Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Monday, June 27, 2011

The Art Of Giving And Receiving_ PETER JONES

As the Governor of the Bank of England wades into the fray, it does not seem too much to ask of bankers to make it clear that they are spending a portion of their bonuses on the Big Society.  Those who already are must overcome their modestry and let us know about it.
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Euergesia - "benefaction, philanthropy" - was a virtue of the well-born Greek.  Many inscriptions and statues, erected by the euergetist to himself or by a grateful people, attest the practice.  The culture spread to Rome.  Over 11 years, Pliny the Younger spent two million sesterces on his home town in benefactions.
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Discussion about the theory of giving was intense.  In general, euergetism was personal and reciprocal: it served the interests of the giver - everything from patriotic display to political self-advancement - as well as that of the recipient.  But in fifth-century B.C.  Athens, radical democrats thought a lavish benefactor might be seeking political advantage.  So they invented the leitourgia (out "liturgy"), under which the 300 richest citizens in any years were ordered to subsidise state activities.  Greeks then started to argue that the generous man did not look for a return.  But this meant that, if one was done a good turn, one should refuse on principle to respond.  If so, did this make receiving the benefit a nuisance?  Some argued it did.  To get out of this bind, the Roman Stoic Seneca defined a beneficium as "an action which gives pleasure and finds pleasure in so doing, from a natural and spontaneous inclination".  Seneca does agree that "everyone who serves another has thereby served his own advantage" but goes on to insist that the advantage consists not in what one gets back, but from the fact that all virtue is its own reward.  Aristotle by contrast drew an analogy with the artist, who rejoices in something he has created.
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A famous Greek benefactor, T. Claudius Atticus, offered to hand over his vast fortune to the emperor Nerva.  "Keep it", said Nerva, "and use it well".  Come on, you bankers, do the same: prove you are a load of euergetists.  You can start with launch of www.classicsforall.org.uk.... By arrangement with the Spectator...

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

How Gandhi became Gandhi... GEOFFREY C. WARD

Some years ago, British writer Patrick French visited the Sabarmati ashram on the outskirts of Ahmedabad in Gujarat, the site from which Mahatma Gandhi led his salt march to the sea in 1930.  French was so appalled by the noisome state of the latrines that he asked the ashram secretary whose job it was to clean them.  A sweeper woman stopped by for an hour a day, the functionary explained, but afterward things inevitably became filthy again.
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But wasn't it a central tenet of the Mahatma's teachings that his followers clean up after themselves?
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"We all clean the toilets together, on Gandhiji's birthday,"the secretary answered, "as a symbol to show that we understand his message."
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Gandhi had many messages, some ignored, some misunderstood, some as relevant today as when first enunciated.  Most Americans - many middle-class Indians, for that matter - know what they know about the Mahatma from Ben Kingsley's Academy Award-winning screen portrayal.  His was a mesmerizing performance, but the script barely hinted at the bewildering complexity of the real man.  Who was at the same time an earnest pilgrim and a wily politician, an advocate of celibacy and the architect of satyagraha, a revivalist, a revolutionary and a social reformer.
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It is this last avatar that interest Joseph Lelyveld most.  Great Soul  concentrates on what he calls Gandhi's "evolving sense of his constituency and social vision", and his subsequent struggle to impose that vision on an India at once "worshipful and obdurate".
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This is not a full-scale biography.  Nor is it for beginners.  Lelyveld assumes his readers are familiar with the basic outlines of Gandhi's life, and while the book includes a bare-bones chronology and is helpfully divided into South African and Indian sections, it moves backward and forward so often, it's sometimes harder than it should be to follow the shifting course of Gandhi's thought.
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But Great Soul is a noteworthy book, nonetheless, vivid, naunced and clear-eyed.  The two decades Gandhi spent in South Aftrica are too often seen merely as prelude.  Lelyveld treats them with seriousness they deserve.
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"I believe implicitly that all men are born equal", Gandhi once wrote in the midst of one of his campaigns against untouchability.  " I have fought this doctrine of superiority in South Africa inch by inch".
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It actually took a long time for the Mahatma to turn that implicit belief into explicit action, lelyveld reminds us.  When Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi arrived in Durban from Bombay in 1893, he was a natty 23-year-0\old British-trained lawyer, hired to help represent one wealthy Muslim Indian trader in a dreary civil suit against another, and primarily interested in matters of religion and diet, not politics.
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Initially, Gandhi was simply affronted that discriminatory laws and bigoted custom lumped educated well-to-do Indians like him with "coolies", that impoverished mine, plantation and railroad workers who made up the bulk of the region's immigrant Indian population.  The non-violent campaigns he waged to bring about equality between Indians and whites over the next 20 years would lead him to advocate equality between Indian and Indian, first across caste and religious lines and then between rich and poor.
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Soon after returning to India in 1915, Gandhi set forth what he called the "four pillars on which the structure of swaraj would ever rest":  An unshakable alliance between Hindus and Muslims; universal acceptance of the doctrine of non-violence, as tenet, not tactic; the transformation of India's approximately 650,000 villages by spinning and other self-sustaining handicrafts; and an end to the the evil concept of untouchability.  Lelyveld shrewdly examines Gandhi's noble but doomed battles to achieve them all.  
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He made a host of enemies along the way - orthodox Hindus who believed him overly sympathetic to Muslims, Muslims who saw his calls for religious unity as part of a Hindu plot, Britons who thought him a charlatan, radical revolutionaries who believed him a reactionary.  But no antagonist was more implacable than Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar, the brilliant, quick-tempered untouchable leader who saw the Mahatma's non-violent efforts to eradicate untouchability as a sideshow at best.  He even objected to the word - Gandhi coined for his people - "Harijans" or "children of God" - as patronizing; he preferred "dalits", from the Sanskrit for "Crushed", "broken".
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Sometimes, Gandhi said Indian freedom would never come until untouchablility was expunged; sometimes he argued that untouchability could be eliminated only after Independence was won.  He was unapologetic about that kind of inconsistency.
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As lelyveld has written in Move Your Shadow, "Gandhi had hoped to bring about India's freedom as the moral achievement of millions of individual Indians, as the result of a social revolution in which the collapse of alien rule would be little more than a byproduct of a struggle for self-reliance and economic equality".  Foreign rule did collapse, in the end, "but strife and inequality among Indians worsened".
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Gandhi is still routinely called "the father of the nation" in India, but it is hard to see what reamins of him beyond what Lelyveld calls his "nimbus".  His notions about sex and spinning and simple living have long since been abandoned.  Hindu-Muslim tension still smoulders just beneath the uneasy surface.  Untouchability survives, too, and stand-issue polychrome statues of Ambedkar in red tie and double-breasted suit now outnumber those of the sparsely clothes Mahatma wherever dalits are still crowded together.
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Gandhi saw most of this coming and sometimes despaired.  The real tragedy of his life, lelyveld argues, was "not because he was assassinated, nor becuse his noblest qualities inflamed the hatred in his killer's heart.  The tragic element is that he was ultimately forced, like Lear, to see the limits of his ambition to remake his worlds."
......................... GEOFFREY C. WARD, a biographer and a screenwriter for documentary films, spent part of his boyhood in India and is currently writing a book about Partition....

GREAT SOUL CONCENTRATES ON WHAT HE CALLS GANDHI'S 'EVOLVING SENSE OF HIS CONSTITUENCY AND SOCIAL VISION', AND HIS SUBSEQUENT STRUGGLE TO IMPOSE THAT VISION ON AN INDIA AT ONCE 'WORSHIPFUL AND OBDURATE... IT IS A NOTEWORTHY BOOK... VIVID AND NAUNCED...........

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Boy..Scout

When and where was Boy Scouts founded?

The origin of the Boy Scouts movement is attributed to the efforts of Robert Baden-Powell.  He organised an experimental camp attended by 20 boys, held from July 29 to August 9, 1907 on Brownsea Island, Dorset, England.  Outlining the principles of scouting, he, in 1908, wrote a book "Scouting for Boys" much of which was based on Baden-Powell's army career in Africa.  He also published a magazine 'The Scout' in the same yar.  Later that year the first official camp was organised at Humshaugh, Northumberland.  By 1909 the scouting movement had gained such momentum that in a rally held at Crystal Palace, London, 11,000 scouts participated.  Currently there are more than 38 million members involved with the Boy Scouts movement.  Indonesia has the highest scout membership with 89,09,435 scouts followed by USA and India.

Women Rights...

When and Where for the first time were women granted the right to vote?

In 1893 the Women's Sufffrage Petition was passed in New Zealand, making it the first self-gverning nation in the world to grant women the right to vote.  This pioneering feat was achieved when Governor Glasgow signed the Electoral Bill in September 1893 to that effect.

United Kingdom Vs Great Britain...

What is the difference between the United Kingdom and Great Britain ?

The United Kingdom comprises of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland whereas Southern Ireland is a separate nation.  Northern Ireland share a common government and passport with the nations of the large island.  Great Britain, on the other hand, includes the main Island of Scotland, Wales and England excluding the whole of Ireland-both Northern as well as Southern.  Great Britain is called so in order to distinguish it from Brittany or Little Britain, a province across the Channel in France.


Friday, May 29, 2009

Kuiper Belt...

What is 'Kuiper Belt'?

The Kuiper Belt is a donut-shaped region that extends to about 50 Astronomical Unit (AU) (1 AU=92.96 million miles, means distance of Earth from the Sun.)  Kuiper Belt is thought to be the source for short-period comnets such as Comet Halley or Comet Swift-Tuttle.  It is filled with icy bodies that are in solar orbit.  800 objects found in this region are called Kuiper Belt Objects (KBOs).  On the other hand, it is estimated that there are more than 70,000 objects of more than 60 miles in diameter in the Kuiper Belt.  Dwarf planets like Pluto and UB 313 are considered as Kuiper Belt objects.



Thursday, May 28, 2009

E1 Nino...

What is E1 Nino?....

E1 Nino is a climatically significant disruption of the ocean-atmosphere system characterised by large scale weakening of trade winds and warming of the surface layers in the central and eastern equatorial Pacific region.  The term E1 Nino, Spanish for "the Christ Child" was originally used by fishermen to refer to a warm ocean current that appeared around Christmas off the west coasts of Ecuador and Peru and lasted several months.  Nowadays the term has come to be reserved for exceptionally strong warm currents that bring heavy rains.

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E1 Nino events generally occur at irregular intervals of 2 to 7 years, at an average of once every 3 to 4 years.  They typically last 12 to 18 months.  the intensity of E1 Nino events varies depending on the intensity of and area encompassed by the abnormally warm ocean temperatures.  E1 Nino influences weather around the globe and its impacts are most clearly seen in the winter.
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Friday, May 22, 2009

Grand Slam...

What is the Origin of the term 'Grand Slam'....

The term Grand Slam is used today when someone wins all the four major tennis tournaments (Australian Open, French Open, Wimbledon and US  Open) in a year.  This application of grand slam was first used by sports journalist Allison Danzig in 1938 when he referred to the achievement of Australian Donald Budge who had won all the major tennis tournaments that season.  In the North America grand slam is also known as a baseball homerun with the bases loaded.  However the term originated in the game of bridge, where it means winning all the thirteen tricks in one hand...


Environmental Performance Index...

What is Environmental Performance Index?

The Environmental Performance Index (EPI) is a measure of environmental health and ecosystem vitality.  It is based on an assessment of 16 indicators like air quality, water resources, biodiversity and habitat, productive natural resources, sustainable energy, etc.  According to the 2006 EPI, New Zeland, Sweden and Finland have been rated as the best performing countries in the Environmental performance Index with EPI scores of 88.0, 87.8 and 87.0 out of 100, respectively.


World's Youngest Movie Director....

Who has the distinction of being the world's youngest movie director?

As per Guinness Book of World Records 2008, world's  movie is Kishan Shrikanth (b.1996).  In 2006, the Indian prodigy at the age of 9 directed a movie C/o Footpath about an orphaned boy who wants to go to school thus breaking the record of Sydney Ling of the Netherlands who directed a movie at the age of 13.

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

The inventor of World Wide Web?......(www)

Who is credited with the invention of World Wide Web?....

The credit for the invention of the World Wide Web (WWW) goes to Tim Berners-Lee (later given the title of Sir) and his colleagues at CERN (Eurropean Council for Nuclear Research), an international scientific establishment based in Switzerland.  They developed HTML (hyper text markup language), the format that directs a computer how to display a web page, HTTP (hyper text markup language), the format that directs a computer how to display a web page, HTTP (hypertext transfer protocol) that facilitates communication between clients and servers and URLs (universal resource locators) that identify resources like documents, images, dowloadable files, services and electronic mailboxes on the Web thereby reducing a range of complex instructions to a single mouse click.

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The World Wide Web provides the facility for all the world's computers to be linked, making it easy to send documentation electronically via the Internet.  Mr. Lee deliberately refrained from patenting his work on HTTP, HTML and URLs because he wanted to encourage as many people as possible to use the Web.  The forerunner of the Internet, however, was the ARPANET.  ARPA stands for Advanced Research Projects Agency, a division of the US Defence Department that possessed linked computers across North America to enable exchange of information.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Roman Empire__

Q: How vast was the Roman Empire?
A: At its peak, the Roman army extended all around the Mediterranean Sea and most of the rest of Europe. Much of what is now England and France, Belgium and The Netherlands, Spain and Protugal, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary, part of Germany, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey Israel, Syria, Arabia, Tunisia, Algeria and Morocco constituted the Roman empire. All this was ruled by the Romans from their base in Italy.
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A huge army was needed to maintain control over these regions and the costs involved were tremendous. There were continual minor wars and skirmishes along the edges of the empire, which meant that large garrisons of soldiers had to be maintained.
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Friday, January 2, 2009

C O M E T S

Q: How are comets formed?

A: There are two main theories about how comets are formed. According to one theory, as the Sun moves through clouds of interstellar dust, its gravity pulls the particles together to form a dense stream that trails behind the Sun like the wake of a ship. Occasionally, an enormous clump of particles is drawn towards the Sun to become a comet. According to the other theory,t he Sun's planets are surrounded by a permanent whirling cloud of particles containing billions of clumps, a cloud that extends halfway to the nearest star. The gravitational influence of nearby stars deflects the path of a clump, causing it to swing close to the Sun and become visible on the earth as a comet. Comets have no trails until they get close to the Sun. When they come closer to the Sun the intense heat vapourises portions of them and the gas blows out to form a glowing, smoke like streamer. The tails vary enormously in shape and size. Because a comet loses part of its substance every time a tail is formed, it is sure to burn itself out eventually.

Political positions_LEFT_RIGHT

Q: Why are political positions referred to as 'left' and 'right'?
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A: More than two hundred years ago, King Louis XI of France was compelled to convene a new form of parliament for the first time. While sitting at the assembly the more radical delegates took up their seats to the left of the King while their conservative counterparts took their seats to his right thus starting the practice of calling radicals as 'left' and conservatives as 'right'. Since then, liberal ideas have been referred to as from the left and conservative views as from the right.

Metric System

Q: Where did the metric system develop?
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A: The metric system was developed in France during the eighteenth century to provide a uniform system of measurement to replace widely differing systems then in existence. Metric measurement includes weight, volume, length, area, capacity and temperature and is based on multples being to the power of ten. The intention was to make measurements uniform throughout the world and introduce a set of universal standards in places such as research laboratories. Frenchman Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Perigord, Prince de Benevent, Bishop of Autun and Sir John Riggs Miller of England, jointly championed the metric system in the 1790s. By 1840 France made metrication mandatory. At the Metric Conference of 1875 in France, seventeen additional countries signed the Treaty of the Meter.

Thursday, January 1, 2009

Judaism... origin....

Q: When did Judaism originate?
A: One of the most ancient belief systems, Judaism is the religion of the Jews. Judaism is the oldest of the monotheistic religions, which hold that there is only one god rather than a plethora of many different deities. The name of the Jewish God is Yahweh (Jehovah) and the holy book is the Torah. The historical origins of Judaism are disputed among scholars. However, followers of the religion believe that a man named Abram (later known as Abraham) left the Mesopotamian city of Ur for Cannan (Palestine), sometime around 1800-2000 BC. In Cannan, Abraham made a covenant with Yahweh, accepting him as the most important god and the ruler of the universe.

Thursday, December 25, 2008

Mobile Phone

Q: Who invented the mobile phone?

A: The Chicago police department in the 1930s pioneered the use of a form of mobile telephone (two way radio) to stay ahead of prohibition gangsters. The mobile phone or the cellular phone as we know today was invented by Dr. Martin Cooper of Motorola. It was used for the first time in 1973 in a demonstration call, which was made by cooper to his rival Joel Angel, the head of research at Bell Laboratories. The frequency switching system that allows cell phones to work was invented in the 1930's by Hollywood beauty Hedy Lamarr. The Bell Laboratories built a prototype cell system by 1977 which was tested by two thousand selected customers.

world's first Encyclopaedia

Q: Who compiled the world's first encyclopedia?

A: In all probability, the first encyclopaedia was compiled by the Greek philosopher Plato's nephew, Speusippus, who recorded his uncle's ideas on mathematics, natural history and philosophy in about 348 BC. Speusippus also included Aristotle's lecture notes in the encyclopedia. The Chinese, on the other hand, claim that the Yongle Canon or Yongle Dadian, compiled between 1403 AD and 1407 AD and running to more than 11,000 books, was the world's first encyclopedia. The whole work was too vast to print, hence only two manuscripts were made.
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The prototype of the modern encyclopedia was Ephraim Chamber's Cyclopaedia published in 1728 while the first English language encyclopaedia was the Encyclopaedia Britannica published in 1768 which became available on the Internet in 1999. The Encyclopaedia Americana was the first multi-volume encyclopaedia which was published in thirteen volumes between 1829 and 1833 in the United States and had expended to thirty volumes by 1919.

Escimos

Q: Who are Eskimos?

A: Eskimos are a Mongoloid race native to the Arctic coasts of Greenland, North America and north-east Asia. They are believed to have crossed the Bering Strait from Asia in about 200 BC. The Eskimos, who speak dialects of the Eskimo-Aleut language family, have preserved their cultural identity to a remarkable degree. Many of them still live by hunting and fishing using traditional skills to exploit the unyielding Arctic environment. Seals, fish, walrus and whales re hunted for food, fuel and clothing. Travel on land is by dog-sledge and on the water by kayak or Umiak, a skin boat. During hunting expeditions, temporary igloo shelters are sometimes built, but the basic home, in which the Eskimos live in small communal groups, is made of sod, driftwood and stone. Tents of hide or sealskin are used in the summer. The traditional Eskimo religion draws heavily on rich folklore. In Greenland, many Eskimos have adopted Christianity. Shamanism is also practised.

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Legend of Vestal Virgins.....

Have you ever heard the expression, "As pure as a Vestal Virgin"? If you have then this is the legend of the Vestal Virgins and you will soon discover how and why the expression came into being. In ancient Rome, the Vestal Virgins were the virgin holy priestesses of Vesta, the gooddess of the hearth. Their primary taks was to maintain the sacred fire of Vesta, and they were the only female priests within the Roman religious system. The Vestal Virgins however, went onto become a powerful force within the Roman state. For instance, they were included in the matter of all dedications and ceremonies by the emperor Augustus Caesar.
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Legend has it that the Vestal Virgins were committed to the priesthood at a yound and tender age and were sworn to celibacy for a period of 30 years. These thirty years were divided into three periods of a decade each -- 10 were spent as students, 10 in service and 10 as teachers. The Vestal Virgins who were considered holy and pure (hence the expression), were cosen by the high prest and were required to be free of physical and mental defects, have two living parents and to be daughters fo free-born Italian residents. Their tasks included the maintenance of the fire sacred to Vesta, collecting water from a sacred spring, the preparation of food used in rituals and caring for any sacred objects within the temple's sanctuary.
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The dignities and privileges accorded to them were many, owing to their high status. For instance, unlike most Roman women they had the right to own property, make a will and vote. In national crisis, their advice was undisputed, and they were entrusted with important state documents. They could free condemned prisoners and slaves by merely touching them. In fact, it's said that if a prisoner on his way to the gallow met a Vestal Virgin, he was automatically pardoned. The chief festival of Vesta was the Vestalia which was celebrated from June 7 to June 15. On June 7 only, her sanctuary (which normally no one except her priestesses, the Vestal Virgins, entered) was accessible to mothers of families who brought her offerings in the form of plates of food. The simple ceremonies were officiated over by the Vestals and they gathered grain and made salty cakes for the festival. However, the College of the Vestal Virgins was disbanded by order of emperor Thedosius I in 394 BC.....