Sharkith wrote:
I have shown that in fact there was a change of values but that this change directly affected the British empire and that in fact the change of vlaues (from the enlightenment) is exactly the identical value system we have today. If we have the same values that the empire was continued upon then how can we be criticising it from a different set of values?
My point is that the values in the time of the Empire, even after the "Age of Enlightenment", are different than the values today. I have shown some examples of where values
are different.
I think you place too much store in the "Age of Enlightenment", and it's effect on values. From what I can see The Enlightenment was more about changing the way people think, more specifically encouraging people to think for themselves, than actually setting any particular values. Of course, once people start to think for themselves that will lead to a change in values, but it didn't, in itself, introduce a fixed set of values.
In fact because it encouraged thinking it probably had the opposite effect, values were more likely to be challenged, changed, and evolve, and therefore were certainly not a fixed set.
The very fact that you mention that by-and-large the methods of control changed after this period shows that The British Empire did change in accordance with the values of the time. It realised that it was doing wrong, against the new values that were becoming important, and changed. Hardly a shameful act, it would have been shameful to pretend that it was right and that it shouldn't change.
If by the fact that I try to think for myself, and encourage others to try and do the same, then I guess I am an agent of the enlightenment. I disagree that encouraging the use of English (or any other language) as a second language to aid global communication would be a form of hegemony though, unless of course we consider the dominance of The Human Race over itself as hegemony?
Remember the choice of language was not about affecting any other change in culture than allowing easier global communuication through a second language, if it wasn't already spoken as a main language. English was proposed as a suitable candidate due to it's current wide-spread use, a further consequence of which is that it will effect a change in the fewest nations.
Chinese being another strong candidate would affect more nations but fewer people. This would also suffer from the fact that otehr countries would possible have an objection to Chinese for historical reason, Japan being the main one to spring to mind.
The other languages that could be considered candidates (French, Spanish, German etc) would all suffer to a similar extent from the issues associated with English.