Cumulative PM-based History Quiz II

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I'm not qualified anyway as the holder of the last quiz, but since you lust so much after attention: It seems to be a very interesting, but also very challenging quiz. If this were the researchable quiz, one could try to find some things out. But only from reading the questions, the only thing I got in my mind for many of them was 'no idea'. But luckily I'm freed from the duty to take part anyway ;)
 
I'm sorry but I disagree with those heaping praises on this latest quiz and many of you will probably moan as you read this. I don't care. It's worth making the point.

Luceafarul, the questions in your quiz are no doubt excellently put, covering many ages, question formats and so on. But as is so often the case with these quizzes, quite Eurocentric. In this particular case, totally. Is it any wonder that more people don't play these quizzes? Wonder why quiz masters have to PM people to get them to play? It's one big reason why I don't take part more often. I don't mind losing, as many of my entries have shown, but I do mind feasting on the same historical and geographical diet each and every question and in the majority of PM quizzes.

I just want to politely remind you guys that this is supposed to be an international forum.

Let me put it another way for you Luc. By focussing on such geography and culture you only help the PM quiz elite get 'richer', whilst those without a European cultural upbringing and education simply get 'poorer', condemned to watch through the window in the cold whilst the PM quiz elite feast on dishes they can only dream of.

I know I'm a terrible ranter when it comes to these quizzes. But the point is worth making again. And I was educated in England!
 
That's a valid point, and it is important to mention. The problem with non-European questions posted by Europeans is, however, that we - well, I can only speak for myself, so I - that I'm struggling to estimate the difficulty level of non-Western questions. I actually had some ideas for non-European questions in my own quiz, but I didn't know enough in order to evaluate them. So instead of risking to post a question that might be far too easy, or far too hard, I decided to go with questions I knew that could be solved with a certain amount of knowledge/research.

It all boils down to this: in order to formulate a balanced question about a certain topic, you have to have a quite profound knowledge about this topic. And I think it is quite natural that we all know more about the history of our country (region, continent,...) than about "the rest".

Now we can all start blaming our educational systems for being close-minded, but the point I actually wanted to made is that people like me, who don't have a balanced knowledge of world history, have to decide between making a quiz whose difficulty level I can "control", or making a quiz that is geographically balanced, but whose question might be ridicilous hard or very, very boring.

I decided to go with the former, but I'll admit that I could have been more creative.

sydhe just posted a question about ancient Chinese history in the Military Pictionary Game. It was a very good question, but still, he had no takers.
 
Rambuchan said:
I'm sorry but I disagree with those heaping praises on this latest quiz and many of you will probably moan as you read this. I don't care. It's worth making the point.
I said I wanted constructive critique, so I am just grateful for what you write here.

Luceafarul, the questions in your quiz are no doubt excellently put, covering many ages, question formats and so on. But as is so often the case with these quizzes, quite Eurocentric. In this particular case, totally. Is it any wonder that more people don't play these quizzes? Wonder why quiz masters have to PM people to get them to play? It's one big reason why I don't take part more often. I don't mind losing, as many of my entries have shown, but I do mind feasting on the same historical and geographical diet each and every question and in the majority of PM quizzes.
OK, fair enough. Let's have a look at your claims:
1. It is "Eurocentric". OK, guilty as charged. And so am I. My foremost expertise in history is about topics mostly European. Perhaps I for personal reasons had to make it simple for myself this time.

2. If it wasn't, many others would participate.
This forum is for a large part about military history. This forum has a whole quiz about ww2. If I did a forum search on Hitler, I would have reading material until the middle of next week. It is not annoyingly many threads about non-European topics, but for a couple of excellent articles by yourself and some of Knightdragoons webfinds.
I think your assumption here is wrong. At least, I would like some verification of this claim.

3. I am "serving the same diet" every time.
I am not full of myself, but I think it would benefit you to have a look at some of the quizes before I started to get involved in it. No fancy stuff, no pictures, quite a lot of things martial.
This claim I simply resent.

4. It is not educational.
I think that is up to each and every individual to decide. It might also be appropriate to point out that "Europe" is not only England, Germany and France and that many does not have such a superb knowledge about smaller countries, my own included.

Let me put it another way for you Luc. By focussing on such geography and culture you only help the PM quiz elite get 'richer', whilst those without a European cultural upbringing and education simply get 'poorer', condemned to watch through the window in the cold whilst the PM quiz elite feast on dishes they can only dream of.
See above. I find that image not very fitting.
Except for early modern Europe, I specialized in labour and social history. While many here sees great people,ideas, cultural struggles, etc as the driving forces in history, for me it is first and foremost, but not only that, the struggle between the classes.
Where you see a high degree of Eurocentrism as a problem,and I agree to a certain extent in this, I see as a huge problem that so few know or are interested in the history of those who were not great kings, artists, scientists disregarding what country or continent they came from, those whose unrewarded toil made it possible for those few to be glamour figures. Consequently I tried to incorporate some of this in my quizes, but what I got of reactions was rather sour. Then I decided that the customer is always right, and cut it out. If you prefer, I could have filled my quiz with Latin American labour history instead, but I think that people wouldn't have been forming any long cue to be a part of that.
I know I'm a terrible ranter when it comes to these quizzes. But the point is worth making again. And I was educated in England!
No problem. Like I said I appreciate constructive critiscism. But being negative is not always being right. This time I think you hit well with some , but not all. However, the discussion is worthwhile.:)

El_Tigre said:
That's a valid point, and it is important to mention. The problem with non-European questions posted by Europeans is, however, that we - well, I can only speak for myself, so I - that I'm struggling to estimate the difficulty level of non-Western questions. I actually had some ideas for non-European questions in my own quiz, but I didn't know enough in order to evaluate them. So instead of risking to post a question that might be far too easy, or far too hard, I decided to go with questions I knew that could be solved with a certain amount of knowledge/research.

It all boils down to this: in order to formulate a balanced question about a certain topic, you have to have a quite profound knowledge about this topic. And I think it is quite natural that we all know more about the history of our country (region, continent,...) than about "the rest".

Now we can all start blaming our educational systems for being close-minded, but the point I actually wanted to made is that people like me, who don't have a balanced knowledge of world history, have to decide between making a quiz whose difficulty level I can "control", or making a quiz that is geographically balanced, but whose question might be ridicilous hard or very, very boring.

I decided to go with the former, but I'll admit that I could have been more creative.

sydhe just posted a question about ancient Chinese history in the Military Pictionary Game. It was a very good question, but still, he had no takers.
Some good points here.
Sorry also if this became a bit messy. I was just about to log out when I decided to take a last look at the thread to post sydhe's result. He scored 10 p, so the bright burning tiger is still leading. If what I wrote is too hopeless, I will come back to it tomorrow.
Now I wish you all a good evening.
 
Luceafarul: Oh dear, I had a feeling you may overreact to my comments. That's how I see your post. I'm sorry if I caused you any distress or discomfort. My comments were regarding the quizzes in general, not just yours. Although this particular one does fall in line with my general complaint. It's only one aspect of it that I'm griping about anyway, the rest of it is truly tremendous. :goodjob:

I don't really want to go off on another thread jacking debate about these quizzes. Believe it or not I'm just as fed up of seeing this rising up again as many in this thread probably are. So I'll just respond to your post and then leave the matter behind. It's all meant to be a fun anyway right!?
Spoiler my response for thread neatness :

1. It is "Eurocentric". OK, guilty as charged. And so am I. My foremost expertise in history is about topics mostly European. Perhaps I for personal reasons had to make it simple for myself this time.
I appreciate you may have had to make it simple for yourself this time around. Fair enough. I don't see it as simple btw. I also appreciate that you and most participants are European and that more depth is achieved in Eurocentric quizzes because that is where the expertise lies. But then see the next point.
2. If it wasn't, many others would participate.
This forum is for a large part about military history. This forum has a whole quiz about ww2. If I did a forum search on Hitler, I would have reading material until the middle of next week. It is not annoyingly many threads about non-European topics, but for a couple of excellent articles by yourself and some of Knightdragoons webfinds.
I think your assumption here is wrong. At least, I would like some verification of this claim.
Well the verification of the claim is provided quite simply by the low number and confined geographical location of the quiz participants. There are actually quite a few highly erudite East and South Asian, Latin American, Persian and Middle Eastern posters around (mainly in C&C). Do their names appear in the quizzes with any frequency? Sadly not. Perhaps if more balance was provided in the quizzes and some luring or awareness exercises for these posters took place then maybe, just maybe, there would be the total verification you seek.
3. I am "serving the same diet" every time.
I am not full of myself, but I think it would benefit you to have a look at some of the quizes before I started to get involved in it. No fancy stuff, no pictures, quite a lot of things martial.
This claim I simply resent.
This is the overraction I mentioned. I'm not making any assault on your good name as a quiz master at all. I'm making an assualt on the very nature, 'tradition' and cultural focus of these quizzes. I'm well aware that you've done a great deal to refresh the format. Well aware.
4. It is not educational.
I think that is up to each and every individual to decide. It might also be appropriate to point out that "Europe" is not only England, Germany and France and that many does not have such a superb knowledge about smaller countries, my own included.
I did not say it isn't educational.
I find that image not very fitting.
To continue the analogy: Those at the heaped luxurious dining table rarely tend to see it from the other side of the fancy restaurant window. Just think of someone, well steeped in history but was educated in say Brazil or Malaysia, and consider what they make of these quizzes.

I appreciate also that a quiz entirely about Latin American labour relations would get very few participants but clearly I'm not calling for that at all. Just a litte more balance and variety.

If you want to come back please feel free. I would suggest we don't go off on another massive debate about it though, it does ruin the thread somewhat. But you're quiz master!
 
Rambuchan said:
Luceafarul: Oh dear, I had a feeling you may overreact to my comments. That's how I see your post. I'm sorry if I caused you any distress or discomfort. My comments were regarding the quizzes in general, not just yours. Although this particular one does fall in line with my general complaint. It's only one aspect of it that I'm griping about anyway, the rest of it is truly tremendous. :goodjob:

I don't really want to go off on another thread jacking debate about these quizzes. Believe it or not I'm just as fed up of seeing this rising up again as many in this thread probably are. So I'll just respond to your post and then leave the matter behind. It's all meant to be a fun anyway right!?
Spoiler my response for thread neatness :

I appreciate you may have had to make it simple for yourself this time around. Fair enough. I don't see it as simple btw. I also appreciate that you and most participants are European and that more depth is achieved in Eurocentric quizzes because that is where the expertise lies. But then see the next point.
Well the verification of the claim is provided quite simply by the low number and confined geographical location of the quiz participants. There are actually quite a few highly erudite East and South Asian, Latin American, Persian and Middle Eastern posters around (mainly in C&C). Do their names appear in the quizzes with any frequency? Sadly not. Perhaps if more balance was provided in the quizzes and some luring or awareness exercises for these posters took place then maybe, just maybe, there would be the total verification you seek.
This is the overraction I mentioned. I'm not making any assault on your good name as a quiz master at all. I'm making an assualt on the very nature, 'tradition' and cultural focus of these quizzes. I'm well aware that you've done a great deal to refresh the format. Well aware.
I did not say it isn't educational.
To continue the analogy: Those at the heaped luxurious dining table rarely tend to see it from the other side of the fancy restaurant window. Just think of someone, well steeped in history but was educated in say Brazil or Malaysia, and consider what they make of these quizzes.

I appreciate also that a quiz entirely about Latin American labour relations would get very few participants but clearly I'm not calling for that at all. Just a litte more balance and variety.

If you want to come back please feel free. I would suggest we don't go off on another massive debate about it though, it does ruin the thread somewhat. But you're quiz master!
I don't have time for it right now, but I will respond to this later.
Now I just want to make it clear that I in no way am offended, distressed or discomforted, i don't think I overreacted, and I believe my response was rational and polite.
I also don't want any long debate about this, at least not in this thread.
However, I just want you to reflect on this:
Do you think that it is possible to see history in other dimensions than the cultural or geographical one?

I will also announce that we have a new leader, Asclepius scores 15 p.
 
Newsflash: Oryctolagus comes in as equal second with 11 p.
So a rabbit is of equal strength with a tiger...:lol:
 
At least for a little while, the tiger adds 2 p to his score and threatened to return (and return and return) so watch out, O Great God of Medicine and Healing.
A scoreboard might be in place:

Asclepius 15
El_Tigre 13
Oryctolagus 11
sydhe 10
Taliesin 10
Till 6

So it is a tight contest, and consider the relatively modest scores, room at the top.
Some of you might also be interested in this: http://forums.civfanatics.com/showthread.php?t=153505
 
And we have a new leader!
Our foremost expert on everything Roman, Ciceronian leaps in front with 19 p.
I have received more than one request for providing hints on certain of the questions. If nobody wil present the correct answers on those in the next few days, i will do excatly that.
 
Not much has happened recently, just El_Tigre reaching equal second with 15 p.
I will probably post a few hints next week for the trickier questions.
 
And Oryctolagus jumps (pardon the pun) to joint second place with being the first to find out who it is asked for in #1, as well as picking up an additional point elsewhere, thus landing on 15 p.
 
Seems like my high score has discouraged any more submissions. :mischief: And without me at the top, we could have three winners - three people on 15 points at the moment. Wouldn't this quiz be much more exciting without me? ;)
 
luceafarul said:
And a nylon stocking or a Dubya mask...
Did Christmas turn out to be such a great strain on your economicy?:lol:

I was thinking more like: totally scattered, I could hit the proverbial barn door and it would be pure chance if I blew the hinges off. Quite lethal on close range though.

@ Ciceronian: yes, you should always wait until the last day before you submit. :D
 
Ciceronian said:
Seems like my high score has discouraged any more submissions. :mischief: And without me at the top, we could have three winners - three people on 15 points at the moment. Wouldn't this quiz be much more exciting without me? ;)
Perhaps you are right, but personally I very much appreciate your participation.
On the other hand, Oryctolagus closes in, he now has reached 19. this could still be exciting. Tiger however, seems to have run out of fuel.

thetrooper said:
I was thinking more like: totally scattered, I could hit the proverbial barn door and it would be pure chance if I blew the hinges off. Quite lethal on close range though.
trooper you old dog you:lol:

@ Ciceronian: yes, you should always wait until the last day before you submit. :D
Like I usually do...:D
 
So the deadline has arrived, and since interest petered out I close this one and have the great pleasure to congratulate my friend Ciceronian with a great performance[party] :goodjob: :beer:

Final scores:
Ciceronian 26 :king:
Oryctolagus 19
Asclepius 15
El_Tigre 15
sydhe 10
Taliesin 10
Till 6

So let me thanks all of you who took the time and trouble to submit, I think you all performed excellently.:goodjob:
7 participants was a tad disappointing, but I realize that I was way too clever this time, as can be seen form the fact that many from the elite band of this forum submitted, but even so the winning score was a rather modest one .
I will hopefully be able to present a detailed write-up tomorrow, depending on whether I can get an appointment with my dentist or not. In any case I suppose I am not the only one who looks forward to a new Ciceronian-quiz.:)
 
luceafarul said:
So the deadline has arrived, and since interest petered out I close this one and have the great pleasure to congratulate my friend Ciceronian with a great performance[party] :goodjob: :beer:
Thank you for the praise my friend! :) Like I already said, I think I should have submitted later. But I am surprised that I won, afterall there are many other strong historians here, many of which also submitted, but failed to beat me. I think Adler17's absence also helped me to win it. But I think you asked just the right questions, it was a very lucky combination for me.

luceafarul said:
7 participants was a tad disappointing, but I realize that I was way too clever this time, as can be seen form the fact that many from the elite band of this forum submitted, but even so the winning score was a rather modest one.
7 participants isn't a huge number but I wouldn't say it's disappointing. Look at sydhe's researchable quiz, only 3 people submitted to that one. Sydhe's quiz was a good one, but many questions were quite hard. And yes, compared to the total of 70 points 26 was very low, that's why I'm surprised I won.
luceafarul said:
I will hopefully be able to present a detailed write-up tomorrow, depending on whether I can get an appointment with my dentist or not. In any case I suppose I am not the only one who looks forward to a new Ciceronian-quiz.:)
In fact, I've already written my quiz up. I spent the past few weeks writing it and I would have used it another time if I wouldn't have won now, but since I have, you're going to see it soon. It's become quite long and chunky unfortunately, but I don't want to get rid of any of the questions, I hope the length of it doesn't deter submittants. But I will wait until you've put the answers up and there has been a little discussion until I post it.

Thank you luceafarul for a great quiz! :goodjob:
 
And so, for the answers:

1.Which well-known mythological figure is associated with the following people? (3 p)

Orpheus.

You also get 1 p for each of the persons you can identify.
1. Valentin Greff Bakfark (ca.1520 - 1576)
Transilvanian lutenist and composer. Bakfark was born in Kronstadt (today Brasov, Romania) and was trained as a lutenist at the court of the Hungarian king Janos Zapolayi. He later was hired by the king of Poland as court musician, where he enjoyed great success until he became victim of a court intrigue, and being accused of being a spy for Brandenburg (it was quite common for musicians to be spies back then, but the accusations against Bakfark seems to have been unfounded) he had to flee leaving his family and estate in Wilno behind. He then settled in Wien and ended up in Padova where hedied of the plague. On the marble plaque on his grave, he is compared with Orpheus.
Bakfark enjoyed a great reputation in his time as a true master on his instrument, both in Poland and France poems in his praise exists, and there is even a Polish saying:"...Nobody plays the lute after Bekwark..."

2. Jean Cocteau (1889-1963) French writer, poet, artist and film-maker. An important exponent of surrealism, especially through his films.One of the most wellknown and best is Orpheus, which was later followed up by a sequel, The Testament of Orpheus.
This is quite a good page about Cocteau:http://www.netcomuk.co.uk/~lenin/JeanCocteau.html
3. Tenessee Williams (1911-1983) One of the most prominent US playwrights in the 20th century. A writer in the so-called Southern Gothic style, some of William's plays belongs to the classics, such a The Glass Menagerie, A Streetcare named Desire and Cat on a Hot Tinroof. In the play Orpheus descending, he retells the myth set in the 1950's USA.

4. Nick Cave (1957-) Australian musician, author, actor and screenwriter. On his 13th studio album with his band Bad Seeds, the second CD is called The Lyre of Orpheus.

2.What was Nim Chimpsky? (3 p)
A chimpanzee, the subject of an important animal language aquisition study at Colombia University, the Project Nim. The name is of course a humorous salute to Noam Chomsky, who apart from being one of USA's leading dissident also is regarded as the father of modern cognitive linguistics.Nim was raised in human-like settings and taught sign language as a human child. While he learned the basic signs, he did not seem to develop complex language skills.

3. Here follows an excerpt of a text. Who wrote this text (2 p) and what was the title of it (2 p)?

2.Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) from the text "What is Enlightenment". I was inspired by this by a current thread in OT where it was asked what philosophy you live by.
I find a lot of wisdom in this text,

Later somebody else wrote a comment to this text, using the same title. Who? (2 p)

Michel Foucault (1926-1984)., French philosopher.

Links to the two texts:

http://foucault.info/documents/whatIsEnlightenment/kant.whatIsEnlightenment.en.html

http://foucault.info/documents/whatIsEnlightenment/foucault.whatIsEnlightenment.en.html

4. Where did the Battle of the Bees find place? (3 p)

At Tanga, Tanzania, a military outpost of German East Africa.

And in which war? (2 p)

First World War. This was the first major battle in Africa in this war, a poor attempt by the British Indian Army to capture German East Africa. El_Tigre mentioned that Adler17 has written an article about this on this forum. And since he knows much more about this than I, go read it.

5. What is the probable origin behind the expression "mad as a hatter"? (3 p)

Most likely from an early industrial occupational disease. Felt hats were once very popular in North America and Europe; the best sorts were made from beaver fur, but cheaper ones used furs such as rabbit instead.
A complicated set of processes was needed to turn the fur into a finished hat. With the cheaper sorts of fur, an early step was to brush a solution of a mercury compound—usually mercurous nitrate—on to the fur to roughen the fibres and make them mat more easily, a process called carroting because it made the fur turn orange. Beaver fur had natural serrated edges that made this unnecessary, one reason why it was preferred, but the cost and scarcity of beaver meant that other furs had to be used.
Whatever the source of the fur, the fibres were then shaved off the skin and turned into felt; this was later immersed in a boiling acid solution to thicken and harden it. Finishing processes included steaming the hat to shape and ironing it. In all these steps, hatters working in poorly ventilated workshops would breathe in the mercury compounds and accumulate the metal in their bodies.
Mercury is a cumulative poison that causes kidney and brain damage. Physical symptoms include trembling (known at the time as hatter’s shakes), loosening of teeth, loss of co-ordination, and slurred speech; mental ones include irritability, loss of memory, depression, anxiety, and other personality changes. This was called mad hatter syndrome.
Labour history can be so depressing.

6. In Russian language there exist the ironic cliche that somebody is a "Susanin".
What does this mean (2 p) and what is the origin of the expression? (2 p)


A person who leads somewhere claiming to know the way, but eventually proves that he doesn't. I suppose most of you know this type.
The expression comes from an incident in 1612. It had been a war between Poland and Russia, and even if a czar, Mikhail Romanov, had been elected, there was still supporters of the Polish king Sigismund III Vasa around in Russia. Some of those, finding out that the young czar was situated in Kostroma, went on the mission to kill him. Not being known in the area, they had to ask locals for direction. The logger Ivan Susanin offered his assistance, claiming to know a shortcut to the Ipatiev monastery Mikhail was hiding in. However he led them completely astray, probably deep in the forest to die in the winter cold, sacrificing his own life in the process.

Susanindeath.jpg


This story is also subject for the first Russian opera; A Life for The Czar by Mikhail Glinka.


7. The following poem is an example of a specific genre of poetry. What is this genre called? (1 p)

Haiku, a Japanese style of poetry.

It is written by one of the celebrated masters of this genre. What was his name? (3 p)

Matsuo Basho (1644-1694).

Basho.3.trim.png



Born Matsuo Kinsaku in 1644 near Osaka. Being of samurai family, he took employement as a samurai until his master died in 1666. He then went to Kyoto where he gained reputation as a great teacher of poetry before settling down in Edo.He took the name Basho after the banana three growing near his home.
Basho travelled extensively in Japan, and came to see the city as a negative influence, in his poetry he tries to define the perception of himself and the simplicity of the countryside.
The poem quoted here is his last one.
For those interested in Basho and Haiku, here is a wide selection of good links:http://opening.hefko.net/gi_basho.html

8.What is depicted here? (4 p)

The flight of Abbas Ibn Firnas (?-887)
This multi-talented humanitarian, technologist and alchemist carried in 875 out a bold experiment. With a self-built glider he launched himself from a tower in his city Cordoba. While the flight was successful, the landing was not, and he injured his back.This is widely regarded as the first scientific attempt by a human to fly.
While Ibn Firnas deserves to be mentioned for a lot of other things as well, like his designed waterclock, his devised means of manufacturing glass from sand, the chain of rings he developed to show the motion of the planets, and developing a method to cut rock crystal his fame within the Islam countries is based mostly on this flight. Thus Libya issued a stamp in his honour, and north a Baghdad an airport carries his name.

9.I think most people know that it this year is 250 years since Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born.
It so happens that another illustrious composer was born the same year, this man.
During his brief life - he survived Mozart with only about a year - this German-born composer had great influence on the music in the country he settled down in. What was his name? (4 p)


Joseph Martin Kraus (1756-1792)
Kraus was born in Miltenberg and studied music in Mannheim before studying law in Weimar. In 1778 he went to Stockholm, and after a difficult start he was appointed conductor of the Royal Swedish Opera and director of the Royal Academy of Music. He was then granted a 5-years tour of studying in Europe, where he got to know among others Gluck, Mozart and Haydn, even writing a symphony for the latter to perform at the court of Esterhaza.
On his return he was appointed Conductor of the Royal Court, a post he held until his death.
An innovative composer with a flair for the dramatic (his surviving 12 symphonies are very much in the style of the fashionable Sturm und Drang), Kraus is a very interesting musical aquaintance, whose works for a long time has been the main contents in my mp3-player.
A good tip for those who like the music of this era, on Naxos one can find recordings of all his symphonies on 4 CDs by the Swedish chamber Orchestra and Petter Sundquist. A real bargain.

As additional clue I offer this portrait, 2 p for identifying him.

King Gustav III (1746-1792) the reigning Swedish monarch during Kraus stay in that country. One of Kraus' most moving compositions is the funeral symphony he wrote after the king's assasination .

10. In 1998, an organization called ATTAC was created.
What does the acronym represent? (3 p)

Association for the Taxation of Financial Transactions for the Aid of Citizens or in French Association pour la Taxation des Transactions pour l'Aide aux Citoyens.
This grass-root organization which today is a major one in the struggle against growing corporate power and what in newspeak is called globalization, was originally a single-issue movement demanding introduction of the so-called Tobin tax, a tax on currency specualtion suggested by the economist James Tobin.
Here is the link to its webpage: http://www.attac.org/index.htm

11.What was the Milgram experiment? (2 p)

An experiment by the psychologist Stanley Milgram intended to measure the willingness of a participant to obey an authority who instructs the participant to do something that may conflict with the participant's personal conscience.

Here is a detailed description of the experiment:
For the experiment, subjects were recruited by newspaper ads and direct mail to participate in a study at Yale. The experiments themselves took place in two rooms in the basement of Linsly-Chittenden Hall on the university's Old Campus. The experiment was advertised as taking one hour, for which those responding would be paid $4.50. Participants were men between the ages of 20 and 50, coming from all educational backgrounds, ranging from an elementary school dropout to participants with doctoral degrees.
The participant and a confederate of the experimenter (an actor pretending to be another participant) were told by the experimenter that they would be participating in an experiment to test the effects of punishment on learning behavior.
A slip of paper was given to the participant and another to the confederate. The participant was led to believe that one of the slips said "learner" and the other said "teacher," and that the participants had been given the slips randomly. In fact, both slips said "teacher," but the actor claimed to have the slip that read "learner," thus guaranteeing that the participant was always the "teacher." At this point, the "teacher" and "learner" were separated into different rooms where they could communicate but not see each other. The confederate was sure to mention that he had a heart condition.
The "teacher" was given a 45-volt electric shock from the electro-shock generator as a sample of the shock that the "learner" would supposedly receive during the experiment. The "teacher" was then given a list of word pairs which he was to teach the learner. The teacher began by reading the list of word pairs to the learner. The teacher would then read the first word of each pair and read 4 possible answers. The learner would press a button to indicate his response. If the answer was incorrect, the learner would receive a shock, with the voltage increasing by 15 volts with each wrong answer. If correct, the teacher read the next word pair.
The subjects believed that for each wrong answer, the learner was receiving actual shocks. In reality, there were no shocks. After the confederate was separated from the subject, the confederate set up a tape recorder integrated with the electro-shock generator, which played pre-recorded sounds for each shock level. After a number of voltage level increases, the actor started to bang on the wall that separated him from the subject. After several times banging on the wall and complaining about his heart condition, the learner gave no further response to the questions and made no further complaints.
At this point many people indicated their desire to stop the experiment and check on the learner. Many test subjects paused at 135 volts and began to question the purpose of the experiment. Some continued after being assured that they would not be held responsible. Some subjects began to laugh nervously once they heard the screams of pain coming from the learner.
If at any time the subject indicated his desire to halt the experiment, he was given a succession of verbal prods by the experimenter, in this order:
Please continue.
The experiment requires you to continue, please go on.
It is essential that you continue.
You have no choice, you must continue.
If the subject still wished to stop after all four successive verbal prods, the experiment was halted. Otherwise, it was halted after the subject had given the maximum 450-volt shock three times in succession.

Chilling stuff.

12.With the aid of the following pics, find the name of an ancient city.(3 p)

Corinth.
The first picture shows Aphrodite, to whom the Great Temple of its acropolis was dedicated. The second shows the tyrant Periander, one of the Seven Wise Men of Greece. The third is the philosopher Diogenes, who lived for the last part of his life and probably died in Corinth.

13. We all know that Christopher Colombus "discovered" America. His namesake Mateo Colombo also claimed to have "discovered " something. What was that? (4 p)

The clitoris. :rolleyes:
Mateo Colombo (1516-1559), pupil of Vesalius, was an important anathomist who among other things discovered the pulminary circulation and also pointed out the correct placement of the lens in the eye. However, in his De Re Anatomica, he also describes what he calls "love or sweetness of Venus,"of which he claims the honur of having discovered.
Except that it was later pointed out that anathomists had known about this for centuries, one might assume that more than one woman knew perfectly well about its existence and benefit...
This is the subject of a nice novel by Federico Andahazi: The Anatomist.

14.What sort of people is this drawing depicting? (3 p)

Soldiers in the Swedish army in the Thirty Years' War as seen by Catholic propaganda. To the left is an Irishman, to the right a Lapp (or Sami).

checkthisout.jpg


15. From which literary work is this? (4 p):

Batrachomyomachia, or the battle between the frogs and the mice.This is a mock-epic or parody on the Iliad about which neither the author or the exact time written is known.
A link to the text with comical illustrations:http://www.homer.com.mx/Homeric_Hymns_and_Homerica/Batrachomyomachia/01.html

And who was it usual to suppose had written it? (2 p)
Homer. Nowadays it is common to attribute it to some anonymous poet of the time of Aleksander the Great, though.

16. In Slavic mythology; what is Jav, Prav and Nav? (3 p)

In the Book of Veles, this is the names of the three worlds. Jav is the material world, contained within Nav, the immaterial world of the dead. Prav is the law of the fire god Swarog that governs both Yav and Nav.

17.What is depicted here? (4 p)

The mutilation of king Magnus Sigurdsson.
The Irishman Harald Gille come to Norway in 1127 and claimed to be the son of king Magnus Barefoot. he proved his claim by an ordeal of fire, and was aknowledged by the reigning Norwegian king Sigurd Jorsalfar under the condition that he would not rival Sigurd's son Magnus. however the realtion between Harald and Magnus was an uneasy one, and when Sigurd died in 1130, Harald broke the agreement and war broke out. it ended with the capture of Magnus in 1135, and to render his rival harmless, Harald had his eyes put out, catstrated him and for good measure also chopped off one foot.
Except for the cruelty of this action, it was a political blunder, which lost Harald a lot of the sympathy he had built up through former cunning actions. He was not to enjoy his kingship for a long time, as he was murdered the year after by another throne pretendant, Sigurd Slembejakn.
This was to begin a period of turmoil in Norwegian history, the so-called civil war era.

See also this:http://omacl.org/Heimskringla/gille.html

Reactions to this is welcome, positive as well as negative. If somebody wants more information about any of the topics covered, I will do my best to provide it.

And finally, Ciceronian, you can go ahead and post your quiz. I look forward to see it.:)
 
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