Most oppressive non-Abrahamic religions/philosophies?

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Frank Hipper
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Post by Frank Hipper »

wolveraptor wrote:This discussion of the Aztecs and other sacrifice-oriented religions has me on a tangent. Why the fuck do such cultural practices survive? Shouldn't they die out in competition to cultures that don't practice human sacrifice?What possible advantage could there be?
Sacrificial beliefs appear to correlate with the emergence of agriculture; seeds give themselves to produce food, so the people had better give themselves to appease those gods in control of such things with sympathetic magic.

As to advantage, why does there need to be an advantage? Rome's system of slavery survived for centuries despite it's glaring flaw of holding a captive population within it's midst, the Aztec's system of tribute and predation survived for a century until the coming of the Spaniards; civilisations often thrive in spite of themselves.
As an analogy, what advantage does the US drug policy offer, and how is maintaining the world's largest prison population not similar to sacrifice? Throwing people away is throwing people away, dead or not.

As to the topic; I'd add Tibetan Buddhism is a none too savory practise; raising sons to become monks to support monasteries to raise sons to become monks to support monasteries, ad nauseum.

Hinduism? The dowery system alone is enough to repel a thinkin' feller.
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wolveraptor wrote:This discussion of the Aztecs and other sacrifice-oriented religions has me on a tangent. Why the fuck do such cultural practices survive? Shouldn't they die out in competition to cultures that don't practice human sacrifice?What possible advantage could there be?
Generally, they sacrifice people from other cultures. The Aztecs, for example, organised 'flowery wars' where they made the neighbors send out a puny army that had no chance of victory, who they rounded up, and sacrificed (the alternative being a real war, which the Aztecs would also win).

Of course, this shitty behaviour snapped them in the ass eventually; their neighbors were falling over themselves to help the Spanish.
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Post by Darth Yoshi »

Patrick Degan wrote:The example of Japan destroys that argument. Another very conservative, hidebound society which attempted to seal itself into its own little bubble-world and create a totally static social order for 250 years just like China. But unlike the Chinese, the Japanese threw off their governing ideology in the wake of the War of the Restoration, adopted Emperor Meiji's reforms, and embraced industrialism, international trade and capitalism. Within twenty years, Japan began to take its place as a thoroughly modern industrial and rising military power. The Chinese never even attempted that initial step until the revolution which finally brought down a hopelessly corrupt and fossilised monarchy, and they paid the price of another 50 years of civil war and foreign invasion as a result.
I'm sorry, but what does that have to do with Confucianism? All that shows is that the Imperial Japanese weren't ultra-conservatives like Cixi.
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Post by Stark »

NecronLord wrote:Generally, they sacrifice people from other cultures. The Aztecs, for example, organised 'flowery wars' where they made the neighbors send out a puny army that had no chance of victory, who they rounded up, and sacrificed (the alternative being a real war, which the Aztecs would also win).

Of course, this shitty behaviour snapped them in the ass eventually; their neighbors were falling over themselves to help the Spanish.
Also, their obsession with taking captives and their 'conventional' ritualised warfare meant even when they occassionally caught the Spaniards at a disadvantage they refused to exploit it, rather concentrating on rounding up as many of their Mexican allies as possible for sacrifice. I've even read that several times in close battle the Aztecs could have attacked and killed Cortez himself, but were easily defeated due to their retarded insistence on CAPTURING him for sacrifice.
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Post by PainRack »

Patrick Degan wrote: It's enshrinement of the primacy of authority, set formulas governing every aspect of life, and general rigidity are three forces stifling free inquiry and scientific development.
Yet, governments and people have no qualms about doing things DIFFERENT from Confucianism. Look at example the government salt and iron monopolies, despite confucianist arguments that such an act was "unnatural" and overstepped the boundaries of government, successive emperors and dynasties continued to maintain the monopolies as well as the revenue it garnered.

Similarly, despite the nature of Confucianism, the government had no qualms about changing the monopolies to meet different circumstances, such as the eventual shift towards franchising and licensing salt/iron industries.

Confucianism may had acted as a conservative force, but tell me, which society did not have its conservative nature? Look at Europe and the smallpox vaccine, as well as the introduction of the potato. These two developments signified the major leap in agricultural and scientific medical reforms that ultimately led to the Industrial Revolution and their technological advantage. Yet, they were all opposed by conservative elements of society.
The example of Japan destroys that argument. Another very conservative, hidebound society which attempted to seal itself into its own little bubble-world and create a totally static social order for 250 years just like China. But unlike the Chinese, the Japanese threw off their governing ideology in the wake of the War of the Restoration, adopted Emperor Meiji's reforms, and embraced industrialism, international trade and capitalism. Within twenty years, Japan began to take its place as a thoroughly modern industrial and rising military power. The Chinese never even attempted that initial step until the revolution which finally brought down a hopelessly corrupt and fossilised monarchy, and they paid the price of another 50 years of civil war and foreign invasion as a result.
Wrong. The Chinese DID attempt to reform and a mini industrial revolution did occur even prior to the double ten revolution. The upgrades in the Qing army arsenal of cannon was a direct result of this, similarly, the new navies that were crushed was an immature form of technological development.

Other than the corrupted nature of the Chinese court which hindered progress as well as officials who benefited from the old system, China is also vastly different from Japan in the sense that its much larger. Any social and technological reform could only occur at a much slower pace, even if we ignore the fact that the cities where such reform took place was under European control. Look at for example the Allied powers expedition and what it did to destroy Chinese industry.

If China had the same period of peace and relative prosperity that Japan had, it may had succeeded in catching up technologically wise, although not in terms of geopolitical power.
The isolationism driven at the end of the Ming Dynasty (early 17th century) was driven by Confucian extremists. Although there are a lot of other examples of Chinese people in power passing up opportunities, this was the proverbial straw that broke the camel's back - China is, effectively, still catching up to Europe from this single bout of idiocy.
It was advocated by court officials advocating Confucianism, however, their arguments was valid. To put it simply, the massive treasure ship expeditions was a vast drain on resources, resources the Ming Dynasty desperately needed at home to maintain other social and military project. Furthermore, the fact that the ban against ocean-going trading ships was decleared 3 times, as well as the fact that Chinese traders dominated the SEA inter-straits trade until the arrival of the Portugese shows that the Ming never utterly abandoned seaborne trade.

It would be more interesting to ask why did the government feel that pirates were being abetted by sea-going merchants .
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Xeriar wrote:
Darth Wong wrote:Correct me if I'm wrong, but doesn't Confucianism date back to 500 BC, whereas Chinese technological advancement actually outpaced that of the West until around the 17th century or so? I was under the impression that it was simply a set of very conservative Emperors who caused the stagnation, not Confucianism. In fact, the early Europeans who encountered the Chinese were shocked at their huge, highly advanced ships and other technologies. But when China's version of George W. Bush got into power, he pulled back his explorer ships and began persecuting intellectuals.
The isolationism driven at the end of the Ming Dynasty (early 17th century) was driven by Confucian extremists.
Can you explain which particular teaching of Confucius involves killing intellectuals and halting all scientific, cultural, and geographic inquiry?
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wolveraptor wrote:This discussion of the Aztecs and other sacrifice-oriented religions has me on a tangent. Why the fuck do such cultural practices survive?
The entire religion of Christianity is based upon the notion that a perfect human sacrifice will solve every problem of our society. It's not as if this mindset has really gone away; we've just gotten squeamish about practising it.
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Post by Fingolfin_Noldor »

The problem and issue I take with Confucianism is the extreme case of filial piety. Creative interpretations of them can really really lead to extremely interesting results.

And often played by as a bloody political card as something that is all holy and righteous by some buggers who decided wearing white was a symbol of all thing good.
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Post by PainRack »

Darth Wong wrote: Can you explain which particular teaching of Confucius involves killing intellectuals and halting all scientific, cultural, and geographic inquiry?
If you ask me, China backwardness is more a result of religion than anything else.

From temple gods to astrology, the idea of the supernatural permeated Chinese culture. Without the empirical foundation of science and research, its no wonder that China simply couldn't build on her technological advantage to supremacy.
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Gotta submit Buddhism as a contender. While the latter half of the 20th century up until now has been unkind to Buddhism's index of nations it has kept under it's thumb, nobody should be a stranger to Michael Parenti's articles on the myth of the blameless Buddhist, built largely on placid, exotic imagery popularized in movies like Kundun and Seven Years In Tibet. Theosophically inclined westerners who swallow that "one God, many faiths" tactic have been receptive to this packaging in spite of the ugly truth of feudal Tibet:

To elevate his authority beyond worldly challenge, the first Dalai Lama seized monasteries that did not belong to his sect, and is believed to have destroyed Buddhist writings that conflicted with his claim to divinity. The Dalai Lama who succeeded him pursued a sybaritic life, enjoying many mistresses, partying with friends, and acting in other ways deemed unfitting for an incarnate deity. For this he was done in by his priests. Within 170 years, despite their recognized status as gods, five Dalai Lamas were murdered by their high priests or other courtiers...

In the Dalai Lama's Tibet, torture and mutilation—including eye gouging, the pulling out of tongues, hamstringing, and amputation--were favored punishments inflicted upon runaway serfs and thieves. Journeying through Tibet in the 1960s, Stuart and Roma Gelder interviewed a former serf, Tsereh Wang Tuei, who had stolen two sheep belonging to a monastery. For this he had both his eyes gouged out and his hand mutilated beyond use. He explains that he no longer is a Buddhist: "When a holy lama told them to blind me I thought there was no good in religion." Since it was against Buddhist teachings to take human life, some offenders were severely lashed and then "left to God" in the freezing night to die. "The parallels between Tibet and medieval Europe are striking," concludes Tom Grunfeld in his book on Tibet.....

In 1959, Anna Louise Strong visited an exhibition of torture equipment that had been used by the Tibetan overlords. There were handcuffs of all sizes, including small ones for children, and instruments for cutting off noses and ears, gouging out eyes, and breaking off hands. There were instruments for slicing off kneecaps and heels, or hamstringing legs. There were hot brands, whips, and special implements for disemboweling....

The exhibition presented photographs and testimonies of victims who had been blinded or crippled or suffered amputations for thievery. There was the shepherd whose master owed him a reimbursement in yuan and wheat but refused to pay. So he took one of the master's cows; for this he had his hands severed. Another herdsman, who opposed having his wife taken from him by his lord, had his hands broken off. There were pictures of Communist activists with noses and upper lips cut off, and a woman who was raped and then had her nose sliced away.
And for those Buddhist apologists convinced that Theravada Buddhism is the pony to back in their religion's bid to evade their inevitable comeuppance, consider the records of French explorer Abbe de Choisy, who said of Thailand's Ayutthata state, whose official religion was Theravada Buddhism, that:
"the king has absolute power. He is truly the god of the Siamese: no-one dares to utter his name."
Numerous wars were conducted in the name of their "compassionate" bodhisattva king, and all dissent was utterly silenced in light of the crushing impression upon the subjects of the Ayutthata state that their king embodied all that was Divine and Right.

Modern Buddhism's oppression may pale compared to it's lost glory days, but they're worth dusting off and reviewing, lest Buddhism now enjoy too warm a reputation.
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Post by Patrick Degan »

Darth Yoshi wrote:
Patrick Degan wrote:The example of Japan destroys that argument. Another very conservative, hidebound society which attempted to seal itself into its own little bubble-world and create a totally static social order for 250 years just like China. But unlike the Chinese, the Japanese threw off their governing ideology in the wake of the War of the Restoration, adopted Emperor Meiji's reforms, and embraced industrialism, international trade and capitalism. Within twenty years, Japan began to take its place as a thoroughly modern industrial and rising military power. The Chinese never even attempted that initial step until the revolution which finally brought down a hopelessly corrupt and fossilised monarchy, and they paid the price of another 50 years of civil war and foreign invasion as a result.
I'm sorry, but what does that have to do with Confucianism? All that shows is that the Imperial Japanese weren't ultra-conservatives like Cixi.
It has plenty to do with the argument. The Tokugawa Shogunate's ideology was very much structured along the Confucian pattern and was ultra-conservative. They were overthrown however in the War of the Restoration which put the Genro Council and Emperor Meiji in power. But until that occurred, no progress in Japan was really possible.
PainRack wrote:
Patrick Degan wrote: It's enshrinement of the primacy of authority, set formulas governing every aspect of life, and general rigidity are three forces stifling free inquiry and scientific development.
Yet, governments and people have no qualms about doing things DIFFERENT from Confucianism. Look at example the government salt and iron monopolies, despite confucianist arguments that such an act was "unnatural" and overstepped the boundaries of government, successive emperors and dynasties continued to maintain the monopolies as well as the revenue it garnered.

Similarly, despite the nature of Confucianism, the government had no qualms about changing the monopolies to meet different circumstances, such as the eventual shift towards franchising and licensing salt/iron industries.
Excuse me, but how do those exceptions destroy the general observation? The very existence of the government monopolies while independent salt and iron concerns were prohibited only lend further weight to the argument. Furthermore, the government may have allowed licensing to an extent of their salt and iron franchises, but this did not seem to lead to a general loosening of the socioeconomic structure of Chinese society or of its doctrinal base.
Confucianism may had acted as a conservative force, but tell me, which society did not have its conservative nature? Look at Europe and the smallpox vaccine, as well as the introduction of the potato. These two developments signified the major leap in agricultural and scientific medical reforms that ultimately led to the Industrial Revolution and their technological advantage. Yet, they were all opposed by conservative elements of society.
Conservative elements which very evidently were not powerful enough to halt the introduction of the potato or the smallpox vaccine, nor were they operating from an ideology that society was already in a perfect form which had to be preserved intact, which would have loaned the force of centuries of tradition behind the resistance. Western conservatism was nowhere near as despotic or absolute as its Eastern counterpart.
The Chinese DID attempt to reform and a mini industrial revolution did occur even prior to the double ten revolution. The upgrades in the Qing army arsenal of cannon was a direct result of this, similarly, the new navies that were crushed was an immature form of technological development.
Big deal. The fact remains that Chinese society had been robbed of the social and ideological tools to exploit those advances on a large scale due to centuries of its Confucian tradition. The reformers lacked enough support to overcome the corrupt, fossil establishment.
Other than the corrupted nature of the Chinese court which hindered progress as well as officials who benefited from the old system, China is also vastly different from Japan in the sense that its much larger. Any social and technological reform could only occur at a much slower pace, even if we ignore the fact that the cities where such reform took place was under European control. Look at for example the Allied powers expedition and what it did to destroy Chinese industry.

If China had the same period of peace and relative prosperity that Japan had, it may had succeeded in catching up technologically wise, although not in terms of geopolitical power.
The problem with that argument is that it does not destroy the overall observation. Why did China, a nation which had a far more advanced civilisation than Europe could dream of before the middle of the 19th century, wind up in a position where she was utterly helpless to resist European exploitation? They had centuries on the West and yet England and the other colonial powers overtook them in just three decades.
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Post by Master of Cards »

Nieztchean Uber-Amoeba wrote:
Master of Cards wrote:I'll vote for Aztec beleifs because they led the way for the Spanish wiping them out
However evil the Aztecs may have been, their religion had nothing to do with the Spanish hard-on for gold.
Gods from the East? The Aztecs belived the gods will come from the east. Spain came from the east and were let in, allowing their captail to fall
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Master of Cards wrote:
Nieztchean Uber-Amoeba wrote:
Master of Cards wrote:I'll vote for Aztec beleifs because they led the way for the Spanish wiping them out
However evil the Aztecs may have been, their religion had nothing to do with the Spanish hard-on for gold.
Gods from the East? The Aztecs belived the gods will come from the east. Spain came from the east and were let in, allowing their captail to fall
I read something some time back which suggested that this was back filling of a back story, so to speak. Other examples are in history
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Post by Battlehymn Republic »

PainRack wrote:
Darth Wong wrote: Can you explain which particular teaching of Confucius involves killing intellectuals and halting all scientific, cultural, and geographic inquiry?
If you ask me, China backwardness is more a result of religion than anything else.

From temple gods to astrology, the idea of the supernatural permeated Chinese culture. Without the empirical foundation of science and research, its no wonder that China simply couldn't build on her technological advantage to supremacy.
Just remember, even though Confucianism was a philosophy mostly considered with the world and dismissed Buddhist mysticism, doesn't mean that it was devoid of religious aspects. The whole Mandate of Heaven and other beliefs that "this is the way for a divinely-inspired society" and so on.
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Post by Stark »

Master of Cards wrote:Gods from the East? The Aztecs belived the gods will come from the east. Spain came from the east and were let in, allowing their captail to fall
Wicked Prince is correct. All the sources I've seen with this 'gods from the east' copout are post-conquest, and indeed they build on each other and embellish - right down to the 'white bearded god' fiction. From primary Aztec sources pre-conquest there are few if any references to returning gods. Quezalcoatl, in some stories, went INTO the east (in most others he was consumed by fire and became the morning star) but the point wasn't that he'd come back and save the day like Jesus.

Moctezuma may have decided that Cortez was a returning god, but let's face it: he had mental problems and behaved erratically. Hitler believed some stupid shit when the Russians were coming, after all. :)
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Patrick Degan wrote: Excuse me, but how do those exceptions destroy the general observation? The very existence of the government monopolies while independent salt and iron concerns were prohibited only lend further weight to the argument. Furthermore, the government may have allowed licensing to an extent of their salt and iron franchises, but this did not seem to lead to a general loosening of the socioeconomic structure of Chinese society or of its doctrinal base.
Except that they disprove the argument that Confucianism is the key cause of what caused the decline.

Furthermore, how does one argue that since Confucianism disaproves salt and iron monopolies, ergo, the existence of salt and iron monopolies prove that Confucianism is the key element in dictatorial behaviour which caused the decline and fall of the Chinese civilisation?

The key reason for the backwardness of China lies in the Industrial Revolution. A revolution that occured in Britainand which spread outwards from there.
Unless one can show that Confucianism disallows the Industrial Revolution, its illogical to attribute the decline to Confucianism. Ergo for corruption, inept imperial leadership and unequal access to education.

The main arguments that can be raised is Confucianism attitude towards merchants and the role of women and peasants. Yet, by the Tang dynasty, both attitudes had died out. Not only that, education became more and more liberalised and free from the drudgy of the classics. More emphasis was placed on essays in the Imperial Exam which displayed critical thinking in areas of governance and agriculture among other subjects, with less emphasis placed on classical literature memorisation. Similarly, amongst the military, the idea of the "gentlemen" art slowly died, with more practical aspects of horsemanship and archery slowly coming to the foreground when choosing officers.

Unless one wish to argue that the governing philosophy of Confucianism, which places high value on loyalty, obediance and piety is the cause for China failure, its impossible to say that Confucianism is the cause for China decline. And if one chooses to argue that, remember that certain attitudes which derive from Confucianist philosophy such as the value of diplomacy, fiscal conservatism and responsibility, social welfare(in terms of education) are those which are also prized in our modern day society. The fact that such values can be taken to extremes, such as the laissez faire attitude listed above or pacificism, are the same attitudes as those found in liberal societies today. Yet, can one argue that these values are destructive to society?
Conservative elements which very evidently were not powerful enough to halt the introduction of the potato or the smallpox vaccine, nor were they operating from an ideology that society was already in a perfect form which had to be preserved intact, which would have loaned the force of centuries of tradition behind the resistance. Western conservatism was nowhere near as despotic or absolute as its Eastern counterpart.
Yet, the attitudes you argue about AREN"T confucianist at all. The idea of the Middle Kingdom is not a Confucian idea. The idea that China is perfect is similarly not a Confucian idea.

While Confucius placed great emphasis on the rites and customs of the past, believing that obedience of the rites is what will create a "perfect" human which will lead to harmony and etc etc etc, these attitudes were not ones which caused the eventual decline and fall of the Chinese civilisation.

At best, worship of the past is a Confucian ideal and if you examine chinese history instead of a superficial, stereotypical facade of its decline, you will notice that this WASN"T the reason for its eventual decline.
Big deal. The fact remains that Chinese society had been robbed of the social and ideological tools to exploit those advances on a large scale due to centuries of its Confucian tradition. The reformers lacked enough support to overcome the corrupt, fossil establishment.
Prove that Confucianism was what did this, instead of the lack of a secular education on science, which China never had because of its supernatural inclination and attitudes, instead of the lack of monies and funds which was a constant problem throughout the Yuan dynasty, and last but not least, because technical expertise was simply not available on a scale large enough.

And of course, what little abilities were developed were quickly destroyed or consumed by the European powers it encountered. The 8 powers expedition managed to engage and destroy the most modern of the Qing cannon and the armoury that built it. Furthermore, while Japan was protected from physical exploitation by the other European powers by the USA, China was not. What little concentrated industries that occured were in the ports, which quickly fell under European control. The cottage industries that existed in the other parts of China simply couldn't compete in steel and iron production, even if China could had the monies and expertise to build the railways.

Furthermore, one cannot simply neglect the role of the European in continuing to keep China down. The Opium wars and the resulting reparations severely depleted China finances. Starting from a false position of strength, they never had the time to rebuild as successive wars and failures depleted her strength further whereas Japan did, protected as it was under the wing of the US.
The problem with that argument is that it does not destroy the overall observation. Why did China, a nation which had a far more advanced civilisation than Europe could dream of before the middle of the 19th century, wind up in a position where she was utterly helpless to resist European exploitation? They had centuries on the West and yet England and the other colonial powers overtook them in just three decades.
Because England and other colonial powers underwent industrialisation and China instead went on human labour.

I'm not a sociologist, so I have no idea what theory can explain that. Is it because of the relative scarcity of land in England as oppposed to China? Is it because of the lack of agricultural land to support a vast animal population, while retaining the argicultural expertise to support a vast human populace which caused China to focus on human labour instead of labour saving machines?

All that is known is that in a land where a horse equals to 7 human labourers, industralisation took a second place to throwing more human bodies at a problem.
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Post by PainRack »

Battlehymn Republic wrote: Just remember, even though Confucianism was a philosophy mostly considered with the world and dismissed Buddhist mysticism, doesn't mean that it was devoid of religious aspects. The whole Mandate of Heaven and other beliefs that "this is the way for a divinely-inspired society" and so on.
Except that they merely shown the symptoms. It wasn't the cause. The beliefs in gods and the need to win their favour is the disease.
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Post by Big Orange »

TithonusSyndrome wrote: Modern Buddhism's oppression may pale compared to it's lost glory days, but they're worth dusting off and reviewing, lest Buddhism now enjoy too warm a reputation.
But Buddhism doesn't seem as intrinsically authoritarian and cruel as Judaism, Christianity or Islam. And the cruelty in Tibet seems to be linked more to economic and legal feudalism rather than to religious teachings (but Mao did state that religion was "poison").
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Big Orange wrote:
TithonusSyndrome wrote: Modern Buddhism's oppression may pale compared to it's lost glory days, but they're worth dusting off and reviewing, lest Buddhism now enjoy too warm a reputation.
But Buddhism doesn't seem as intrinsically authoritarian and cruel as Judaism, Christianity or Islam. And the cruelty in Tibet seems to be linked more to economic and legal feudalism rather than to religious teachings (but Mao did state that religion was "poison").
Uh, why not? Because the Dalai Lama looked so placid in a recent interview and said charming things that play to an innate tendency among westerners to be amused by simplistic "Confucius say"-style sentence structure? Buddhism is a fucking death cult if anything, holding the attainment of nirvana/oblivion over everything else. All those "be nice to everyone else" disclaimers strewn about their sacred texts are no different than a lot of the same from the Abrahamic religions, and about as easily discarded in favor of the core doctrines of postmortem interests as well.
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Post by Frank Hipper »

Big Orange wrote:But Buddhism doesn't seem as intrinsically authoritarian and cruel as Judaism, Christianity or Islam. And the cruelty in Tibet seems to be linked more to economic and legal feudalism rather than to religious teachings (but Mao did state that religion was "poison").
Buddhism doesn't need to be as intinsically oppressive as Judeo-Christian religions to qualify as being oppressive, you know...

Economics and law in Tibet were defined, entirely, by the Buddhist Monasteries; they were the policies of a theocracy so total it beggars Western imagination. If those policies were at odds with Buddhist teachings, the fact that they were enforced by religious authorities makes that point entirely moot.
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Post by Patrick Degan »

PainRack wrote:
Patrick Degan wrote: Excuse me, but how do those exceptions destroy the general observation? The very existence of the government monopolies while independent salt and iron concerns were prohibited only lend further weight to the argument. Furthermore, the government may have allowed licensing to an extent of their salt and iron franchises, but this did not seem to lead to a general loosening of the socioeconomic structure of Chinese society or of its doctrinal base.
Except that they disprove the argument that Confucianism is the key cause of what caused the decline.
Funny, but you don't demonstrate exactly how the argument is disproven. Confucian ideology is definitely at the root of the very hierarchical system which governed all aspects of Chinese society and established a lineage system which ordinary people simply couldn't operate outside of. Free enterprise, on the other hand, requires a relatively hands-off environment in order for any concern to be able to establish itself and operate freely.
Furthermore, how does one argue that since Confucianism disaproves salt and iron monopolies, ergo, the existence of salt and iron monopolies prove that Confucianism is the key element in dictatorial behaviour which caused the decline and fall of the Chinese civilisation?
Excuse me, but that is not at all my argument. Your strawman of it, perhaps...
The key reason for the backwardness of China lies in the Industrial Revolution. A revolution that occured in Britainand which spread outwards from there.
But that doesn't answer the question of why there was no Industrial Revolution in China of the same sort as what occurred in Britain and the west, does it?
Unless one can show that Confucianism disallows the Industrial Revolution, its illogical to attribute the decline to Confucianism. Ergo for corruption, inept imperial leadership and unequal access to education.
Confucianism did not "disallow" the Industrial Revolution; it merely made for a society which was too hidebound to recognise and grasp the forces of change and innovation. Higher education was aimed at preparation for the examination system which was the only access into the imperial bureaucracy and the one real avenue for upward mobility in Chinese society, and that education had degenerated into rote memorisation of classical texts. That does not build a foundation for a dynamic society.
The main arguments that can be raised is Confucianism attitude towards merchants and the role of women and peasants. Yet, by the Tang dynasty, both attitudes had died out. Not only that, education became more and more liberalised and free from the drudgy of the classics. More emphasis was placed on essays in the Imperial Exam which displayed critical thinking in areas of governance and agriculture among other subjects, with less emphasis placed on classical literature memorisation. Similarly, amongst the military, the idea of the "gentlemen" art slowly died, with more practical aspects of horsemanship and archery slowly coming to the foreground when choosing officers.
Oh really:
The Encyclopaedia Britannica wrote:Confucianism was perceived by the Mongols as a Chinese religion, and it had mixed fortunes under their rule. The teachings of the Neo-Confucian school of Chu Hsi from the Sung period were introduced to the Mongol court at Chung-tu in the late 1230s but were confined to limited circles there and in North China. Confucian scholars enjoyed the benefits extended to the clergy of all religions, but they were dealt a strong blow by the discontinuation of the literary examinations following the Mongol conquest. For many centuries the examinations, based on Confucian texts, had been the basis for the selection of officials and for their privileged position within the state and society. After Kublai's accession, Confucianism had a more cordial reception at the Mongol court through the efforts of Chinese advisers like Liu Ping-chung and the great Confucian master Hsü Heng. Under their stewardship a certain Confucianization took place in government and education. Chinese rituals were performed for a while in the dynastic temple (t'ai-miao), erected in Chung-tu in 1263. State sacrifices were offered to Confucius, and the study of the Classics was encouraged. Many of the rites observed at the court that were either Tibetan Buddhist or inherited from the Mongol nomadic past were continued, however. The emperor Buyantu (ruled 1311–20), one of the most Sinicized Mongol rulers, reintroduced the examination system in 1313, but it remains doubtful how well the examinations functioned. They certainly did not guarantee an official career, as those under the Sung and, to a certain extent, under the Chin had done.

The system of the Yüan, as introduced in 1313, provided different types of curricula for Mongols, other foreigners (se-mu jen), and Chinese; also, the requirements were different—Chinese had to show their complete mastery of the curriculum, whereas Mongols and other foreigners had to give only a mediocre performance. This inequality was even formalized for the candidates who were to be admitted to the state academy (kuo-tzu chien). The first examinations were held in the presence of the Emperor in 1315, and, of the 300 persons granted the title of doctor (chin-shih), 75 were Mongols, 75 were other foreigners, 75 were northern Chinese (han-jen), and 75 came from southern China; they all received official positions within the bureaucracy, Mongols the higher and Chinese the lesser posts. The positions of power within the hierarchy remained in the hands of the Mongols and other foreigners.

Under Buyantu, for the first time, the interpretation and commentaries of the Neo-Confucian school were made obligatory. This cemented Neo-Confucian ideology not only among the Chinese literati who wished to pass an examination but also for future generations. Chinese Confucian orthodoxy from the 14th to the 19th century therefore rested largely on the foundations it had received under the Yüan. In spite of all this, Classical scholarship under the Yüan did not produce a single remarkable work but struggled under an adverse political and intellectual climate. Striving to preserve their sacred tradition, the Confucian scholars were content with expounding the doctrines laid down by the Sung philosophers, seeking to harmonize the different philosophical issues and points of view rather than exploring new horizons.
PainRack wrote:Unless one wish to argue that the governing philosophy of Confucianism, which places high value on loyalty, obediance and piety is the cause for China failure, its impossible to say that Confucianism is the cause for China decline. And if one chooses to argue that, remember that certain attitudes which derive from Confucianist philosophy such as the value of diplomacy, fiscal conservatism and responsibility, social welfare(in terms of education) are those which are also prized in our modern day society. The fact that such values can be taken to extremes, such as the laissez faire attitude listed above or pacificism, are the same attitudes as those found in liberal societies today. Yet, can one argue that these values are destructive to society?
Yes, it placed high value on obedience, piety, and loyalty. It also discouraged innovative thought and free scientific inquiry. It's emphasis on the preservation of tradition as a supreme virtue acted as a negative force against any trend toward progress.
Conservative elements which very evidently were not powerful enough to halt the introduction of the potato or the smallpox vaccine, nor were they operating from an ideology that society was already in a perfect form which had to be preserved intact, which would have loaned the force of centuries of tradition behind the resistance. Western conservatism was nowhere near as despotic or absolute as its Eastern counterpart.
Yet, the attitudes you argue about AREN"T confucianist at all. The idea of the Middle Kingdom is not a Confucian idea. The idea that China is perfect is similarly not a Confucian idea.
Oh really:
Basic cultural differences existed between the Chinese and Western Europeans. To Westerners, the individual was more important than the group. The Chinese took the opposite view. Westerners believed in the supremacy of law. The Chinese believed in an all-powerful emperor. Westerners placed a high value on technology and material wealth. The Chinese considered proper relationships far more important. According to Confucian thought, Chinese society at this time was divided into four classes. In order of importance, they were scholar-gentry, who governed in the name of the emperor; peasants, who provided food and taxes; artisans, who crafted useful objects; and merchants, who made profits by selling things that the peasants and artisans produced. Thus, while Westerners held merchants and business people in high regard, the Chinese tended to despise merchants, who "neither plow nor weed."

Paul Thomas Welty and Miriam Greenblatt, The Human Expression, 4th ed. (Peoria, Ill.: Glencoe, 1992), 234.
While Confucius placed great emphasis on the rites and customs of the past, believing that obedience of the rites is what will create a "perfect" human which will lead to harmony and etc etc etc, these attitudes were not ones which caused the eventual decline and fall of the Chinese civilisation.

At best, worship of the past is a Confucian ideal and if you examine chinese history instead of a superficial, stereotypical facade of its decline, you will notice that this WASN"T the reason for its eventual decline.
The problem is that once Confucius' ideals became codified into doctrine, that doctrine was observed and applied with increasing rigidity with each passing century.
Big deal. The fact remains that Chinese society had been robbed of the social and ideological tools to exploit those advances on a large scale due to centuries of its Confucian tradition. The reformers lacked enough support to overcome the corrupt, fossil establishment.
Prove that Confucianism was what did this, instead of the lack of a secular education on science, which China never had because of its supernatural inclination and attitudes, instead of the lack of monies and funds which was a constant problem throughout the Yuan dynasty, and last but not least, because technical expertise was simply not available on a scale large enough.
Let's see what Prof. Henry Tsai Shih-shan (History dept., University of Arkansas) had to say on the matter:

Linky
"Fear of change is an enduring legacy of Confucianism," says Henry Tsai Shih-shan, a University of Arkansas history professor who has written several books on the Ming dynasty. "Chinese continually fail to appreciate that expansion can create power and wealth, not chaos."
Further, you toss out "supernatural inclination and attitudes" as the supposed catch-phrase answer to the entire question while ignoring the fact that neither Buddhist nor Taoist traditions (the prevailing religious/philosophical influences in Chinese society during the period in question) and teachings are particularly mystical or concerned with superstitious practises, and therefore cannot support your theory or explain the fact of Chinese stagnation. Insular and tradition-bound they might have been, but the Chinese certainly were not the Voodoo People. To punctuate both points:

.pdf Link
Intensive And Extensive Growth In Imperial China wrote:The bureaucratic system was the major force maintaining China as a unitary state. The
bureaucracy was a docile instrument of the Emperor (as long as he did not seriously breach the mandate of heaven), but exercised autocratic power over the population, with no challenge from a landed aristocracy, an established church, a judiciary, dissident intellectuals, the military or the urban bourgeoisie. They used a written language common to all of China, and the official Confucian ideology was deeply ingrained in the education system. This system was relatively efficient and cheap to operate compared with the multilayered structure of governance in pre–modern Europe and Japan. It facilitated central control by maintaining an efficient communications network and flow of information which enabled the imperial power to monitor and react to events. It maintained order without massive use of military force. It created the logistics (the Grand Canal) for feeding a large imperial capital on the edge of the Empire. It raised and remitted taxes to maintain a lavish imperial household and the military establishment. It maintained the Great Wall as a defensive glacis against barbarian invaders. Maintenance of a single economic area did not ensure a single national market for goods because of high transport costs, but it had an important impact in facilitating the transmission of best–practice technology. New techniques which the bureaucracy sponsored or favoured could be readily spread by use of printed matter. Thus the gap between best–practice and average practice was probably narrower than it was in the polycentric state system of Europe. The economic impact of bureaucracy was generally very positive in agriculture. Like eighteenth century French physiocrats, the Emperor and bureaucracy thought of it as the key sector from which they could “squeeze” a surplus in the form of taxes and compulsory levies. They nurtured agriculture through hydraulic works. They helped develop and diffuse new seeds and crops by technical advice. They settled farmers in promising new regions. They developed a public granary system to ensure imperial food supplies and mitigate famines. They commissioned and distributed agricultural handbooks, calendars etc. Outside agriculture, the bureaucratic system had negative effects. The bureaucracy and gentry were quintessential rent–seekers. Their legal and customary privileges defined their status, lifestyle and attitudes. They were the group which dominated urban life. They prevented the emergence of an independent commercial and industrial bourgeoisie on the European pattern. Entrepreneurial activity was insecure in a framework where legal protection for private activity was so exiguous. Any activity that promised to be lucrative was subject to bureaucratic squeeze. Larger undertakings were limited to the state or to publicly licensed monopolies. Potentially profitable activity in opening up world trade by exploiting China’s sophisticated shipbuilding and navigational knowledge was simply forbidden.

The other feature of this bureaucratic civilisation which had long–term repercussions on economic development, was the official Confucian ideology and education system. By comparison with the situation in Europe in the middle ages, its pragmatic bias gave it the advantage. The official orthodoxy was probably most benign during the Sung dynasty. Educational opportunity was widened by state schools which provided a broader curriculum than the bureaucratic academies in later dynasties. Taoism and Buddhism were in decline. Neo–Confucian thought was reinvigorated and at that time was free of the dogmatism it displayed in later centuries (see Kracke, 1953, and Miyazaki, 1976). Needham (1969) argued that the Chinese bureaucracy was an enlightened despotism, more rational than European Christendom; more meritocratic in its concentration of the best minds in situations of power and hence more favourable to the progress of “natural knowledge” than the European system of military aristocratic power. After the European Renaissance and the development of Galileian and Newtonian science, the balance of advantage changed. Needham argues that China was never able “to develop the fundamental bases of modern science, such as the application of mathematical hypotheses to Nature, the full understanding and use of the experimental method, the distinction between primary and secondary qualities, and the systematic accumulation of openly published scientific data” (Needham, 1981, p. 9). However, he adds that the European breakthrough was due to “special social, intellectual and economic conditions prevailing there at the Renaissance, and can never be explained by any deficiencies either of the Chinese mind or of the Chinese intellectual and philosophical tradition”. China failed to react adequately to the Western challenge until the middle of the twentieth century, mainly because the ideology, mindset and education system of the bureaucracy promoted an ethnocentric outlook, which was indifferent to developments outside China.
As the above extract indicates, a system based upon the bureaucratic enforcement of Confucian doctrine sapped away the impetus toward any large-scale development of native Chinese technological abilities and robbed the Chinese civilisation of the fullest exploitation of its economic and scientific potential. Not mysticism as you would have it.
And of course, what little abilities were developed were quickly destroyed or consumed by the European powers it encountered. The 8 powers expedition managed to engage and destroy the most modern of the Qing cannon and the armoury that built it. Furthermore, while Japan was protected from physical exploitation by the other European powers by the USA, China was not. What little concentrated industries that occured were in the ports, which quickly fell under European control. The cottage industries that existed in the other parts of China simply couldn't compete in steel and iron production, even if China could had the monies and expertise to build the railways.

Furthermore, one cannot simply neglect the role of the European in continuing to keep China down. The Opium wars and the resulting reparations severely depleted China finances. Starting from a false position of strength, they never had the time to rebuild as successive wars and failures depleted her strength further whereas Japan did, protected as it was under the wing of the US.
And what you continue to ignore is just what put China in such a position of weakness that it could not resist European incursion and exploitation in the first place. You focus on a symptom while ignoring the root cause of the disease.
The problem with that argument is that it does not destroy the overall observation. Why did China, a nation which had a far more advanced civilisation than Europe could dream of before the middle of the 19th century, wind up in a position where she was utterly helpless to resist European exploitation? They had centuries on the West and yet England and the other colonial powers overtook them in just three decades.
Because England and other colonial powers underwent industrialisation and China instead went on human labour.
A so-called answer which actually explains nothing.
I'm not a sociologist, so I have no idea what theory can explain that. Is it because of the relative scarcity of land in England as oppposed to China? Is it because of the lack of agricultural land to support a vast animal population, while retaining the argicultural expertise to support a vast human populace which caused China to focus on human labour instead of labour saving machines?
China had no lack of arable land to support its human and animal populations and at least had agricultural production well-enough organised to obviate against the danger of famine. Furthermore, your argument here is self-contradictory: a country which supposedly lacks the agricultural capacity and expertise to support livestock as well as its human population but somehow can support a large labour-force? Doesn't track —particularly as Chinese civilisation was no less primitive or poor than 17th century Europe before the West gained the upper hand.
All that is known is that in a land where a horse equals to 7 human labourers, industralisation took a second place to throwing more human bodies at a problem.
A lot more is known that that. Chinese history is not exactly a mystery to the rest of the world.
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Post by Akhlut »

Stark wrote:Also, their obsession with taking captives and their 'conventional' ritualised warfare meant even when they occassionally caught the Spaniards at a disadvantage they refused to exploit it, rather concentrating on rounding up as many of their Mexican allies as possible for sacrifice. I've even read that several times in close battle the Aztecs could have attacked and killed Cortez himself, but were easily defeated due to their retarded insistence on CAPTURING him for sacrifice.
They got over that one quickly. It doesn't take too many ass-spankings to learn to kill your enemies instead of just capturing them. And their weapons were effective, as one Spaniard attested to an Aztec sword nearly beheading a horse. Their main problems were smallpox, horses, guns, and all those aforementioned tribes wanting revenge.
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Post by Akhlut »

wolveraptor wrote:This discussion of the Aztecs and other sacrifice-oriented religions has me on a tangent. Why the fuck do such cultural practices survive? Shouldn't they die out in competition to cultures that don't practice human sacrifice?What possible advantage could there be?
Depends on how much sacrifice they practice and who is being sacrificed. Large numbers of sacrifices of one's own people is probably doomed, but small numbers of sacrifices of one's own people or large numbers of other people probably won't have that much of an effect on the population numbers of a society.
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Post by The Grim Squeaker »

Akhlut wrote:
wolveraptor wrote:This discussion of the Aztecs and other sacrifice-oriented religions has me on a tangent. Why the fuck do such cultural practices survive? Shouldn't they die out in competition to cultures that don't practice human sacrifice?What possible advantage could there be?
Depends on how much sacrifice they practice and who is being sacrificed. Large numbers of sacrifices of one's own people is probably doomed, but small numbers of sacrifices of one's own people or large numbers of other people probably won't have that much of an effect on the population numbers of a society.
In addition it's a helpful trait once you get used to sacrifice Other people (And putting it in as clauses in treaties).

Pratchett said it best (Paraphrased) : The tribe that practices goodwill towards all and are content with their small patch of vegetation are going to end up massacred by the tribe from the next valley whose god told them that life would be much better if they converted & killed the heathens from the neighbouring valley (Until they get massacred by the fanatics from the next valley and so on and so forth).
Akhlut wrote:And their weapons were effective, as one Spaniard attested to an Aztec sword nearly beheading a horse.
Really? I read that the Aztec stone/obsidian clubs and unpractical sacrificial swords Bounced off Spanish metal armour?
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Post by Erik von Nein »

DEATH wrote:Really? I read that the Aztec stone/obsidian clubs and unpractical sacrificial swords Bounced off Spanish metal armour?
Generally speaking, those weapons weren't unpractical and horse necks aren't Spanish steel. Those weapons were, quite literally, razor sharp. They could easily sever a man's arm, if the swing was at the right angle.
However, they did shatter quite often, but they rarely even bounced off anything.
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