Speakpigeon
Contributor
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2009
- Messages
- 6,317
- Location
- Paris, France, EU
- Basic Beliefs
- Rationality (i.e. facts + logic), Scepticism (not just about God but also everything beyond my subjective experience)
Hm... It seems I was wrong. You seem to really do believe in the pre-19'th century historiography.
???
Fancy that. I don't. Yeah, I believe history works like economy. If something can be invented... it will... by somebody. If something is invented... somebody will use it. Pandemonium ensues. rinse. Repeat.
You're not even making sense.
That's Marxist history in a nutshell.
Is it?
Anyhow, I provided a quote of Marx expressing his view on the relation between men and context. He thought that people made their own history:
own view, expressed in his book on the 18th of Brumaire, was that "people make their own history, but they do not make it however they want, not under self-selected circumstances, but out of the actual given and transmitted situation".
And I followed up expressing my agreement with his view and how it obviously contradicted yours:
So sure, the context is very important but only in that it restricts the range of options people can choose from but it's ridiculous to claim like you did that "anybody in Napoleons situation and context would probably have turned out similar and made similar choices".
I think this is really all I needed to say and the fact that I have to repeat myself here shows I won't need to say anything else.
EB
