"Page0039" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bloom Howard - The Lucifer Principle (htm))1 1 1 Mother Nature, the Bloody Bitch "We do not see, or we forget, that the birds which are idly singing around us mostly live on insects or seeds, and are thus constantly destroying life...." Charles Darwin, The Origin of the Species "Mankind has always been cutting one another's throats.... Do you not believe...that hawks have always preyed upon pigeons...? Then...if hawks have always had the same nature, what reason can you give why mankind should change theirs?" Voltaire, Candide In 1580, Michelle de Montaigne, inspired by the discovery of New World tribes untouched by Europe's latest complexities, initiated the idea of the "noble savage." Nearly two hundred years later, Jean Jacques Rousseau popularized the concept when he published four works1 proclaiming that man is born an innocent wonder, filled with love and generosity, but that a Luciferian force ensnares him: modern civilization. Rousseau claimed that without civilization, humans would never know hatred, prejudice or cruelty. Today, the Rousseauistic doctrine seems stronger than ever. Twentieth century writers and scientists like Ashley Montagu, Claude Levi-Strauss (who hailed Rousseau as the "father of anthropology"), Eric Jantsch, David Barash, Richard Leakey and Susan Sontag have reworked the notion to condemn current industrial civilization. They have been joined by numerous feminist,2 environmentalist and minority rights extremists. Even such august scientific bodies as the American Anthropological Association, the American Psychological Association, and the Peace And War Section of the American 1 1 1 Mother Nature, the Bloody Bitch "We do not see, or we forget, that the birds which are idly singing around us mostly live on insects or seeds, and are thus constantly destroying life...." Charles Darwin, The Origin of the Species "Mankind has always been cutting one another's throats.... Do you not believe...that hawks have always preyed upon pigeons...? Then...if hawks have always had the same nature, what reason can you give why mankind should change theirs?" Voltaire, Candide In 1580, Michelle de Montaigne, inspired by the discovery of New World tribes untouched by Europe's latest complexities, initiated the idea of the "noble savage." Nearly two hundred years later, Jean Jacques Rousseau popularized the concept when he published four works1 proclaiming that man is born an innocent wonder, filled with love and generosity, but that a Luciferian force ensnares him: modern civilization. Rousseau claimed that without civilization, humans would never know hatred, prejudice or cruelty. Today, the Rousseauistic doctrine seems stronger than ever. Twentieth century writers and scientists like Ashley Montagu, Claude Levi-Strauss (who hailed Rousseau as the "father of anthropology"), Eric Jantsch, David Barash, Richard Leakey and Susan Sontag have reworked the notion to condemn current industrial civilization. They have been joined by numerous feminist,2 environmentalist and minority rights extremists. Even such august scientific bodies as the American Anthropological Association, the American Psychological Association, and the Peace And War Section of the American |
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