Sunday, April 5, 2020
Person And Society Essays - Civilizations, Sumer, Thomas Hobbes
  Person And Society    In this paper I will try to explain the puzzle of whether individuals are  products of society or society is a product of individuals. I believe that in  general, and in the beginning, the answer to this question, is that society is a  human product. I will start by presenting early man, the hunter and gatherer as  an early form of society, but lacking critical qualities of a society. Then I  will continue to support my theory by analyzing the beginning of known society  some three and one half thousands years ago. I will present the individual as  creation of society, or more precisely, an ongoing social recursive  conditioning. I will also present society as creation of individuals. Finally, I  will conclude my paper with some thoughts on the paradox of who is the product  and who is the producer of the individual and society. EARLY MAN According to    Charles Darwin, man developed from the ape. Darwins theory of evolution  appears to be unsupported though, because for thousands of years these apes have  been there, but none of them have developed into human beings nor did Darwin  ever find the missing link. Although unproved, there must be a process of  evolution. And if there was evolutionary process, a few of the steps in-between  still must be missing. Since man is not asexual, man did not, and could not,  survive or prosper by himself. Early man grouped together with other hunters and  gathers to form a family which brought order, direction, and stability to his  life. According to Rousseau, the earliest and only natural societies are  families (Primis 192). The point here is that the individuals choose to  become a part of something larger than the individual. But if Rousseau is  correct, there was a time when the individual gave up certain freedoms to find  security within a group. This is contra to Thomas Hobbes view. It was not until  significant scientific advances in the nineteenth century that the view of this  seventeenth century philosopher Hobbes has his views rejected. Hobbes stated  that the life of early man was solitary, poor, nasty, brutish and short. Hobbes  thought that early man was scarcely even human and a club-wielding savage. At  either rate, early man lacked the qualities that were considered by John Locke  as necessary to begin a society even though it is believed that groups and  families existed. Society as Product of Individuals Some three and one half  thousands years ago a group of individuals gathered their resources together to  form the first civilization named Sumer. The people that lived there were called    Sumerians. The Sumerians began as a primitive race stemming from the hunters and  gatherers who came to the area known as southern Mesopotamia to form the first  permanent human settlement. By the end of their occupation in Mesopotamia, they  had created the beginnings of society as we know it today. It has been said by  the locals that this place is the fabled Garden of Eden and also according to  tradition, Eden existed in the marshes of this fertile land that is today known  as Iraq today. The lands of Sumer were fertile and in close relationship to two  major rivers which are known as the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers today. The  fertile lands were feed by the rivers and allowed the settlers to stop the  migratory habits of their predecessors or early man. The constant migration of  early man had prevented any real education to exist as they were always on the  move in search of food and shelter. Early man was only concerned with survival,  which meant that they did not have the leisure time to give thought to the  development of academia. The Sumerians, which found the development of  agriculture an easy task in this land, found that they had time to develop  culture and devote time to academic studies. The Sumerians conceived and began  development of mathematics, reading, writing skills and the written text on  cunieform tablets, the wheel and agricultural technology, which are heavily  relied upon in today's society. By 3,000 BC, the written script of the Sumerians  had evolved into a full syllabic alphabet. The Sumerian's gift of writing made  possible for the recording of history for the first time. The recording of  literature, science, society and history is a lasting legacy of the Sumerians  and our society. The individuals in the Sumer originated the development of  society through the codes of law that was written as, and to be, social policy.    These were the first written laws    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.