Somewhere I read a blurb that intimated that people should turn their attention away from their favorite blogs and towards their favorite authors. While such advice seemed a genuinely positive gesture, something felt awkward. Maybe it was that I am a blogger and this notion threatened me somehow. For a day it was left at that. Then it came to me. Blogging’s insane gravity is not merely a dumbing down of the public. It is also drawing out the written creativity in those that have their own blogs. When I look out at the sea of blogs out there, what I am looking at is a sea of humanity looking to the written word to express themselves, to create, to share, and to write. In this way, the English language is getting a refresher course by way of society, and nothing could be a greater boon to the written word than to have a wave of home-based publishers daily revealing their worded wares. Merci.
Genruk
Civilization
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Blogging’s Invisible Gift
January 4, 2011 in Civilization, Communication, Social Movement by Genruk | No comments
Tags: Civilization, Social, The Written Word
Which Comes First- Society or Man?
December 28, 2010 in Civilization, Discontent, Human Nature, Philosophy, Social Nature by Genruk | No comments
Much of what I have been saying intimates that much of what ails mankind is the result of the limitations put upon him by his civilization by way of cultural inculcation. The question we have to ask ourselves is which should come first, man or his society? This is a difficult, maybe even impossible, question to answer. In fact, even initiating such a contemplation is a difficult endeavor, for where are we to begin? Humans are egocentric by nature, and this is expressed in our want of freedom and independence. On the other hand, we are wickedly social and are driven to seek the company, or should I say the attention, of others. But if we are to accept that there is an unacceptable constraint on human nature by cultural inculcation then we must come to a conclusion as to which agency we should make divine, individuality or nationality. In part, this decision must be made after a painfully pragmatic take on the issue- is man even able to glory over the individual while forcing society to take a back seat. Would such an endeavor lead to social chaos? If man is to truly face up to the social ills that are the champions of discontent then this discussion must be somehow come to fruition and thereby finds its way into the social limelight of intelligentsia today.
Genruk
Tags: Civilization, cultural inculcation, Discontent, Human Nature, Perception, Philosophy, Social, Truth
Social Media and Our Culture
December 21, 2010 in Civilization, Essays, Philosophy, Social Nature by Genruk | No comments
When I first appreciated the onslaught of social media, the first thing that came to mind was that it was nothing less than a catalyst for the further degradation of a decadent culture. Of course, that is my typical knee slap response to anything in its incipience, before it has had time to grow past its ugly duckling period. Blogs, I thought, were online soapboxes for the general public to clamor upon about this thing and that. To a large degree I was initially correct. But what I did not calculate was the fact that such egocentricity would soon peter out, only to be followed by people with something worth listening to. My initial responses to Myspace and Facebook were pretty much the same, if not even more scornfully so. Though Myspace is really not my deal, Facebook has come to be a huge part of social sharing that I could not have imagined possible. Again, time let the field of social weeds cull themselves, and now we are left mainly with a scent full field of Facebook flowers. Now with Twitter I was initially aghast. To me it was the stupidest thing on the interweb. Again, how more wrong I could have been is impossible to conceptualize.
So what’s the verdict? Was there even a verdict to be decided upon? I would have to say that social media is no longer in my cross hairs of cultural evil, no longer the fomenting agent of our civilization’s ruin. Instead, the onslaught of social media, for those up to date, has become a way to remain connected with people, to add remarkable ideas for their community to ponder, and to level the playing field for the commoner. This last attribute might be the greatest of all, for it is threatening to change the whole of our advertising industry, from the interruption-based industry of commercial campaigns to becoming a league of transparent companies that attracts its customers by its good deeds, by its offering of free and useful information, and by good old fashion hard work. Online social media has become the champion , the freighter even , of industrial transparency. Not only does corporate malfeasance easily come bubbling to the surface of the online community, ingenuous characters are quickly sniffed out and scoffed. Simply put, one’s online reputation is made good with continued, determined, and honest effort but turned sour with frightening ease. This is one of the first positive cultural movements that our civilization has seen in a while, a movement which just might be the turning point for reverting our culture’s immanent decadence into a movement where the West is back on track as an almost living phenomenon.
Genruk
Tags: Civilization, culture, Human Nature, Social
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Suggested Reading
The Social Animal by Elliot Aronson
Civilization of the Middle Ages by Normon Cantor
The Rape of Nanking by Iris Change
Guns, Germs, and Steel by Jared Diamond
Beyond the Lodge of the Sun by Chokecherry Gall Eagle
The Evolution of Human Societies by A.W. Earle
Blood and Power: Organized Crime in 20th Century America by Stephen Fox
The Anatomy of Human Destructiveness by Erich Fromm
The Dark Side of Man by Michael Ghiglieri
The Culture of Make Believe by Derrick Jensen
Endgame Vol. 1 and 2 by Derrick Jensen
Me Against my Brother by Scott Peterson
The Evolution of Civilization by Carroll Quigley
Ishmael by Daniel Quinn
A History of Russia by Nicholas V. Riasanovsky
The New Penguin History of the World by J.M. Roberts
The United States Occupation of Haiti by Hans Schmidt
Roll the Bones: The History of Gambling by David G. Schwartz
Chimpanzee Politics by Frans de Waal
Good Natured by Frans de Waal

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