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przeciwwymiotne
Be rude to me at all times, I don't deserve kindne
- Jun 27, 2022
- 357
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You're probably right, but what if some caveman was like "I sometimes have a desire to stop running when chased by a predator, to end it all and be consumed"Interesting thought.
I think they may have been too preoccupied with survival to consider it.
Their lives were already dangerous and they had a high likelihood of dying as it was.
Probably, history repeats itself
That does not make any sense since slavery has always been a part of human civilization. Practically every society has practiced at least some form of slavery at some point in its history, whether on systematic or individual levels.i have read ctb never existed until slavery. can you think of any animals living in nature that ctb ?
i have read ctb never existed until slavery. can you think of any animals living in nature that ctb ?
There is definitely a way to sacrifice oneself to the godsYou're probably right, but what if some caveman was like "I sometimes have a desire to stop running when chased by a predator, to end it all and be consumed"
yeah being eaten alive is far from a peaceful deathEasy to be suicidal when there's bigger predators to annihilate you right away.
That zebra knew what a painful one was thoughI don't know. I think cavemen have really no idea what a peaceful death should be like anyway.
Are you familiar with the prison planet theoryI don't think the history is true what there are saying in the history books we are made a slave Volk for the reptilian s
In history the don't need to make ctb the worse no busses there were people who sacrificed if I were willing to let myself be sacrificed
I used to believe in it back when I was crazyAre you familiar with the prison planet theory
Yeaah I think that Fakt we live not onn a ball and we are in a prisonAre you familiar with the prison planet theory
yeah being eaten alive is far from a peaceful death
Yeah, most of modern folks seem to think of a peaceful death as dying in your bed while asleep. I think that would probably be possible in a nomadic or semi-nomadic hunter-gatherer society, but not very likely. You'd have to be quick about it. Get sick on Tuesday, die by Wednesday night, everyone pulls up stakes at dawn on Thursday.I don't know. I think cavemen have really no idea what a peaceful death should be like anyway.
I actually don't see that one … it doesn't take into account that suicide rates can also be quite high in societies that are pretty hostile to individualism. Japan is a case in point. It has always been quite suicide-tolerant, and in some eras and contexts, suicide has been positively glorified. Even required, although clearly that treads the borderline of murder. It's certainly been commanded by authority figures at times.
But hasn't slavery pretty much always existed?i have read ctb never existed until slavery. can you think of any animals living in nature that ctb ?
Loneliness isn't just the purview of individualistic societies. Ritual suicide was the realm of individuals who had been shamed for some misdeed. Ostracism and loneliness go hand in hand.Lion: "Hey, babe. Netflix and chill? I brought dinner."
Lioness: "Oooooohhh!"
(I am aware that it is actually the female lions who hunt. Also, I realize that few lions even know what Netflix is, because of low tv ownership among lions.)
Yeah, most of modern folks seem to think of a peaceful death as dying in your bed while asleep. I think that would probably be possible in a nomadic or semi-nomadic hunter-gatherer society, but not very likely. You'd have to be quick about it. Get sick on Tuesday, die by Wednesday night, everyone pulls up stakes at dawn on Thursday.
I suppose at times members of a band of prehistoric nomads might have been willing to carry an injured or ill person in a litter or drag them around on a travois, but I expect that it would SUCK. "Sorry to hear about the compound fracture of your femur, Thag. That mammoth just wasn't as dead as he looked, I guess. It's too bad about the gangrene that's setting in, too. We've got to be moving on though, so we can either leave you here for the vultures and hyenas, or we can drag you along for a while on this draggy thing. Try not to scream too loud as the draggy thing hits bumps and rocks though, ok? You might attract the leopards again."
Or maybe they had a different idea of peacefulness. Perhaps the goal was to be at peace with your own mortality, so you'd go out with a crumb of dignity, no matter what form your death happened to take.
Thag: "Oh, you're here to slaughter me, are you, leopard? Clearly you have never met me, Thag Grzeskowiak-Spink Jr., son of Thag Grzeskowiak-Spink Sr., in mighty battle! I shall pull on your ears until your face comes off your skull! I shall bite your spots off! I shall twist your pelvis around backwards, so your feet don't know if you're coming or going! You will rue the day you first heard the name Thag Grzeskowiak-Spink Jr., son of Thag Grzeskowiak-Spink Sr.! Have at you, leopard! Do your worst!!"
Leopard: "K."
Thag: "BLEAARRGHHH! He pulled my face off my skull!!"
Somebody: "Dammit Thag, we told you!
I think death in bed is probably overrated anyway. Being bedridden sounds incredibly dull, lonely, and frustrating to me. Feed me to the leopards any day. Well, the metaphorical leopards. A few small, meek metaphorical leopards. Okay, maybe one. Nvm, scratch the leopards.
I tend to agree with Dr. Roy Baumeister's theory of suicidal ideation, so I would say few to no cavemen thought of suicide.
I actually don't see that one … it doesn't take into account that suicide rates can also be quite high in societies that are pretty hostile to individualism. Japan is a case in point. It has always been quite suicide-tolerant, and in some eras and contexts, suicide has been positively glorified. Even required, although clearly that treads the borderline of murder. It's certainly been commanded by authority figures at times.
Hirohito knew exactly which cultural buttons to push to pressure young men into flying their Zeros straight into the hulls and decks of Allied warships. Those buttons represented duty and self-sacrifice, not rugged individualism. Officers acting in the Emperor's name knew what buttons to push in order to drive the women of some Japanese islands to take their children by the hand and jump off cliffs to their deaths, just ahead of the U.S. Navy entering Japanese waters. (I've never heard that Hirohito himself ordered Japanese civilians to kill themselves, either directly or through his representatives, but it would have been on-brand.) None of that happened because Meiji Japan was too individualistic.
I think it's probably fair to say that more people complete suicide during times of great change, especially If it's viewed as change for the worse. During the stock market crash of 1929, there really were businessmen who killed themselves by jumping from high office building windows. Such affluent people may be more at risk during catastrophic downturns of fortune because they have more to lose. Someone living in a remote tar paper shack or a tent city under an overpass may be somewhat inured to catastrophic downturns of fortune, because for them, that is just any given Tuesday.
I can't really say whether prehistoric cave life was on the whole more similar to Wall St. wealth or Los Angeles homelessness. It probably depended a lot on the cave, and the caprices of the weather, and exactly how many leopards had been stalking around lately.
It may have been difficult even for a cave person's family to know for sure whether his or her death was voluntary. Did Gronk mistake a poisonous mushroom for an edible one? Or was he just unable to face another Ice Age winter in Europe? Did Bog-Louise of the Beautiful Brow Ridge accidentally startle the wooly rhino that ran her over, or was she just thinking: "I'm an old lady of 37. I have arthritis. I have parasites. I've been knocked up 20 times because I'm pair-bonded with a horndog and nobody's invented the damn pill yet. My brow ridge isn't even all that beautiful anymore. Fuck this noise. I'm going to go arrange a suicide by rhino."
That kind of thing probably happened, and while I can't say how common Neolithic suicide might have been, I do feel skeptical of claims that only people living in "soft" conditions kill themselves, while those who have had painful, dangerous lives do not. I'm pretty sure that only people who are in a great deal of pain seriously contemplate committing suicide. Also, how can you even tell if someone deliberately ended their lives if the town streets are being criss-crossed with live ammunition all day?
Maybe some unfortunate soul caught a stray bullet that metaphorically had their name on it. Maybe they purposely stood in the crossfire until they got a bullet labeled, "To whom it may concern."
This videoi have read ctb never existed until slavery. can you think of any animals living in nature that ctb ?