The Krakatoa erupted in the 19th century I think. Definitely not 535 AD...
And it's in Indonesia, hardly in the South Pacific...
And it's in Indonesia, hardly in the South Pacific...

Originally posted by Alcibiaties of Athenae
Why would an eruption in the South Pacific set off the modern world?
Originally posted by Bifrost
Well, why do I think west began 40000 year ago?
A desire to be free appeared with mankind simultaneously. For a very short period of time, everyone was really free - people formed some primitive societies, where they chose the leaders, defined the functions of each member..........everything except freedom is just a facade, just a decoration of the main idea.
BiFrost wrote:
I disagree with nearly everything that was said before.
My option is 'other'
West began approximately 40 thousands years ago.
Well, that's an extreme opinion. I'm going to play Devil's advocate for you, Brother BiFrost: If Freedom, which is clearly a critical ideological component of the modern West, is so important in human affairs and has always been, why haven't other civilizations become as obsessed with it as the West? The West (by my reckoning) is a fairly new civilization and was preceded by many civilizations that had achieved very considerable material and philosophical levels long before any English king signed any Great Charter, or before any bloated French king proclaimed "L'etat c'est moi!". Why didn't the Chinese, Indians, Mayans, or Akkadians develop an interest in the individual as a political and economic autonomous unit?
Originally posted by Vrylakas
Klazlo wrote:
The West is now a particular philosophy AND economic system and these two were connected around the 17th century.
This is a very convincing argument, Laci. I suspect for instance that the birth of the nation-state through the processes of the Protestant-Catholic wars from the Peace of Augsburg in 1555 to the celebrated Treaty of Westphalia is somehow tied to the true foundation of a "West".
And if you accept the Weberian argument, the age of the 'protestant ethic' would also be a good candidate. At least where more sociologists are running around...
Didn't Fichte write something about sociologists being the doom of Western Civilization...?![]()
Probably because America has a shorter history and Americans had originally come fr all over Europe and the world. They need something to tie the whole nation together; something beyond ethicity and only a short common history. 'American values' filled this need I think.Originally posted by Vrylakas
The English-speaking peoples have a peculiar history that is steeped like no other people in Europe in ideology, especially the Americans. The idea of something like an "Un-American Activities" committee in Poland or Germany is preposterous but it happened in the U.S. How does one not act Polish? By not being born Polish, I suppose. Americanness is derived from a belief system, not any innate qualities like a Continental European relies on. The English are inbetween on this, but certainly a staunch part of Englishness is a belief in the traditions of the British system. I'm not poking fun or criticizing, just observing.
OK....sorry, can't vouch for Knight-Dragon![]()