Actually in many ways we are arguing past each other. I am maintaining a point that you have not got and in so doing I am not addressing the original point.Xest wrote:You're still simply not getting the underlying point. No one's denying that what happened back then was bad compared to todays standards (although your argument about the holocaust is false in that what the Germans did WAS bad compared to the standards of the time).
OK let me state it a bit more clearly whilst keep the post short. Society is nothing more than communications. We don't live in society as such but are part of its environment. In order to communicate there are communication systems that enable us to do so. In communication semantics and forms of thinking get attached historically and act to shape the future ways we see things. My argument is thus:Ovi wrote:Sharkith,
I think you are confusing 2 seperate points, probably caused by my clumsy way of trying to exlpain them.
My original point was that I am not ashamed of the British Empire because no-one knew any better at the time.
That is quite a seperate statement from saying that what they did was wrong, by what we now know.
In judging whether to be ashamed we shouldn't view the actions with hindsight, we should compare the actions to what else was happening at the time.
To judge whether what they did was right or wrong, and what lessons to learn then of course we need to use hindsight.
The dominance of the English language is owed to the past actions of the British imperial system. Imperial systems are a 'shameful' thing (you see Ovi shame in indelibly imprinted on imperialism its an important thing to remember that it was shameful especially by todays standards). Due to this history the lauguage is unavoidably and indebilly imprinted with these associations.
Now this does not mean it can become dissassociated from these connotations and who knows maybe society would decide in the future to set this aside in the interests of a better formed battle group in Dark Age of Camelot although I do doubt it will. To set that association of shame and imperialism aside however changes an important semantic that guards against such old forms of social dominance. A society that does such, and I hope the British society never does, it would effectively be setting aside an element of the memory that imperialism is somehow wrong. So we must continue to guard against trying to promote the language because no matter what you say this society associates an element of shame with its history and the dominance of its language.
All I see here are arguments that endanger that collective memory and I think that is bad and therefore unethical.
OK now to move forward which to some extent Xest has done. We live in a globalised society and the internet has effectively achieved much more than the British empire ever could. A globalised society does not need one language it simply need globalised communication technologies (the mass media and the internet). So society can exist despite the nation state (paradoxically this does not mean nation states are irrelevant of course). In other words imperialism has become irrelevant as a globalising force and we are already in a new social form. Imperialism failed we know that.
Thankfully everyone doesn't need to speak English, after all we have bable fish now.