>invented atheism Not really. >invented destructive secularism The new elite had to to make sure monarchy won't come back but yeah, can't say you're wrong on this one. >invented mainstream contraception And? >invented fuckwit culture of eating cheese and doing nothing meme >cant get shit done meme >most Muslims out of all Euro countries, even more than Sweden Not per capita >radically socialist and protests all the time Some more meme >highest rates of divorce Wrong >adultery is considered normal We're not the leaders in the cuck porn industry but nice try
I'm not going to say we didn't have a bad influence over the world in the last half century but we're small time players compare to the US (and I'm not blaming the American population for that either).
Henry Rogers
>is France the most degenerate country? Does this even need a proper answer?
Cooper Evans
France, can you stop it?
Lincoln Hall
>>invented atheism >Not really.
how not? Other points might be questionable but atheism is not. It started in France with Voltaire and later to French revolution from there on you had that trockyte faggot Sartre.
Austin Sanchez
The Dictionnaire philosophique (Philosophical Dictionary) is an encyclopedic dictionary published by Voltaire in 1764. The alphabetically arranged articles often criticize the Roman Catholic Church and other institutions. The first edition, released in June 1764, went by the name of Dictionnaire philosophique portatif. It was 344 pages and consisted of 73 articles. Later versions were expanded into two volumes consisting of 120 articles.[1] The first editions were published anonymously in Geneva by Gabriel Grasset. Due to the volatile content of the Dictionnaire, Voltaire chose Grasset over his usual publisher to ensure his own anonymity.[2] There have been many editions and reprints of the Dictionnaire during Voltaire's life,[3] but only four of them contained additions and modifications.[4] Furthermore, another work published in 1770, Questions sur l'Encyclopédie, which contained reshaped and modified articles from the Encyclopédie always in alphabetical order, led many following editors to join this and the Dictionnaire (plus other minor works) in a unique opus.[5] The Dictionnaire was a lifelong project for Voltaire. It represents the culmination of his views on Christianity, God, morality and other subjects.
Cameron Bennett
In Germanic paganism, the forces of suffering were symbolized by the Jotun (often translated as "giants", but simply means "devourers" or "big eaters"), the message obviously being to fight them until your dying breath, as the gods do. Hel was the goddess of death, and the halls of the gods were mythic representations of one's honor that outlived him. The burial customs of pagans suggest that there was an idea of rebirth through inheritance and taking the name of one's ancestor, in modern religious conceptual language, it would be called "becoming an avatar for his spirit", but they called it "rebirth". The honor of the dead was seen to cycle throughout the lineage this way, so their view of death was less absolute than that of the Christians, but death was definitely important. The linear "you are born, you die, and then you are dead forever" does correspond to the existential view though.
You do realize the father of existentialism was a devout Christian right?
Lincoln Lee
is France the most degenerate country? You've seen nothing yet
Jason Harris
>The linear "you are born, you die, and then you are dead forever" does correspond to the existential view though.
duh! the last part isnt as precise description for christianity but there is a reason there was no existential thought within taoism, budhism, greece etc.