Monday, March 6, 2006

Octopus Earring Guage

medieval man and his relationship with God

Brunegel painting by Pieter the Elder.

If in ancient times, the man was the center of study and assessment, in the "Middle Ages" everything will revolve around the immaterial, of religion and God. Relegating the man and his material needs, desires, and thoughts through second grade.

The best example I can bring, is the representation they had, the gods and God in these two periods of history.

If by Greek or Roman gods were ultimately represented in the image and likeness of man, his passions, desire, physical fitness, but also of his happiness, joy and feasting. For medieval man, is he who is to represent the image and likeness of God but a God very different from those who knew the men of antiquity.
This point is substantial and essential when understanding differences in the way of life in these two stages.
will be thanks to these fundamental differences, the renaissance man (Man that new value to the individual, as a center of study, discussion and historical assessment) appoint to this period of history, "Middle Ages, considering a dark period, a decline of humanity among the old and the new revival of humanities from the XVI century. According to the vision

Renaissance man of the Middle Ages there remained immersed in a cultural and intellectual obscurantism relegated him to a miserable condition and devolution because his whole life was dedicated to not make any mistakes against God and his laws and not lose one of the few places in paradise after death. That is, the medieval man lived his life after death, thought the 24 hours a day on it. Its proximity overwhelmed him, forcing him to think about every attitude, action or thought I had, if one was going against what God imposed as a way of life. everyone on earth was relegated after the spiritual world, but from an apocalyptic vision, denial and grief.
Only those who suffered and endured in the underworld, the sky would win and the more we get close to these parameters, we would be closer to the prize.

Thursday, March 2, 2006

Tow Zone On Sundays In Chicago

ONE OF THE CAUSES OF THE FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE. CARPE DIEM

ONE OF THE CAUSES OF THE FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE.
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1-emergence of Eastern religions.



One of the most popular Eastern religions was that of the god Mithras
was connected with the sun.


The emergence of Eastern religions in the Roman Empire, was undermining the relationship of man with his world, his state and its official religion. Formerly

man societies of Greece and Rome, lived for maintenance and durability of the state and the community. There were personal and individualistic thoughts among people of pagan antiquity. One
born, lived and died for the maintenance and survival of the common good and the nation.
Religion had as one of its purposes; encourage, motivate and teach the way of community sacrifice, as in antiquity, religion and the nation-state are intertwined in a single, indivisible entity. All

a person's life revolved around the needs of society and have been, closely related to religion and commanding officer forced to follow the fees charged by the state, they were the same as those that ordered the gods mortals. But unlike these conceptions and traditions, religions and beliefs that came from the east in the early first century AD, sponsoring a new vision of the man-gods, man-state. They called for a personal salvation and individual soul, an intimate walk away from the firstborn order of existence, the service body and soul to a theocratic state.
result of these new influences, it was causing a gap between the relationship of subjugation of the individual against the masses, motivating a more intimate relationship with the gods.
The best reflection of the dramatic changes brought
Eastern religions, was observed in the aspirations Roman burial of man.
Where once the reward after the death of a Roman was to be recognized and honored by the new generations, because the services he and his predecessors had given to state and community. After the emergence of these new religions, the reward was no longer in the material world, but in a world heritage, after this earthly life and earned through personal sacrifice.

The new hero was no longer the man who sacrificed his life for fame, honor and glory of Rome and the state, but the man represented by the monks and Christian priests, who now sacrifice their lives for the salvation of souls in the afterlife.