Following that logic, you could also say the Archaeopteryx was a bird because birds are his closest descendants.(3) Modern Italians are Ancient Romans' closest descendants and, in that sense, we can say things like Scipio was Italian.
Following that logic, you could also say the Archaeopteryx was a bird because birds are his closest descendants.(3) Modern Italians are Ancient Romans' closest descendants and, in that sense, we can say things like Scipio was Italian.
Do you guys realize that the last common human ancestor lived around 2000 years ago (barring pure 100% Native Americans), according to geneticists and anthropologists?
That renders any racial argument moot.
Professor Wik E. Pedia said:Rohde, Olson, and Chang (2004),[5] using a non-genetic model, estimated that the MRCA of all living humans may have lived within historical times (3rd millennium BC to 1st millennium AD). The paper suggests, "No matter the languages we speak or the color of our skin, we share ancestors who planted rice on the banks of the Yangtze, who first domesticated horses on the steppes of the Ukraine, who hunted giant sloths in the forests of North and South America, and who labored to build the Great Pyramid of Khufu". Rohde (2005)[6] refined the simulation with parameters from estimated historical human migrations and of population densities.
Following that logic, you could also say the Archaeopteryx was a bird because birds are his closest descendants.
No, you're deliberately copping out here by claiming that "Italians" means something different to what it means usually. No one interprets the sentence "Romans = Italians" as "Roman = (group of all people forming a cultural relation with Italians)".
Which reminds me of this.
No, you're deliberately copping out here by claiming that "Italians" means something different to what it means usually. No one interprets the sentence "Romans = Italians" as "Roman = (group of all people forming a cultural relation with Italians)".
But I don’t see why anyone should interpret “Ancient Romans are Italians” in the strongest possible sense, as a claim of identity between groups of people from different ages. (Not even the fascist philosopher Giovanni Gentile would have made such a strong claim). To put it that way is to misrepresent the claim and attack a straw man.
The real disagreement turns on whether modern Italians are, culturally speaking, the direct descendants of the Romans, or their closest successors – closer, say, than the French or the Spaniards.
We have three options:
(1) Culturally speaking, ancient Romans have no successors at all: Roman culture is extinct.
(2) There are several different cultures that are equally close descendants of the Romans: anyone, say, who speaks a Romance language.
(3) Modern Italians are Ancient Romans' closest descendants – and, in that sense, we can say things like “Scipio was Italian”.
I take it that Rhye and OneDreamer would go for (2), and would object to (3) on the grounds that it smacks of nationalism and is reminiscent of fascism.
It seems to me that neither (1) or (2) represent the majority opinion amongst Italians, even if we count only living Italians, and discount Romanticism, Risorgimento and all that. The widespread consensus surrounding Benigni’s speech makes me suspect that most Italians would be inclined to agree with (3), and I don’t think that this makes them “nationalists”, “fascists”, or ignorant about history.
That is not to say that Benigni’s speech gives any good historical evidence for (3). I do think, however, that it gives a good indication of what most contemporary Italians actually believe.
Assuming this is true, then the sentence is so meaningless that it's not worth saying it, much less arguing over it. Take your example "Scipio was Italian". With your definition of "Italian", the statement becomes so broad it has no actual meaning to contemporary Italians. But this is clearly not what the national anthem is trying to convey, not what Risorgimento nationalists were trying to convey, and also not what Renaissance thinkers were trying to convey when they said Italians are Romans.When people say that "Scipio was Italian" they are obviously giving the word "Italian" a wider meaning, so that it comes to mean: "member of a group that comprises ancient Italic peoples , medieval Italians, and modern Italians". This is, roughly, what Petrarch meant by "people of Italy". Which is, in fact, the original Medieval meaning of the word "italico".
If you choose to interpret the word "Italian" in a narrower sense (say, "somebody whose native language is modern Italian"), then "Scipio was Italian" comes out as trivially false. But then you'd misinterpret the claim. Clearly, in the context of the assertion that "Scipio was Italian", the narrower meaning of the word "Italian" cannot be the intended meaning.
In fact, I DO believe that Italians are the closest successors of the Romans. I am arguing against your claim that ancient Romans are Italians, that is, Italy and ancient Rome are the same civilization.