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Rescuing Our Pride from the Arena Zero and Causing Sorrow for Tomorrow
Contributor(s): Achour, Mohamed (Author)
ISBN: 1092192158     ISBN-13: 9781092192156
Publisher: Independently Published
OUR PRICE:   $8.55  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: March 2019
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Political Science
- Philosophy | History & Surveys - General
- History | Social History
Physical Information: 0.36" H x 6" W x 9" (0.52 lbs) 154 pages
 
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Publisher Description:
We believe naively that the progress of Good, its advance in all fields (the sciences, technology, democracy, human rights), corresponds to a defeat of Evil. No one seems to have understood that Good and Evil advance together, as part as the same movement...........Good does not conquer Evil, nor indeed does the reverse happen; they are at once both irreducible to each other and inextricably interrelated. Ultimately, Good could thwart Evil only by ceasing to be Good since, by seizing for itself a global monopoly of power, it gives rise, by that very act to a blowback of proportionate violence. (Jean Baudrillard)As stated in the title, along its developmental curve, a superpower and hegemonic nation neglectfully develops its own weaknesses. When those feeble points start being manifest on the surface, instead of facing the facts regarding its own weaknesses, such a nation becomes preoccupied with preserving its national pride, which ironically enough results in the development of even more weaknesses. At long last, it then collapses. We have this Biblical story, which will be discussed later, regarding Pharaoh and Moses. It is a basic reenactment of a story with profound lessons for all governments and societies for all time. From it, we can deduce a strong correlation between contemporaneous (U.S.) geopolitical climates and Pharaoh in ancient Egyptian civilization. Pharaoh was not just the name or title of a person; it is a syndrome of grandiosity and a symbol of hegemony. Moses was not just a person; he is the unknown, antithesis force that mirrors the ultimate reality.The first consideration that is brought to the reader's attention is why we are talking about a supposed myth. The answer is that within these supposedly mythological events we see the reenactment of the same archetypal personalities that are so prominent in our own violent, contemporary period of history. The second consideration, one that is brought (on a pre-conscious level) to the reader's attention, is the occurrence of those legendary events not only in the objective world, but also introspectively in the subjective world.