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Napoleon Ier wrote:Jenos Ridan wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:
Abraham Lincoln. Worst. President. Evah.
Everybody in their right mind knows it goes:
Jimmy "peanut man" Carter (Iran, anyone? That aside, he blamed the deaths of the 1980 St Helens eruption on the few idiots who ignored the Federal and State warnings when most of the deaths occured WAY outside the area the government, HIS administration, had set in place. And this scumbag has the audacity to appear in the News after all this?!)
Followed closely by....
Bill "Slick Willy" Clinton (this miserable prick had the chance to nip Al Queda in the bud by taking out Osama but didn't have the balls. But somehow he had the balls to cheat on his wife.)
Bush Sr. (said "no new taxes" and then hiked the damn taxes. 'Nuff said.)
Richard "Tricky Dick" Nixon (can be summed up in one word: Watergate.)
Lynden B. Johnson (oversaw the complete mishandling of Vietnam; Reason #1 why we lost. Reason number two is also his fault, that moron Westmoreland.)
Herbert Hoover (He had the nerve to say that nothing bad was happening as people began to starve durring the Depression.)
From there, we move into the more mundane, unimportant Presidents like Filmore and eventually into good ones like Teddy Roosevelt.
Wow...that's some fucking impressive own general knowledge. You ever consider going who wants to be a millionaire?
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
MeDeFe wrote:I see two typos in the one and a half line paragraph where Jenos corrects Nappy's grammar. One of them is quite severe.
Napoleon Ier wrote:MeDeFe wrote:I see two typos in the one and a half line paragraph where Jenos corrects Nappy's grammar. One of them is quite severe.
Thanks for coming out on my side, my Bolsho-leftist Commiue-sympathising pseudo-masonico-socialist friend. It means a lot to me.
Iliad wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:MeDeFe wrote:I see two typos in the one and a half line paragraph where Jenos corrects Nappy's grammar. One of them is quite severe.
Thanks for coming out on my side, my Bolsho-leftist Commiue-sympathising pseudo-masonico-socialist friend. It means a lot to me.
or you know you can be a normal person and call him Medefe.
Napoleon Ier wrote:Iliad wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:Thanks for coming out on my side, my Bolsho-leftist Commiue-sympathising pseudo-masonico-socialist friend. It means a lot to me.
or you know you can be a normal person and call him Medefe.
And you know you can't be a normal person until you find a way of donating your spare chromosome. The point is, the pseudo-Boche has been humiliated, and I'm glad.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
MeDeFe wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:Iliad wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:Thanks for coming out on my side, my Bolsho-leftist Commiue-sympathising pseudo-masonico-socialist friend. It means a lot to me.
or you know you can be a normal person and call him Medefe.
And you know you can't be a normal person until you find a way of donating your spare chromosome. The point is, the pseudo-Boche has been humiliated, and I'm glad.
Just to clarify this, is the pseudo-Boche supposed to be me or Jenos, and if it's supposed to be me (which seems the likelier option from the meaning of the word 'Boche'), how have I been in any way humiliated? And anyway, I'mjust fulfilling my duty as a grammar nazi.
saxitoxin wrote:Your position is more complex than the federal tax code. As soon as I think I understand it, I find another index of cross-references, exceptions and amendments I have to apply.
Timminz wrote:Yo mama is so classless, she could be a Marxist utopia.
MeDeFe wrote:Well, I read that 'Boche' is a derogatory french word for Germans, and seeing what nationality CC takes me for... well.
muy_thaiguy wrote:First of all, it was the Byzantines that had preserved the culture and science of the Greeks during the Dark and Middle Ages (especially since the Byzantines kind of controlled the area), also the Roman Catholic Church had some of the works of the Ancients, and it was during the Renaissance that these works (both science and stories) came back into the public.
Also, one needs to think of the Popes as individuals, and not all of them lumped together as a single person. The only things that they had in common was that they were Catholic, the Pope, and the Religious leader of the Roman Catholics. There were Popes that were generals, ones that were artists, ones that were major supporters of Science, and many more with varying interests.
Jucdor wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:First of all, it was the Byzantines that had preserved the culture and science of the Greeks during the Dark and Middle Ages (especially since the Byzantines kind of controlled the area), also the Roman Catholic Church had some of the works of the Ancients, and it was during the Renaissance that these works (both science and stories) came back into the public.
Yes, Byzantium kept the culture alive as well and for almost a thousand years it was unmatched from West. However once the crusaders sacked Constantiple in 1204 Byzantium really never came back as a great power, not in military, economic or cultural sense. So all in all once the West had had enough new thoughts to call it a renaissance, Byzantium had pretty much vanished and thus it was arab scholars that knew ancient texts most well and it was muslim world Europe had to turn to to find its own roots. And thanks to that we still know names like Avicenna or Algazel and many others muslim scholars.Also, one needs to think of the Popes as individuals, and not all of them lumped together as a single person. The only things that they had in common was that they were Catholic, the Pope, and the Religious leader of the Roman Catholics. There were Popes that were generals, ones that were artists, ones that were major supporters of Science, and many more with varying interests.
Quite right. And they did play a very important role when the West was trying to find its identity.
MeDeFe wrote:Are you saying that because Mendel was a monk which gave him a lot of free time for his experiments and made sure he didn't have to do any real work to pay for food and things like that the catholic church is a pioneer of genetics?
Jucdor wrote:muy_thaiguy wrote:First of all, it was the Byzantines that had preserved the culture and science of the Greeks during the Dark and Middle Ages (especially since the Byzantines kind of controlled the area), also the Roman Catholic Church had some of the works of the Ancients, and it was during the Renaissance that these works (both science and stories) came back into the public.
Yes, Byzantium kept the culture alive as well and for almost a thousand years it was unmatched from West. However once the crusaders sacked Constantiple in 1204 Byzantium really never came back as a great power, not in military, economic or cultural sense. So all in all once the West had had enough new thoughts to call it a renaissance, Byzantium had pretty much vanished and thus it was arab scholars that knew ancient texts most well and it was muslim world Europe had to turn to to find its own roots. And thanks to that we still know names like Avicenna or Algazel and many others muslim scholars.Also, one needs to think of the Popes as individuals, and not all of them lumped together as a single person. The only things that they had in common was that they were Catholic, the Pope, and the Religious leader of the Roman Catholics. There were Popes that were generals, ones that were artists, ones that were major supporters of Science, and many more with varying interests.
Quite right. And they did play a very important role when the West was trying to find its identity.
muy_thaiguy wrote:One problem with the first part, the Turks were not, are not, and have never been Arabs. They had a tendency to burn and desecrate many things not to their liking.
And again, many histories, stories, and other manuscripts from the ancients had been collected and preserved in Rome long before the empire split into two. It was during the Renaissance that these were finally released again to the public. Considering that the Turks were one people that the Crusaders never got along with, and that the Turks were a huge threat to Europe as a whole. And considering that it was only about 50 years after Constantinople was sacked that the Turks then laid siege to it. So of course it wouldn't have had time to fully recover in almost any aspect (though the walls surprisingly held out for around 6 months against the heavy cannon fire of the Turks).
tzor wrote:(Medieval Universities) One of the key figures in the rise of the medieval university was Pope Gregory VII. In 1079, he issued a papal decree mandating the creation of cathedral schools that would be responsible for educafting the clergy. This decree ultimately led to the proliferation of educational centers which evolved over time into the universities of medieval Europe. In Italy,the University of Bologna was founded in 1088 while the University of Paris coalesced out of a loose conglomeration of various monastry schools and the center at Notre Dame some time around 1119. In 1231 under the sponsorship of Robert Sorbon, a theological college was established. Over the centuries this theological college would evolve and emerge as the Sorbonne University of Paris. In England various different colleges were established in Oxford between 1167-1185, and in 1209 the first college of the University of Cambridge was established. Some of the earliest colleges to have been formed included Balliol College founded in 1260 by John Balliol in Oxford. At Cambridge, Pembroke College was founded by Mary de St. Pol, wife of the Earl of Pembroke in 1347, and Corpus Christi College in 1352.
It is also wrong to suggest that the Church stoped science from spreading in the Rennisance. Art, science and religion were great friends in those days and their patrons were the rich merchant classes, the rich nobles and the rich churches.
Jucdor wrote:No, the world isn't that black and white. Education did rise from the church's needs, but it's greatest impact came when it managed to get out of churches grip and became independent. Sure my former lecturers seemed to value the theological teachings and depate skills that are still valid today, but let's face it - church burned people at stake when they claimed that blood runs in our veins or that space is infinite.
Martin Luther had condemned his writing in strong terms. Servetus and Philip Melanchthon had strongly hostile views of each other. Most Protestant Reformers saw Servetus as a dangerous radical, and the concept of religious freedom did not really exist yet. The Catholic world had also imprisoned him and condemned him to death, which apparently spurred Calvin to equal their rigor. Those who went against the idea of his execution, the party called "Libertines", drew the ire of much of Christendom. On 24 October Servetus was sentenced to death by burning for denying the Trinity and infant baptism. When Calvin requested that Servetus be executed by decapitation rather than fire, Farel, in a letter of September 8, chided him for undue lenity, and the Geneva Council refused his request. On 27 October 1553 Servetus was burned at the stake just outside Geneva with what was believed to be the last copy of his book chained to his leg. Historians record his last words as: "Jesus, Son of the Eternal God, have mercy on me."
tzor wrote:That is the problem with the question of science and religion. Here you have a classic example of a person who dabbled in both.
Napoleon Ier wrote:Yes. Yes I do. Any more pointless questions?
Jenos Ridan wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:Yes. Yes I do. Any more pointless questions?
graduate from high school
Snorri1234 wrote:Which is exactly the reason why it's a good thing the universities got independent. The issues rarely got seperated, and therefore lots of valuable info and scientists got lost because their beliefs didn't match with the church.
Jenos Ridan wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:Yes. Yes I do. Any more pointless questions?
No. Just one statement:
Wow, you are conceited. And arrogant does not begin to describe you. Pompass, too, does not quite cover it all. But troll covers enough.
I'll spell this out for you kid, you know nothing. No if's and's or but's, You truelly do not know a damn thing. You think you do, but you have not earned that right. That is why the above statement is there, to lay this down in no uncertain terms.
Come back when you have graduated from high school and swallowed some humble pie.
tzor wrote:And I have to strongly disagree. The problem here is that in Europe there is only one historical timeline and the history of the sciences cannot be seperated from the history of the church. Remember that it was Luther who wanted to hang and burn Gallelio, not the Pope. You also have a number of other problems, shared by the sciences and religion, that were a part of the Renissance. There were many who considered the wisdom and science of the greeks which they had just rediscovered as "gospel" even though some ideas were actually flatout wrong. It took a few centuries to get over Aristotle worship for example.
The first person who described blood flow in veins was burnt at the stake alright, but not because he described blood flow in veins. He was condemned because he argued strongly against the trinity. This is a problem that existed in this day. The same work (Christianismi Restitutio) that described blood circulation also "rejected the idea of predestination and the idea that God had condemned souls to Hell regardless of worth or merit." This apparently pissed off Calvin as well. Here's Calvin's writings to one of his friends about this man.
"Servetus has just sent me a long volume of his ravings. If I consent he will come here, but I will not give my word for if he comes here, if my authority is worth anything, I will never permit him to depart alive."
He apparently had pissed off everyone who was anyone in religious circles.
But in the end who burned him? Not the church, the state, the "Geneva Council." What wonderful times those times were. (And thus it shall be said of us by those who will come after us.)
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