LightSpectra
me autem minui
Though didn't he actually do most of this while Secretary of State and an Ambassador?
Not to my knowledge. The treaties culminated during his presidency.
Though didn't he actually do most of this while Secretary of State and an Ambassador?
He also swam nude in the Potomac regardless of weather which is why I admire his balls and fortitude.
I'd think at least Aristotle's Physics, though you might try to claim that he was still saying all things happened because of a deity.
Not sure exactly on the Religions, but consider that the Puritans were kicked out of England for being too intolerant. Also consider there have been a couple of religious revivals in the history of the USA. And also the America's generally received peoples on the losing end of religious persecution in Europe.
If you could answer two questions i would love it.
How come Europe became increasingly socialist after the world wars but the United States was relatively unaffected? Was it Soviet influence or is it just because Americans were not affected by the devastation of world war II if that has anything to do with it?
Also what is the historical reason for why heavy religious beliefs are much less prevalent in Europe than the United States? Just the fact the United States was separated from Europe so we were not influenced by you guys maybe?
So would you say the early 20th/ late 19th century the average population in the west was educated enough to know natural phenomena had a scientific reason behind it?
I'm looking for a general time when most people in western society were educated enough to understand this.
If you could answer two questions i would love it.
How come Europe became increasingly socialist after the world wars but the United States was relatively unaffected? Was it Soviet influence or is it just because Americans were not affected by the devastation of world war II if that has anything to do with it?
Also what is the historical reason for why heavy religious beliefs are much less prevalent in Europe than the United States? Just the fact the United States was separated from Europe so we were not influenced by you guys maybe?
So in the US there was wealth and full employment. People came more to the opinion that the poor must be poor because they were lazy.
Also what is the historical reason for why heavy religious beliefs are much less prevalent in Europe than the United States? Just the fact the United States was separated from Europe so we were not influenced by you guys maybe?
To take the example of the NHS. <snip>
A good thing those people were set straight when the Depression hit.
Whih, once again, runs into the Canada counter-example. Though here rural areas tend to be more religious, it is nothing near the US.Another possible explanation is that the US is more rural, as a whole, than much of Europe, and rural areas cling on to old beliefs far more strongly than urban ones. Indeed it seems that the more rural parts of the US are more religious than the more urban ones. But again this is somewhat speculative, especially since it's hard to agree on what actually counts as "urban" in the first place.
Not arguing against a puritan influence, but I never really saw a religious overtone about US Thanksgiving, beyond "they were a persecuted religious group". So I don't really see that as evidence of anything.This is a county that still "gives thanks" every year for the survival of a group of religious maniacs, whom it regards as the "puritan fathers".
Whih, once again, runs into the Canada counter-example. Though here rural areas tend to be more religious, it is nothing near the US.
Not arguing against a puritan influence, but I never really saw a religious overtone about US Thanksgiving, beyond "they were a persecuted religious group". So I don't really see that as evidence of anything.
From an outside perspective, I always see it as more about the "persecuted" part than the "religious" one. Following the idea that the US was built on people forced to flee Europe.Well, even calling them "a persecuted religious group" rather loads the dice in one's view of them. One might equally well say that these were people who were so religiously weird that they were too much even by the standards of early seventeenth-century England. But apart from that, it may be true that Thanksgiving isn't a religious festival these days, but still its survival as an important American festival is testament not simply to the influence of the puritans upon American society but also (and perhaps more significantly) to the perceived importance of those puritans. If people hadn't thought the first American puritans particularly significant, they wouldn't have continued to mark a festival celebrating them. That indicates that Americans considered themselves the spiritual descendants of those puritans for a long time.
Not really. Yes there are parts like that, but most of Southern Canada, where the vast majority of people live, is very similar to the US (or rather to the corresponding parts of the US). And while people in Alberta (excepting Quebec, which presents a completely different issue, is the most socially conservative and religious part of the country, by far) are probably more religious than those in New York, they appear pale in comparison to the American Plains States.Yes, I thought that as I was typing. But I wonder if the US has more inhabited rural areas than Canada? A lot of people in the US live in what one might call semi-rural places. Whereas I imagine Canada to be a few cities divided by totally uninhabited howling wilderness. (I realise this model may require some fine-tuning.)