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Post 40

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 7:26pmSanction this postReply
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<blockquote>And Jenna, I blame Chinese government on Western Culture, ie. Communism. ;-)</blockquote>

You got me there! :)

(Edited by Jenna W on 6/26, 7:27pm)


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Post 41

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 7:45pmSanction this postReply
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Whatever amount of evil that came from Western culture, cannot negate the overwhelming amount of good that came of it. Science, reason, liberty, are probably the most crucial and vitally important idealogies that have produced the most amount of good in this world.

Some Eastern people did use science, reason, and liberty, also. But when I think of history, I think as far back as I can go and think of all the different things that people have done all over the world through time. The ancient Egyptians build structures that still last. Of course, many good things came out of the Mediterranean and Europe. The Chinese invented fireworks and abacuses.

I think that for every culture, there is good and bad, and that it's a good thing to know where, why, and how so that we won't repeat history. Yes, Western civilization has its great points, but it doesn't mean that the good stuff is so good that it supercedes all the wrong turns.While any evils of any culture cannot invalidate the culture's good parts, neither can the overwhelming good of one culture supercede its evils and make it supreme over all cultures; for instance, I think it's good that we should never forget communist China nor the Holocaust for potential lessons learned in the future. I also think that every culture I've known-- through various people-- has something good to offer and something to learn from. However, because of my dual cultural background, I'm not much of an ethnocentrist/imperialist. :)


Post 42

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 8:11pmSanction this postReply
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"Civilization is the process of freeing man from man..." [Ayn Rand]  To that extent, then, one can use a yardstick in appraising the value of any  culture - just how, in its totality, or in its continuity, or in its perserverity this is achieved.....

Post 43

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 8:15pmSanction this postReply
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[Deleted]
(Edited by robert malcom on 6/26, 8:16pm)


Post 44

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 8:34pmSanction this postReply
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The trick, Bill, is the starter.... most bakeries now do not mess with it, as it means time lost [or priced added] to making it profitable....
Well, Cinderella Bakery sells it for less than 3 bucks a loaf, and the loaves are, I think, a couple of pounds each, so they're evidently making a profit. You can go to the Bakery, which is connected to their restaurant, and buy it fresh out of the oven. Speaking of multiculturalism, the last time I went there, I was served by a tall Chinese woman with a Russian accent.

- Bill

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Post 45

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 8:51pmSanction this postReply
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John, Bill, and especially Michael Dickey,
Thank you for your considerate replies. I simply don't like the cherry-picking practice that take a few good things and call them "western culture", while ignoring a big chunk of "western culture" that are irrational, stupid, and even evil. Call them something else but no, they are not "western". Give me a break! ;-)

And from various statements make by many people here, I detect a lot of ignorance about Asian cultures. No, going to Chinese restaurants or visiting Vienam are not enough.

Also, the reasons that some cultures are lagged behind the West today are not necessarily or entirely due of their moral inferiority. For example, Chinese would not be able to invent algebra and hence the modern Mathematics and physics, because Chinese language and its way of writing (from top and down, right to the left) is just not compatible with math formula. And yet, Chinese people today have fully embraced modern science and technology, if not other Western ideologies, more so than many western people.

Just for the record, I admire ancient/classic Greek and Roman culture, their philosophies, science, art, literature, etc.. I consider that they were far more superior than anything else in the world at the time. However, the thousand years of dark age that followed the collapse of the Roman Empire just baffles my mind. I feel that the Western world is still recovering from that.


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Post 46

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 9:31pmSanction this postReply
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As for the Hmong, they're among us now, and the Hmong who are humongous are really among us. :-\
LOL! Bill...
 
I had a Hmong customer come in the other day with one of his son's who could speak English very well.  The father was wearing a ton of those little string bracelets that are traditionally given to parents by their children to show them affection.
 
I think it's a sweet tradition, one those that could easily get picked up by the larger culture, because it's such a cool, positive, easily understood, universal kind of thing.
 
 I didn't like it. It was too bland, not at all what you get in a typical Chinese restaurant.
Did it have chicken feet in it?  My ex-husband still talks about "Robert Fung," an old coworker, who took him to a "traditional" Chinese restaurant, where he dined on cooked chicken feet.
 
American's eat way too much salt (and sugar. I'm totally guilty), and that's probably what you weren't tasting.
 
 
I'm saving Robert's rye bread recipe. My husband's favorite favorite is black rye bread.  Except, what the F is a "K" of flour?? You don't mean "kups," do you?  How the hell do I measure a kilo of flour??
 
And this can't be right:
 
Form oblong loaves, smooth tops with damp hands. Bake in preheated oven at 400F/200C, for about 2-3 hours.
Is this for bread, or bricks?  Sounds way too long to bake, unless the loaves are as big as a log, which I assume 6 kilos of flour would make a log about the size of a 200 year old oak trunk after it's risen.
 
I'll try it anyway...
 
 


Post 47

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 9:56pmSanction this postReply
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$3 per loaf is good price..... probably either 20 oz or 2 lbs as weight.. and if latter, then VERY good price.....

Post 48

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 10:03pmSanction this postReply
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Can only guess, since never made only-rye bread, but rye probably needs cook at higher temp than wheat [is only difference between 350 and 400], as cornbread is usually 450...  time - well, does seem long - so would check after half hour.....

not to worry over a K of flour - there is conversion right next to it....


Post 49

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 10:16pmSanction this postReply
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Hong wrote:


And from various statements make by many people here, I detect a lot of ignorance about Asian cultures. No, going to Chinese restaurants or visiting Vienam are not enough.


I'm not sure if I should take some offense here. It seems Hong you are implying because I am white, and I grew up in the West, I can never possibly come to any judgement about Eastern cultures because I can never know enough or learn enough? Hong what would it take? A life dedicated to Eastern studies? Would I have to disrupt my life and move to China and spend the rest of my life there to finally be able to come back to you and say, I can now speak about Eastern culture without ignorance?

I think that would be unfair. At some point one can know enough to pass judgement on a culture. Would I have to know everything there is to know about the history and theories of Marxism to come to a conclusion Communism is an evil idealogy? Do I have to have lived in a Communist country and experience it first hand to no longer have ignorance of Marxism and be able to condemn Communism?

I also think it's unfair that you take my statements on this thread alone, where I have barely mentioned whatever knowledge I may or may not have learned about Eastern culture, and come to such a hasty conclusion about my ignorance of the subject matter. How did you come to such a conclusion?



Post 50

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 10:56pmSanction this postReply
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Teresa, send me your address (on RoR email) and I'll parcel you a loaf. I'm serious! I'll buy you a loaf and send it to you. Of course, it won't be as fresh when you get it as it is for me, but at least you'll get an idea of what it's like, and it should still be pretty good. It's really delicious when it's fresh! It keeps very well, but can get a bit dry after several days. In that case, just put it in the microwave for about 10 seconds or so, and that should moisten it up. Ditto for you, Robert. I'll foot the bill and the shipping cost.

- Bill

Post 51

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 11:43pmSanction this postReply
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One thing that should be mentioned here is that there are elements of Chinese culture as reflected in the Chinese family that are superior to other ethnic groups, specifically the emphasis on education and achievement - something which Thomas Sowell points out in his books on race and ethnicity. Chinese throughout the world tend to be high achievers. Also, the most dominant ethnic group on many of our college campuses today is Chinese. I think it's over 50% at UC Berkeley now.

A professor at my university pointed out that what has held back China is not so much culture in the above sense of the term, but the political system, which has tended to discourage the industrious and enterprising facets of the Chinese people. Of course, "culture" in the broader sense of the term includes the political and socioeconomic system, which does not reflect favorably on China, although Hong Kong and Taiwan are bastions of capitalism that have done remarkably well, due no doubt to the influence of the British.

Again, what is meant by "Western culture" is only the values of the Enlightenment that gave rise to the freedom and prosperity of those that adopted its ideas, including the second and third generation Chinese who currently reside in the U.S. Similar things can be said about the Japanese in regard to their work ethic, although there are other facets of Japanese culture to which one could take exception - its lack of individualism, emphasis on conformity, loyalty to one's employer regardless of better opportunities elsewhere, cronyism, refusal by the government to allow businesses to fail, etc., although it appears these traits are giving way to more rational attitudes and beliefs.

- Bill
(Edited by William Dwyer
on 6/26, 11:45pm)


Post 52

Monday, June 26, 2006 - 11:50pmSanction this postReply
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quote When passing moral judgement about a culture, for example Hindu culture, and compare it with Western culture, you have to take the totality of those culture into consideration when passing judgement.


I wasn't talking about passing moral judgments about cultures but about a multicultural society, ie a society made out of different cultures. My point is that everybody shares the same basic needs that are differntly expressed in those cultures. The fact of being human outweighs cultural differences. Social sciences should therefore concentrate on what individuals share instead of what seperates cultures.


Post 53

Tuesday, June 27, 2006 - 5:22amSanction this postReply
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Teresa, send me your address (on RoR email) and I'll parcel you a loaf. I'm serious! I'll buy you a loaf and send it to you. Of course, it won't be as fresh when you get it as it is for me, but at least you'll get an idea of what it's like, and it should still be pretty good. It's really delicious when it's fresh! It keeps very well, but can get a bit dry after several days. In that case, just put it in the microwave for about 10 seconds or so, and that should moisten it up
Bill, I wouldn't dream of allowing a poor professor to purchase my bread.  Do you have a PayPal account?  I'll send you the dough. Jon will be thrilled, further encouraging me to attempt making this leavened delicacy.  

Wrapping leftover or day old bread in damp papertowel, and then microwaving for a 30 seconds to a minute will do wonders.   
 


Post 54

Tuesday, June 27, 2006 - 7:14amSanction this postReply
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Theresa and William, thanks for your compliments.

Hong,

I don’t think people are citing the cuisine they enjoy as evidence that they know something about a culture, but only as evidence that they do not dislike all aspects of a culture per se. It is a very strong argument that many of us could never really know a culture, as I said a white person can not ‘become’ Chinese, nor can a foreigner become ‘German’. But I feel that any culture that includes anything someone has no choice over is automatically inferior to cultures based on people’s choices, it is no different than original sin and is obviously just collectivist racist or group thought. There are very few cultures that are based primarily on ideas, and western culture is I think the most significant, because it’s ideas are the most significant

Obviously the crux of this disagreement hinges on our definitions of “western” and “eastern” culture, Johnny, Bill and I refer to the ideas that now predominate western culture and originated in ancient Greece or the age of enlightenment. You seem to mean anything that has ever been connected to what is popularly considered western / European / Caucasian throughout history, and I feel that renders the term nearly meaningless.

It is suggested that we cant truly know, for instance, Chinese culture well enough to evaluate it (though I am not sure if this is either of yours particular stance) but if that is true than wouldn’t that also imply that you couldn’t know western culture well enough to decide it was not superior and was in fact inferior? But of course it wouldn’t imply that because it’s different, since western culture is based primarily on ideas and does not include a racial component as a primary. But that essentially means that that since none of us are Chinese we cant really morally assess Chinese culture. I disagree, if any culture embraces anti-individualist fundamentals, it is inferior morally to ones that do not, regardless of race.

Also, I suspect some people who spend their whole life studying a particular culture (though I am certainly not one of those people) could certainly be considered intimately familiar enough with it to make an assessment of it, often with more veracity I think than people of that culture or race as the case may be. Consider people who learn a second language fluently, often they know the language better than the people who grew up in it because they actively studied it, researched it, looked into it’s history, discovered meaning behind words that people who learned it only through habit would not know. Same could be said of a culture with extensive study. But I don’t think that is necessary once any culture demonstrates a disrespect for individuals, to me it immediately loses value. By these standards the currently worse cultures of the world are by far the fundamentalist Islamic ones.

I am fascinated by almost all cultures, including many eastern ones, and in all of them I seek things that are valuable to incorporate into my own choices of value. I do not think the arbitrary particulars which do not constitute any assault of person or property of western culture are of any value any more than I think arbitrary particulars of any other culture in the world which do not include assaulting a person or property of no value, and I adopt and disregard them as I please where I personally find value in them.

I am, in fact, an extropian (which I have mentioned here occasionally) Extropians are lovers of progress, technology, and life. They hope to see a world of indefinite life spans, sentient life spreading among the stars with people living and growing for centuries or millennia. But more than anything, they are lovers of sentience and all of them end up embracing a profound and deep respect for individuals and their choices, and consequently are the most likely to disregard things that were not the result of the choice of a person. Some are transgenderists and all of them I have met flagrantly violate stereotypes of their particular age, sex, race, or nationality. This aversion to any kind of inherited value assessment comes from the essential end goal that these kind of positive futurists see, mans ability to completely alter himself to his will. Whether it be his eye color, hair color, gender, race, or culture, it is only truly of value when it is chosen. Many extropians envision futures where they live inside computers, uploaded into emulated neural networks. What role would culture play here? Of course many of these things are absurdly fanciful, but you could imagine that integrating the valuing of sentient individual life to such an extent would make it clear why biological inherited traits become completely irrelevant and why any infringement on individuals is so abhorred. I make assessment of cultures based on this long term view of mine, where people live indefinite lives and can travel from planet to planet, what role will cultures play? Really I cant see any vision of this except one where any culture that crushes individualism will quickly lose that component and any cultural aspects which incorporate growth and enhancement will be adopted. Thus I abandon the former myself and always seek the latter. I hope that provides some useful context to how I view cultures.


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Post 55

Tuesday, June 27, 2006 - 7:17amSanction this postReply
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John A.,

The ignorance that I see are not from your statements in this thread (though you haven't demonstrate either that you do know the essence of other cultures. Using Chinese food to demonstrate an understanding of Chinese culture is not a good sign). I see it from the Marty Lewinter's article Western Pride vs. Multiculturalism. I pointed out some of the misstatements in that article here. As much as I appreciate Michael Dickey's post here, there are statements there that are quite off. For example,

What did it do in response to discovering a new world?  It beached it’s massive fleet, burned it’s ships, and built a giant wall. 
Huh?
 
In the 1940’s the nationalists lost to the communists and again China turned inward.

But Taiwan turned outward, didn't it? While the once "Western" Eastern European blocks including East Gemany also turned inward, is that right?
 
Had china embraced markets and internationalism instead of communism and isolationism at that time they would no doubt still be the reigning world superpower, there would have been no Korean war, no Vietnam war, no Cold War, and probably no lasting monstrous empire of the Soviet Union. 

 
Huh? China has long slipped from one of the world most advanced country a few hundreds years before that, ever since the Industrial Revolution began in the West.
 
When Europe discovered gun powder it helped to bring the ideas of liberty, individual rights, and the ability to pursue your own dreams to many other cultures.
 

And it also brought the annihilation of whole peoples such as the Aztecs by the Spanish Conquistadors and Native American Indians who initially helped the earliest European settlers. "bring the ideas of...individual rights, and the ability to pursue your own dreams"? Ironic, isn't it? 
 
The slave trade in Africa, the opium trades with China, the missionaries spreading one of the most irrational religions in the world, backed with the superior western guns and warships, are shameful episodes amids the spreading of the more enlightened Western ideas. Don't forget that and never let that happen again. Though I am not too optimistic.
 
About universal human values such as "sanctity of life, growth, etc.",  Michael asked "And yet where did these universal human values originate?"
 
You are not saying that only Westerners want to prosper and have a better life, don't you? Those are such fundamental values for human beings since the beginning of the human race and essentially all human cultures are based on it given their own physical environments.
 
Any one of any race or religion can come to America and become an American, I can never go to China and become Chinese. 
Oh, surely you can, just as much as I can go to England and become an Englishman.
 
And please,  I don't consider ignorance by itself is a sin. Nobody knows everything in the world. However, making sweeping judgement based on incomplete knowledge and false conceptions is one of the sins in my book.
 
 

(Edited by Hong Zhang on 6/27, 7:56am)


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Post 56

Tuesday, June 27, 2006 - 7:26amSanction this postReply
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It is suggested that we cant truly know, for instance, Chinese culture well enough to evaluate it

I never said that and never mean that. I know some westerners who are more knowledgeable about Chinese cultures than myself. But nobody on this forum has demonstrated that. I only mentioned Chinese because this is the only thing that I can make some evaluations. 


Post 57

Tuesday, June 27, 2006 - 7:41amSanction this postReply
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wouldn’t that also imply that you couldn’t know western culture well enough to decide it was not superior and was in fact inferior?
Precisely. And at least at the moment. And that's why I don't make that sweeping judgement one way or the other. I know with some certainty that the ancient Greeks were unsurpassed, that the Magna Carta Libertatum originally issued in 1215(!) was way ahead of its time, and that the founders and forefathers of the United States were such enlightened geniuses that I wish people today would stick more to their visions. I am more than happy to discuss specifics, and will definitely avoid the "whole" or the "totality" of a culture.   

(Edited by Hong Zhang on 6/27, 8:37am)


Post 58

Tuesday, June 27, 2006 - 10:11amSanction this postReply
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Hi Hong,

 

Thanks for your comments.

 

What did it do in response to discovering a new world?  It beached it’s massive fleet, burned it’s ships, and built a giant wall. 

Huh?

 

There is compelling evidence, though not verified, that the Chinese discovered the new world around 1418

 

From - http://www.economist.com/books/displaystory.cfm?story_id=5381851

It seems more likely that the world and all its continents were discovered by a Chinese admiral named Zheng He, whose fleets roamed the oceans between 1405 and 1435. His exploits, which are well documented in Chinese historical records, were written about in a book which appeared in China around 1418 called “The Marvellous Visions of the Star Raft”.”

 

From - http://www.perceptivetravel.com/issues/1205/stephens.html

“Zheng He was more than a military officer and a naval commander. He was a gifted scholar too. He spread abroad the Chinese calendar, metrological system, medical skills, and technologies of agriculture, manufacture, architecture, sculpture, and shipbuilding. It is said that thanks to Zheng He's visit, the people of Malacca learned how to construct city walls, how to dig wells for water, and how to build roads on mountains. The Siamese learned water treatment from him and the method of burning straws to fertilize farmland. The people of Vietnam learned of mountain and field reclamation and the agricultural system of growing three crops a year.”

 

Shortly after Zheng He died, suspicious of the outside world many people suggest, the new Chinese emperor had Zheng He’s fleet beached and burned, turned the culture from one of exploration to isolation, and built one of the largest additions to the great wall.  Hence my perhaps disingenuous comment that upon discovering the new world China burned its fleet, turned inward, and built a giant wall. 

 

 

“In the 1940’s the nationalists lost to the communists and again China turned inward.”
“But Taiwan turned outward, didn't it? While the once "Western" Eastern European blocks including East Gemany also turned inward, is that right?”

But as Bill points out, Taiwan turned outward because of western influence, and because it left behind the Eastern influence of isolation that the rest of China was being engulfed by.  I do not consider communism to be “Western” in the context of this discussion, “western” culture is science, reason, progress, capitalism, and individual rights.  Communism in every manifestation has been in opposition to all of these, this disagreement obviously stems in how we define “western culture” and I think Bill has done a great job of that.  How do you define it? 

 “And it also brought the annihilation of whole peoples such as the Aztecs by the Spanish Conquistadors and Native American Indians who initially helped the earliest European settlers. "bring the ideas of...individual rights, and the ability to pursue your own dreams"? Ironic, isn't it? “

 

It certainly brought the end to cultures, but not to whole peoples.  Individuals are all that matter, not cultures, or whole peoples, and the cultures of many native American tribes were as bad as modern communism, being collectivist, anti individualist and focused on war.  The Aztecs regularly practiced human sacrifice and certainly didn’t embrace rationality and individuality as any core component.  Additionally the vast majority of these native peoples were killed inadvertently from disease, not intentionally from genocide (though unfortunately some certainly were killed intentionally)  The very earliest settlers to the new world brought diseases with them and wrought devastation across the Americas before any significant number of European settlers were there. 

 

The slave trade in Africa, the opium trades with China, the missionaries spreading one of the most irrational religions in the world, backed with the superior western guns and warships, are shameful episodes amidst the spreading of the more enlightened Western ideas. Don't forget that and never let that happen again. Though I am not too optimistic.”

 

While European and western explorers certainly brought some bad things with them, they also brought a great deal of good ideas with them, and one of the most effective way colonies were able to reclaim independence was to insist that Europeans be held to their own professed values (in the case of India, for example), yet they adopted the western institutions of science, progress, reason, and capitalism before the colonialists left.   They brought bad ideas and good ideas, the good ideas being the best yet mankind has come up, but all other cultures only brought variations of bad ideas and offered very few good ideas.  Take a look at any picture of a UN gathering, those in suits and ties tend to be progressive and freer nations of the world, those in other clothes tend to be from the oppressive and brutal nations of the world. 

 

“You are not saying that only Westerners want to prosper and have a better life, don't you?” 

 

Certainly not, I think everyone given a informed chance at a choice would choose that, but most people are never given that chance with half the population in this world living in murderous brutal dictatorships or theocracies with the brutality of those rulers generally being inversely proportional to their influence by modern western ideals.

 

“And please,  I don't consider ignorance by itself is a sin. Nobody knows everything in the world. However, making sweeping judgment based on incomplete knowledge and false conceptions is one of the sins in my book.”

 

Lets be clear here, I am not talking about Chinese or eastern culture being wholly deficient nor western culture being completely virtuous, but clearly of all aspects and ideas incorporated western culture has many more positive ones with regard to human rights and liberty.  While I could never make an assessment of eastern or Chinese culture “as a whole” (i.e. knowing all particulars of it) I can certainly judge it by it’s conceptual basics and fundamentals.  A fundamental of Chinese culture is being ethnically Chinese, or partly Chinese.  No surprise there, the vast majority of cultures in the world are tied to a nationality or ethnicity.  It is only the new culture born of the west and the age of enlightenment that disregards nationality and ethnicity for cultural inclusion, what other cultures do that?  Perhaps a few rare ones whose names few people know, but I can not think of any.

 

I think where part of this conflict originates is in what you think I am saying.  I am not making any sweeping judgment that Chinese or eastern culture is only bad and Western culture is only good.  I am saying that when weighing all the most important fundamental aspects of a culture the western cultures tend to be more favorable to individual rights and human liberty than eastern ones, the only things that really matter to me, and eastern ones are more likely to not be based on these, or not as centrally focused, both historically and as a consideration of currently adopted cultural ideas.  But again this all depends on what you define “western culture” as.

 

Perhaps we should say “Enlightenment culture” instead of “western” vs “eastern” and just acknowledge that to the extent that any culture adopts the “enlightenment ideals” they prosper and the lives of the people in them are better.  My statement would be then that “western” nations tend to or are more likely to have adopted more of the “enlightenment culture” ideals, though many “eastern” cultures have as well, and both “Eastern” and “Western” cultures have adopted “Anti-Enlightment culture” to some degree.  But yet again this all depends on what criteria you use to consider something part of “western culture” or a “western nation”


Post 59

Tuesday, June 27, 2006 - 10:25amSanction this postReply
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Michael wrote:

While I could never make an assessment of eastern or Chinese culture “as a whole” (i.e. knowing all particulars of it) I can certainly judge it by it’s conceptual basics and fundamentals.


Not to mention it seems Hong is defining Eastern culture to be any idea that anyone residing in the Eastern Hemisphere of the World at anytime in history as part of that definition of Eastern culture, to the point the term is completely meaningless. And likewise, Western culture she defines it to be any idea, thought of at anytime, by any person, residing in the Western Hemisphere of the world.

I reject that definition as it makes any conversation about culture meaningless.

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