Assuming Christians and Jews were allowed to practice their religions freely?
I wouldn't really care what the "official" dating system was. If those of my faith wanted to use their own personal dating system (as Muslim tradition has), and were allowed to do so, fine. But cultural tradition is as it is.
No, you were not being fair. Someone else pointed out that you were assuming that an American cultural norm applies universally when it does not -- that you were, in fact, being unfair. Responding to that by saying, "Well, we're really influential and can spread our culture to everyone else then" is not being fair, it's advocating for your culture's dominating others.Simply being fairThen why did you bring America's relative power up at all?"Most powerful" mean "most influential". A significant amount of American culture (such as it is) has severely impacted the cultures of others--McDonald's, for one.
As it were...I am unsure as to exactly what you and Chris mean about "ethnocentric thinking".
Whoa--hold on, brother. Traditional dating terminology and declaring cultural jihad is hardly the same thing.
Christopher pointed out that Americans are disconnected, culturally, from much of the rest of humanity. You countered by saying America is more powerful. The implication seeming to be, America can spread its practices to other cultures.
But why? You just said you prefer tradition. Why should America undermine other cultures' traditions like you just seemed to be saying it should?
Again, what's the point of bringing up American influence, when the point was that what is traditional in America is not traditional in the rest of the world, unless your intent was to say that you want to pressure other cultures to change?
The recent BBC series Outcasts showed a group of British dominated characters settling a new planet. And of course until BBC America and Starz (international sales) got involved with the Doctor Who franchise it was also British dominated.
Earth (and humans) dominating the Federation to the point that a human language is the standard used makes sense to the point that the other founding partners of the Federation had a history of distrust, Earth was seen as somewhat neutral, new on the scene, and willing to invest more lives and resources into exploring and building the Federation. After the Federation expanded from 5 to ~150 members, inertia dictated that Earth would still hold disproportionate influence being the seat of power, and an Earth language would be the one labeling Starfleet ships.
But why was American English the language that came to dominate Earth?
But why was American English the language that came to dominate Earth? From a real world point of view it is because Star Trek is American. An in-universe explanation is bound to be extremely controversial politically and has numerous unfortunate "un-PC" implications.
You're assuming a lot. I don't think anyone's OFFENDED! They'd just rather use terminology that reflects a more neutral, secular position.Once again: CE/BCE, in and of itself, is not the problem. I have no problem whatsoever with people using their own terminology. The problem is: what's the point of it? I just find it amusing that people find the traditional terminology offensive. You don't believe it's "Our Lord"? Fine. It's just a convention. What's the problem with it?
That’s true of the Jewish calendar as well. The Jewish week begins on Sunday, which is called Yom Rishon (first day) in Hebrew. The following days are numbered 2 through 6, with the week ending on Yom Shabbat (Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath). This nomenclature is used in Israel today.FWIW, historically my fellow Quakers referred to the week as “First Day,” “Second Day,” etc. specifically to get away from honoring non-Christian deities.
I do. All hail the great Thor and his mighty hammer!Oh, come off it. The overwhelming majority of people in the English-speaking world don't even believe in Thor; their calender system's Thursday ceased to be in his honor when they stopped believing he was real . .
And at least 900,000 of them are in California!Apparently there are about a million Neopagans who profess to worship the Aesir (Norse gods) . . http://www.comicsalliance.com/2011/05/09/thor-pagans-norse-gods/
And Thor...
I wonder how the neopagans responded to the depiction of the Asgard in Stargate.
The difference is obvious. "Thursday" is closer to "Thor's Day" than "Thunor's Day" anyway and is obviously still in honor of Thor;
Oh, come off it. The overwhelming majority of people in the English-speaking world don't even believe in Thor; their calender system's Thursday ceased to be in his honor when they stopped believing he was real, and most of them don't even know that it was originally "Thor's Day." The name is still there because of inertia, not to honor Thor.
It was tradition for the fifth day of the week to be called Thor's Day, but this association was abandoned. Logically, you should favor restoring the German Paganic connection to Thursday if you are intellectually consistent.
That’s true of the Jewish calendar as well. The Jewish week begins on Sunday, which is called Yom Rishon (first day) in Hebrew. The following days are numbered 2 through 6, with the week ending on Yom Shabbat (Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath). This nomenclature is used in Israel today.FWIW, historically my fellow Quakers referred to the week as “First Day,” “Second Day,” etc. specifically to get away from honoring non-Christian deities.
(no more Thor in the day's naming scheme...
Seeing as I learned all of the above in school (Primary school mid-late1960s, high school 1970s) that a pretty damning indictment of today's education.In the same way that January is still January because of inertia, and not because people believe in Janus, yes? So what makes the days of the week and months of the year different from BC/AD? If you want to rename the calendar to remove any religious connotations, why not go whole hog? Bonus: you can make the names of the last four months make sense.
And your point about people not knowing it was named after Thor (or Saturday after Saturn, or March after Mars) applies just as well to BC/AD.
And Thor...
I wonder how the neopagans responded to the depiction of the Asgard in Stargate.
Well, in theory, they've had fifty years to get used to the Stan Lee/Jack Kirby version . . . .
Seeing as I learned all of the above in school (Primary school mid-late1960s, high school 1970s) that a pretty damning indictment of today's education.In the same way that January is still January because of inertia, and not because people believe in Janus, yes? So what makes the days of the week and months of the year different from BC/AD? If you want to rename the calendar to remove any religious connotations, why not go whole hog? Bonus: you can make the names of the last four months make sense.
And your point about people not knowing it was named after Thor (or Saturday after Saturn, or March after Mars) applies just as well to BC/AD.
LOL. Stargate killed off most of the Asgard race (except the small pocket in the Pegasus Galaxy) in the last episode of SG-1. Hopefully they didn't get the memo on that one.
Now that Universe is over I wonder if Stargate will get a literary relaunch like the Star Trek series, Buffy/Angel, Firefly, and Farscape.
Speaking of offending the religious, imagine if "In Thy Image" had somehow been filmed, or released as a book, with the alien Jesus Christ. (This can even be on topic since Mike Friedman tried to novelize this).
Fandemonium Books has already begun publishing Atlantis "Season 6" novels as part of their ongoing line of SG1 and SGA fiction. I imagine they've probably done some post-series SG1 books too.Now that Universe is over I wonder if Stargate will get a literary relaunch like the Star Trek series, Buffy/Angel, Firefly, and Farscape.
That was The God Thing. "In Thy Image" was the Phase II pilot script by Alan Dean Foster that was rewritten into ST:TMP.Speaking of offending the religious, imagine if "In Thy Image" had somehow been filmed, or released as a book, with the alien Jesus Christ. (This can even be on topic since Mike Friedman tried to novelize this).
You're assuming a lot. I don't think anyone's OFFENDED! They'd just rather use terminology that reflects a more neutral, secular position.Once again: CE/BCE, in and of itself, is not the problem. I have no problem whatsoever with people using their own terminology. The problem is: what's the point of it? I just find it amusing that people find the traditional terminology offensive. You don't believe it's "Our Lord"? Fine. It's just a convention. What's the problem with it?
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