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NeoGreen

(4,033 posts)
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 09:17 AM Apr 2019

Anachronism

Last edited Mon Apr 1, 2019, 11:34 AM - Edit history (1)

...https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anachronism


Anachronism
An anachronism (from the Greek ἀνά ana, "against" and χρόνος khronos, "time" ) is a chronological inconsistency in some arrangement, especially a juxtaposition of persons, events, objects, or customs from different periods of time. The most common type of anachronism is an object misplaced in time, but it may be a verbal expression, a technology, a philosophical idea, a musical style, a material, a plant or animal, a custom, or anything else associated with a particular period in time that is placed outside its proper temporal domain.

(snip)

Behavioral and cultural anachronism
The intentional use of older, often obsolete cultural artifacts may be regarded as anachronistic. For example, it could be considered anachronistic for a modern-day person to wear a top hat, write with a quill, or carry on a conversation in Latin. Such choices may reflect an eccentricity or an aesthetic preference.

Emphasis added.

How anachronistic is it, in this day and age, to assume you can acquire positive/ethical morality from Bronze Age philosophies that were poorly translated and transcribed in the Iron Age and perpetually re-transcribed by hand during the Dark Ages?

How long will it be until that cultural norm goes the way of chattel slavery?

How long until religion becomes a full-on cultural anachronism?
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Anachronism (Original Post) NeoGreen Apr 2019 OP
Are humans still humans? guillaumeb Apr 2019 #1
Citation needed. Act_of_Reparation Apr 2019 #7
There can be no citation because the proposition is undefined. marylandblue Apr 2019 #9
It's defined implicity. Act_of_Reparation Apr 2019 #14
Those seem undefined as well. marylandblue Apr 2019 #15
I know, right? Act_of_Reparation Apr 2019 #17
Perhaps for you. eom guillaumeb Apr 2019 #18
And anyone else who isn't hopelessly credulous. Act_of_Reparation Apr 2019 #20
We do a lot of things differently than back then. marylandblue Apr 2019 #8
Your examples are poor. MineralMan Apr 2019 #10
Here's something that's different: we've learned a lot from each other. trotsky Apr 2019 #21
Well, perhaps. It's diverting to come to the Religion Group. MineralMan Apr 2019 #22
Not a well thought out response. Voltaire2 Apr 2019 #19
It is a delusion to even think that an appeal to some invisible all-powerful being that we project vlyons Apr 2019 #2
If you had enough faith, prayer would work for you. LuvNewcastle Apr 2019 #4
Faith is nothing but wishful thinking vlyons Apr 2019 #6
It's a crutch. LuvNewcastle Apr 2019 #11
I like Top Hats Cartoonist Apr 2019 #3
Indeed they do. Here's one hatmaker who offers MineralMan Apr 2019 #13
I also like Derby Hats Cartoonist Apr 2019 #16
It will probably never go away since it seems able to adapt marylandblue Apr 2019 #5
We can hope that someday it will be a vestigial tradition, like the army's sabers. Pope George Ringo II Apr 2019 #12

guillaumeb

(42,649 posts)
1. Are humans still humans?
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 09:24 AM
Apr 2019

Do humans still act in much the same ways as humans from 5800 years ago?

Is philosophy still taught in schools, including the Greek philosophers?

We no longer uses horses to pull loads.
We no longer draw water from a well.
We no longer use a bow to hunt for our food.

But we still behave in the same basic ways as our ancestors of 10,000 years ago.
We are still motivated by the same urges.

To pretend otherwise is to pretend.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
9. There can be no citation because the proposition is undefined.
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 10:15 AM
Apr 2019

He said, "we still behave in the same basic ways as our ancestors." How do we know which behaviors are "basic" and which are not. No doubt, if people still do them, they are basic, and if nobody still does them, they aren't.

So religion must basic because there are enough people around who still practice it. Living in small nomadic bands of 150 people or less is not basic even though we did that for 98% of human history, because almost nobody does that anymore.

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
14. It's defined implicity.
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 01:03 PM
Apr 2019

"Basic" human behaviors are:

1) Religion

2) Any social ill religion has been unable to remedy (i.e., DREAD INTOLERANCE)

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
15. Those seem undefined as well.
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 01:17 PM
Apr 2019

Religion is about "faith" which he thinks is something you have whether you believe in deities or not, so "faith" is basic, but if everybody has to have faith, it's just another word for having a brain.

Intolerance is "tribalism" again defined as a universal something that everybody exhibits, even hermits I guess.

Act_of_Reparation

(9,116 posts)
17. I know, right?
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 02:11 PM
Apr 2019

It's all very deterministic for a guy who believes in free will. But I'm probably misframing, or something.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
8. We do a lot of things differently than back then.
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 09:55 AM
Apr 2019

We do religion differently, philosophy didn't exist and we even do our oppression differently. It's not just technological differences, it's much deeper than that.

The vague "Creator" you worship and try to find in ancient texts would have been totally incomprehensible and pointless to them.

MineralMan

(147,576 posts)
10. Your examples are poor.
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 10:59 AM
Apr 2019
We no longer uses horses to pull loads. - Sometimes we do, though, or at least some people do. Consider the Budweiser Clydesdales. We don't use draft horses much, but there are still working horses out there.

We no longer draw water from a well. - Many rural dwelling places continue to rely on well water. In fact, there are rural communities everywhere that do. Indeed most municipal water supplies rely on wells. We don't use buckets and a windlass to get the water, though, any longer. Electric pumps handle that work.

We no longer use a bow to hunt for our food. - Bow hunting is a very, very popular thing in many states, which often have a separate hunting season for bowhunters. Every year, tens of thousands of bowhunters take to the field. Bowfishing is also a popular sport, and most fish caught that way are eaten.

We do behave in the same basic ways as our ancestors. We seek mates. We form social groups and societies. We look for answers to our questions. We fight wars and commit crimes. All the same. We just have different technology.

trotsky

(49,533 posts)
21. Here's something that's different: we've learned a lot from each other.
Tue Apr 2, 2019, 09:37 AM
Apr 2019

We actually have knowledge that we can use now to generate moral and ethical systems that are FAR superior to what they wrote down. guillaumeb is (again) being disingenuous so he can continue to defend religious privilege.

MineralMan

(147,576 posts)
22. Well, perhaps. It's diverting to come to the Religion Group.
Tue Apr 2, 2019, 09:46 AM
Apr 2019

Not necessarily informative, but it's diverting. Rarely do we get to see someone go on at length about something, only to demonstrate the opposite of that person's intended point. '

Diverting and instructive at the same time. It's like, "Here's how you should NOT make your case."

It's Tons of Fun!

Voltaire2

(14,703 posts)
19. Not a well thought out response.
Tue Apr 2, 2019, 03:45 AM
Apr 2019

There were no schools and no philosophies to teach either 5800 or 10000 years ago.

Work horses and bows are in fact anachronistic. Wells aren’t.

Could you rework your response so that your examples cited to prove whatever point you were trying to make actually belong in the categories you placed them in?

Was it your point that religion is grouped with work horses, bows, and wells as anachronistic? Or with Ancient Greek Philosophy as a academic subject?

vlyons

(10,252 posts)
2. It is a delusion to even think that an appeal to some invisible all-powerful being that we project
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 09:25 AM
Apr 2019

from our own mind can wave a magic wand that suspends the laws of physics, the laws of thermodynamics, to rearrange reality to conform to our wishful thinking. It's why I don't believe in the so-called "power of prayer." There is no creator god.

vlyons

(10,252 posts)
6. Faith is nothing but wishful thinking
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 09:47 AM
Apr 2019

without any evidence whatsoever that it works without any input of work and effort. That people sometimes experience the outcomes that they wish for, just means that they have not understood all the complex causes and conditions that resulted in an outcome.

LuvNewcastle

(17,022 posts)
11. It's a crutch.
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 11:11 AM
Apr 2019

Life sucks for a lot of people in this world, and they think religion helps them cope with some of life's pitfalls. They don't like to think that the cosmos is indifferent to them. It hurts their sensibility that they are special. Religion doesn't really help, though. While it might help one person cope with life, it might turn another person into a violent zealot. The religious often use their religions as an excuse to act out hidden desires.

marylandblue

(12,344 posts)
5. It will probably never go away since it seems able to adapt
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 09:46 AM
Apr 2019

and live long after the social and political structures that created it. Modern religion is only partly anachronistic. It preserves some things from earlier times, but changes others to fit in with the new structures.

Pope George Ringo II

(1,896 posts)
12. We can hope that someday it will be a vestigial tradition, like the army's sabers.
Mon Apr 1, 2019, 11:27 AM
Apr 2019

I'm not sure we're ever going to be fully successful in eradicating it, though. There are just so many people so vulnerable to it.

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