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Robert Barbere

Category Archives: History

Trapped By An Ideology

04 Saturday Oct 2014

Posted by robb1138 in History, Philosophy, Politics

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Babylonians, Canaan, Chaldees, Christian, Egypt, El, Elohim, Fascism, Germanic, Holocaust, Israel, Jericho, Jew, Jordan River, Judah, King Nebuchadnezzar, Levant, Mediterranean, Middle East, Mohammad, Muslim, National Socialism, Palestine, religion, Rhine Valley, Romans, Sephardic Jews, Torah, Ur, World War II, YHVH, Yiddish

What came first?  Was it the chicken, or was it the egg?  The answer is not simple. In a single human being, this relies on a balance of two forces, not necessarily opposing however, influential.  What helps us understand the underlying drive of a group of people is the balance between the material and the cultural world.  In the case of the Israelis, it is important to note that placing these people in a particular geographical location, at a particular time in history, commands a balance of many factors.  One factor drives the other.  Our culture grows from our circumstances, our weather, our terrain, our level of education, and our place in history.  Take note of the Israelis of today, although their history and religion are, to many, one and the same.  One can see, that although they have, in the last two thousand years  spent time in many lands, they are still a people whose past is influenced by political and economic events and whose future is tied ultimately to a particular place on Earth, “the land of Israel”.

To begin with, the Israelis, historically, come from the area we call the Middle East, particularly from an area known as the Levant.  The area on the East Coast of the Mediterranean Sea, now known as Israel, formerly Palestine and was prehistorically known as Canaan.  In a land of low fertile valleys and rocky mountains and where rain is scarce at times, the ancient people settled in areas where their sheep and or cattle would be able to graze and where the people can grow crops of wheat and various vegetables.  With farming and herding of sheep and cattle, the size of various clans grew larger.  The scarcity of land becomes apparent. While telling a tale over the campfire at night, the tribal elders reduce the battle between the shepherd and the farmer for land to the legend of two brothers fighting and one killing the other. Continue reading →

The Hohokam: Arizona’s First Natives

03 Friday Oct 2014

Posted by robb1138 in History

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Arena Football, Arizona, Aztec, canals, Egyptian, Gila River, Gulf of California, Hohokam, Incan, Mayan, Paleo Indians, Salt River, Verde River

The first Indians that arrived in the area that we now call Arizona are classified as the Paleo Indians. The Arizona they found was much different than the Arizona we know today. About 12000 years ago, during the first migration wave, and 6000 years after the second great migration wave, the Indians found Arizona to be wet and green. The habitat at that time contained the, “lush green valleys of southern Arizona” The thought was that the Indian hunters would set up traps for the giant creatures that existed at the time at the many watering holes. As far as the animals that existed we can only speculate, however, evidence exists in the form of the bones of elephants, (probably the wooly mammoth) the primitive horse, a bison, and the tapir.  Other creatures to exist at the time were considered giant by are standards and probably included the mastodons, grizzly bear, beaver, camels, and large bison.

Country Road

Autumn Day © Alison Grippo | Dreamstime Stock Photos

No one knows for sure why, but as some time these giant creatures died off. Speculation is that as the lands started turning into the desert that we know today; the vegetation died and the land could no longer support the creatures that once roamed this land.

As more and more people settled into the area around the Salt River they noticed that the previous inhabitants had left a system of canals that turned out to be quite complex and quite extensive. Some of these canals diverted water from the river up to 16 miles, which enabled the Hohokam to move farther from the river. Scientist speculate that the Hohokam people that built these canals came up from Mexico around 300 BCE and came to number from about 20000 to 60000 before they rapidly declined. Continue reading →

The Age of Reason

26 Friday Sep 2014

Posted by robb1138 in History, Philosophy, Science

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Aristarchus of Samos, Charles Darwin, Claudius Ptolemy, Galileo Galilei, Isaac Newton, Johannes Kepler, Nicolaus Copernicus, René Descartes, Steven Hawking, Tycho Brahe

Throughout the history of modern astronomy the scientific method has played an important role in helping to guide scientist in correctly modeling a theory of how our solar system interacts in the whole cosmology of the universe. The history of scientific method and the history of astronomy seem to develop hand in hand. A development in astronomy seems to coincide with a refinement in the method of studying the sciences. The ancient Egyptians, using a form of the method in their surgical manuals, stated the basic forms of examination, diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis. The ancient Greeks formalized at tradition of a scientific method that included some of the steps that we include today. However, it was during the renaissance period that we get a more defined version of a method. The philosopher/scientists Descartes, Hume, Kant, and Newton all played a part in defining this process and in turn used it to prove to the world that the model of the universe was not geocentric, but was in fact, heliocentric, the Earth revolved around the Sun.

The Heliocentric model of the solar system was put forth by an ancient astrologer  Aristarchus of Samos in 200 BCE, however without any method to prove this theory, this model was overshadowed by the geocentric model of the Solar System and common sense.The method commonly accepted today, in its simplest form, includes the following four steps: The first step involves observing and describing a phenomenon or group of phenomena. The ability to observe what was happening up in the heavens in ancient times was limited at best. With out the aid of telescopes ancient man resorted to using mathematics to explain what the thought they saw in the sky. Claudius Ptolemy (85 -165 CE) used mathematics to portray a very complicated geocentric model trying to explain how the sun, the moon, the stars and the planets revolved around the Earth. This model of the universe was accepted by the Catholic Church and survived and prevailed for almost 1400 years due to the church’s heavy influence.

Continue reading →

Marcus Aurelius – Meditations Summary

10 Wednesday Sep 2014

Posted by robb1138 in History, Philosophy

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Life

Truth

Truth is an absolute value. Some things are true in all places and times. Resisting evil, for example, is always right.

Justice

Justice consists of treating others as one would wish to be treated. “Do unto others what you would have them do unto.” This statement summarizes this concept of justice.

Courage

Courage means standing up for justice.

Moderation

Nothing should be carried to excess.

Wisdom

Wisdom enables a person to know what justice is, to recognize when courage is required, and to do what is right.

Marcus Aurelius

The Origins of the Crusades and 200 Years of War, and a Millennium of Hate

07 Sunday Sep 2014

Posted by robb1138 in History

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crusades image 0001“…a race absolutely alien to God…has invaded the land of the Christians… ” Thus, spoke Pope Urban II on Tuesday November 20 1095 of the old Julian calendar. The Crusades still fascinate us to this day; we write books about the period, and we view films about the crusades to this day. Although information on the era of the crusades are expansive, unless you are a historian or a history buff, watching anything that the History Channel has to offer, the most we know, we get from the movies. A simple search on the internet will yield over three million results. Let’s start at the beginning…

Pope Urban II’s world at the end of the first millennium
Baptized in 1035 as Odo de Lagery, the future pope, was born in Châtillion-sur-Marne, in northern France, grew up in a world divided by bloody feudal battles and general lawlessness. After the decay and fall of the Roman Empire and the rise of the ‘barbarian’ peoples in Gaul, in the fifth and sixth centuries, the Visigoths, Avars, Lombards, battling for territory amongst themselves and the Franks, the region now known as France was ready for order. By 800 CE as the Franks established dominance over the region and consolidated power under Charlemagne, the empire once again sunk into decay and Continue reading →

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