ScottS wrote:Human nature is fixed, and as a result, history is cyclic. Virtually everything has been tried before, and the vast majority of the time, context is irrelevant. And yet, mankind continues to make the same mistakes over and over. Why? Because mankind chooses to ignore it's history before striking out on yet another foolish path.
I'd argue that your assumptions here are wrong.
Everything has not been tried before. Before Westphalia in 1648 the organisation of, essentially, the world into nation states had never before happened. 'National' loyalties and identities had never really been present before, yet today we see them as inherent and an ever-present part of human nature. Again, moving towards colonialism, we brought those ideas of Nation States to Africa and the Middle East, where no such thing had ever existed, even in basic or conceptual form. Before the 9th century BC we'd never experienced cities in even the basic sense we imagine them to be today, nor had we seen these things as political bodies before ancient Greece. The 'public', in the sense of public space and public opinion, didn't even exist before the 16th or 17th century, at least according to Habermas, yet you think we keep making the same mistakes? The French Revolution was entirely different to earlier revolutions because it was the first to be driven by a new public space and a public will to act as both judge and subject.
We do not ignore our history because each context is entirely unique. We are acting independently of history, essentially... They are not the same mistakes because the ruler of a Nation State is a different person to an Emperor, who again is different to a City Elder, who is again different to a Tribal Leader.