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![]() "Frank Dresser" wrote in message news ![]() "Michael" wrote in message ... So? My point was about the slow pace of technological development in slave societies. Neither the slave nor the slave owner has any strong incentive to create newer, better ways of doing things. The slave owner's surest way to get richer is to buy more slaves. The slave risks punishment for failure, but will won't much benefit from success. More than that, freedom allows far more creative minds to work on a problem. I suppose the small percentage of free Roman elites might have someday devloped shortwave radio. Maybe by the year 3000 or something. In order to accept that you would have to ignore the fact that the Romans reigned supreme as the masters of architecture and building materials. Yeah, but the Egyptians reigned supreme as the masters of ancient electronics. They had batteries and were electroplating. Big deal. The art was lost and not rediscovered 'till the after the Romans left the scene. The Greeks and Mayans made some impressive stoneworks, as well. If shortwave radios could be made from piles of stone, they would have done it first. The most complex of Greek architecture does not equal the sophistication of the most complex of what the Romans built. Not even close. That is not to diminish the tremendous and positive influence that the Greeks had on the Romans and ultimately, the world. The Mayans could stack heavy blocks in nice tall pyramid shapes. There was no room in any of their large structures because they didn't have the arch or anything like it. They were hulking piles of stone blocks with tiny rooms at the top that weren't big enough to live in. The Mayans also out did the Romans in horrific and bizarre human sacrifices. Do you honestly believe the pace of innovation of a slave society can compete with the pace of innovation of a free society? If so, how? Where is the evidence? Slave societies hardly innovate in a technological way. Nearly every worthwhile invention has come in the years since the common man has had a chance to profit from his own labors. Yet another reference to slavery is pointless misdirection. I've already pointed out that the US had the institution of slavery. Do you know how many patentable inventions there were on the CSS Virginia and the Monitor ??? That was done in a slave country. Is a civilization without slavery better ??? Yes... Sure is... Does that mean the Romans were all bad ??? No.... Does that take away from what they accomplished and left for the world ??? According to you, yes. According to anyone else who studies history... No. Done waste your time arguing against that. Although they get historic accolades for law and government, they were also the worlds master builders. Not of useless and hulking monuments, but of practical and powerful architecture. The stuff that lasting cultures and civilizations are built on. A simple example of their mastery: When new St Peters Basilica was built, the architects had to study the dome of the Pantheon to get their bearings. Modern architects HAD to study the dome? Does that really mean the new St. Peter's Basilica couldn't be built if the Pantheon didn't exist? No, but the fact that they did study the Pantheon speaks volumes about the level of skill that the Romans had. It wasnt a pyramid shaped stack of blocks. It was and still is sophisticated archetecture. Ancient Rome was far more then slavery. You have to admit that. Many historians feel that the Roman Empire was so successful in transmuting its positive components of law, government and civilization that it is legitimate to say that it didn't really fall. It just morphed. Fortunately, the components of slavery and blood sport didn't make it into Rome Mark Two; post imperial western civilization. Law and government isn't technological innovation. The greatest advance is civilization was the concept that all men are created equal. All men are not created equal. No two living things have an equal chance. That is where law and government comes in. Law and government assures that all men will be given equal and fair treatment under the law. Human rights are cataloged and driven by law. Assured equality is ENTIRELY legal and social, not natural. The ancient world could be brutal in general. What puts the Romans above their contemporaries is that despite the institution of slavery (and the US had it too !!!), they were by far the most socially, racially and religiously inclusive of any of the ancient civilizations. Not to mention, extremely well founded mechanisms of law and government. Add to that, they built buildings, public works and founded cites 2,000 years ago that are still functioning today. Of course, the Romans built things to last. They had to. They were technologically ossified. A useless and fallacious statement. |
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