Instead of seeing everybody debating of the eligibility of each civ, I propose some criterions applyable to any case:
1- An elaborated culture
Definition of "elaborated culture": A culture of hunter/gatherer that every culture started with isn't elaborated. Elaborated is that the culture has its own ways of explaining things, own theology, its way of doing things.
2- A distinct culture
Definition of "distinct culture": Even if they both made a different kingdom that was very powerful (or not, doesn't bother me), they may have the same culture and in fact both be japanese, or chinese or else. It's simply that a civilisation may have schisms or many parts. Also, a culture that can be covered by annother because she is a simple branch of this other, a division, is in fact part of that other. Of course, each civ is in fact a branch of some original human group, but they need to have taken a different path. This is why there are many European civs: many took different paths due to some envrionmental, cultural arrivals and other reasons.
So these are, I think, the reasons. All the rest comes from these two factors. You like Vikings because of their specific way of doing? Well it's because they are specific, have a distinct culture. You think a civ is great by their wars? Well their wars were maybe something coming from their elaborated way of administrating their people, their strenghts (+ they were specific or they should be included elsewhere).
I think that the "distinctive" factor should be looked at for Koreans, Polls, Khmers, Vikings, and many others. Not all are distinctive, even if they are waging wars against the civ from which their branch is coming. As Babylonians that covers some other more minor generally about-similar civs.
I think that the "elaborated" factor could be looked at with civs such as Polynesians, all Iroquois and Native Americans, all Zulus and Africans (should they be all-in-one?). In fact, elaboration is what makes that a civilisation gradually distinguish as a branch. If it doesn't elaborate enough, it wont distinguish. And it wont become a great culture by itself since only elaboration may achieve greatness, should it be as Japan, China, Greek or other.
In fact, a not elaborated enough civ is simply a seed with no flower design yet. As all civs may start the same way. So if it didn't developed any specific culture yet: it's simply a bunch of humans with too little complex organization. And if it didn't elaborated enough from a mother-civilisation, it's stil part of that mother-civilisation, a branch of it.
1- An elaborated culture
Definition of "elaborated culture": A culture of hunter/gatherer that every culture started with isn't elaborated. Elaborated is that the culture has its own ways of explaining things, own theology, its way of doing things.
2- A distinct culture
Definition of "distinct culture": Even if they both made a different kingdom that was very powerful (or not, doesn't bother me), they may have the same culture and in fact both be japanese, or chinese or else. It's simply that a civilisation may have schisms or many parts. Also, a culture that can be covered by annother because she is a simple branch of this other, a division, is in fact part of that other. Of course, each civ is in fact a branch of some original human group, but they need to have taken a different path. This is why there are many European civs: many took different paths due to some envrionmental, cultural arrivals and other reasons.
So these are, I think, the reasons. All the rest comes from these two factors. You like Vikings because of their specific way of doing? Well it's because they are specific, have a distinct culture. You think a civ is great by their wars? Well their wars were maybe something coming from their elaborated way of administrating their people, their strenghts (+ they were specific or they should be included elsewhere).
I think that the "distinctive" factor should be looked at for Koreans, Polls, Khmers, Vikings, and many others. Not all are distinctive, even if they are waging wars against the civ from which their branch is coming. As Babylonians that covers some other more minor generally about-similar civs.
I think that the "elaborated" factor could be looked at with civs such as Polynesians, all Iroquois and Native Americans, all Zulus and Africans (should they be all-in-one?). In fact, elaboration is what makes that a civilisation gradually distinguish as a branch. If it doesn't elaborate enough, it wont distinguish. And it wont become a great culture by itself since only elaboration may achieve greatness, should it be as Japan, China, Greek or other.
In fact, a not elaborated enough civ is simply a seed with no flower design yet. As all civs may start the same way. So if it didn't developed any specific culture yet: it's simply a bunch of humans with too little complex organization. And if it didn't elaborated enough from a mother-civilisation, it's stil part of that mother-civilisation, a branch of it.
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