Originally posted by Boris Godunov
First, I don't really care about "authority". I make my own judgements from the basic material I find and by applying logic. Too often have I seen authority figures, in any field, produce total gibberish. However, at least you did provide a source to back up your statements, while the vultures circling this debate merely screech. So for that I respect you. Nonetheless ...:
You also are displaying a disturbing tendency to introduce elements into the argument, and when I refute them making it sound like I brought them up as a point in my argument.
First, neither Roberts nor I made no claim that the Egyptians did not EMPLOY complex mathematics, masonry, surveying, etc. But the facts of history are that they did not propogate lasting cultural instutions beyond their controlled territory of the Nile. Had they not been so geographically isolated, it is unlikely they would have lasted for the 1000s of years they did. Proof? When they encountered civs that had the technology and means infiltrate their lands (Hyksos, Greeks, Romans), they crumpled easily. They had some very brief spurts of expansion, ...
... but these always ended in failure and failed to spread their culture. Egyptian culture took root nowhere else but Egypt.
As Roberts points out quite correctly, Egypt was surpassed by CONTEMPORARY civs, not later ones. Sumeria, Babylon and Judea all possessed far more complex and influential cultural achievements, whether it be in literature, art, mathematics, architecture, religion or philosophy.
fields. I said they contributed - and to a different list of fields than you are mentioning here. So again, no argument.
Your claim the Egyptians invented irrigation is 100% false. They weren't the first to use irrigation, the Sumerians were, ...
Contrary to what another poster said ...
As for the Iroquois, I think someone almost hit the nail on the head when they wondered if you were just trying to assert a position that is historically unsupportable.
Certainly, the Iroquois culture was unique and, when not confronted with significant outside forces, strong within its own realm.
But just like with the Egyptians, the onset of much stronger cultures revealed their own culture's inherent weaknesses and allowed them to crumple before European civilization.
I say "weakness" not as a judgement call on the quality of their culture, merely on its influence and adaptability.
One of the fundamental weaknesses of Egyptian civilization was its incredible resistance to change.
Any assertion the Iroquois have had any more than a miniscule impact on world history is baseless ...
defender of the status quo, if that's what you call it.
European culture has proven to be, to this point, history's most invasive and overpowering force.
The Iroquois will not be high on that list, I guarantee you, for the vast majority of historians.
Well, I think that covered it. Yours would have been a good post had you dropped the attitude.
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