticated. I think it was because we understood them so well, and they understood us. Whales vary tremendously in their behavior patterns. I don't see where whale ethology instructs us on the distribution of property. They have none. Most of them are so big they don't need to actively defend their territories. There was at least one pod of pigmy sperm whales regularly sighted where I lived at Kwajalein and another one or more pods of pilot whales. They might be small enough to worry about competition from dolphins, who travel sometimes in huge pods. But almost nothing is known about the behavior of these smaller cetaceans. If we alter our focus just a bit to the whales' nearest relatives the dolphins, we find hierarchy, sexual dominance, territoriality, murder, rape, and in the case of the orcas, the top predators of the ocean. An orca was recently observed killing a large great white shark. I had the wonderful opportunity of observing dolphins close at hand for the 18 1/2 years I lived in the Central Pacific. I went diving and sailing almost every weekend. It was always an immense pleasure for us humans to meet the dolphins. They are tremendously intelligent, sociable and fun-loving. They clearly enjoyed both observing us and performing showoff stunts. After performing spectacular maneuvers and leaps, they would pop up and look us in the eye, as though to say, "What do you think of that?" After meeting the dolphins, everyone always had smiles on their faces. We all knew of the dolphins' darker side, but nobody ever thought they were evil. As for the bonobos, we turned out to be humans, not bonobos. Despite our imperfect adaptation to marriage, our sexual promiscuity pales into mere insignificance beside theirs. But ah, to be in high school again....[8D] quote:
Once it pulled you in, latest ( and some old but dismissed ) works on human imprint and social being will be just the more consequential and interesting. An informative overlook like that will on the other hand be making clear that property and power in our distorted cultures have become desperate means and compensation for something otherwise self-evident. Appreciation and affection. Something just immediate and essential / directly given under naturally humane circumstances. Humans in any culture seem quite capable of affection and appreciation for family, extended family, and even clan. But the large clans of Bali, with thousands of members island-wide, are hierarchically organized, and the upper echelons are better off than the lower. Larger groups than clans are uniformly organized as hierarchies, and the upper classes are better off than the lower. I worked for, and still own part of, a 35-person employee owned company. Due to the influence and constant care of one of the leading individuals, the company functioned like a happy family. We not only got along well, supported one another, and socialized together, we were actually good friends. It was an egalitarian group. Secretaries and the receptionist were treated with the same respect as the company president, or a member of the steering committee like me. Toward our competitors we were polite, ethical, honest and ruthless. I don't know of another company in the defense business as well admired and respected. quote:
Which we should rediscover to regain full intellectual and emotional capacity, and to prevent the ecological collapse. Human cultures are tremendously complex. We used to smugly look down on "primitive" societies. Many still do. But when we study these cultures closely, we find the same degree of complexity as in our own.To fully grasp any culture requires growing up in it under the tutelage of loving parents and expert teachers, and further years of adult experience. The cultures that have survived long enough to leave their mark on history have come about through evolution, not by the oversimplified invention of some "system". Attempts to implement invented systems resulted in the most violent century in human history, the one just preceding this one. Cultures can and should be improved by thoughtful modifications agreed to by the participants. The result will be gradual change for the better. Attempts at radical change have most often been met with violence. If gradual change is not quick enough to adapt to changing conditions, and enough people are made to feel pain, then violence will erupt again. The results are guaranteed to be unpredictable, whether the violence erupts spontaneously, or a violent revolution is carried out by a group with a plan for the improvement of mankind. quote:
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Let us work for peaceful evolution toward more just and egalitarian systems Yes, bro! :0) Ruphus All the best, RNJ
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