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[時事討論] 「鮑氏之子」的警言 李怡

本帖最後由 felicity2010 於 2011-11-9 09:11 AM 編輯 6 P. G4 E! N; r4 ^1 h3 u

; o6 \: E- {, utvb now,tvbnow,bttvb「鮑氏之子」的警言  李怡
6 a9 j' L  o  _9 }TVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。
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「人是地球的主宰」、「人為萬物之靈」是人類社會的主流意識。在這種意識主導下,許多動物都瀕臨滅絕。先秦哲學書《列子》有一個「鮑氏之子」的故事:
% z$ o" C9 C( F, q1 }$ v公仔箱論壇齊國貴族田氏大擺流水席,來了上千食客,珍饈滿桌,有魚有雁,田氏感嘆的說:「老天對人類真是太好了,繁殖五穀,生育魚鳥,以供人享用。」眾食客聞言附和:「是啊!是啊!」鮑氏之子年僅十二歲,也在席間,他趨前對田氏說:「不是您講的那樣吧,天地間萬物與人類並存,類無貴賤,完全看智慧高低、力量大小,相制相食,並沒有誰為誰而生。如果食物是為人類而生,那麼蚊蚋吸人血、虎狼食人肉,也是人類為蚊蚋、虎狼而生嗎?」2 _# e9 j9 m$ A! J2 _
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十二歲的鮑氏子不僅不畏權貴、不阿諛奉承、不隨聲附和、敢於表達自己見解,而且講出了人類與萬物應平等相處的愛護自然的道理。可惜這種看法得不到重視,這則寓言也極少被人提起。tvb now,tvbnow,bttvb) j1 g: p8 ~  N. v: o1 O* z7 v
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知名歷史學家威爾.杜蘭( Will Durant, 1885-1981)寫下共十一大卷的經典歷史著作《世界文明史》(The Story of Civilization)。他對人類歷史的最終結論,就寫在一本名叫《歷史的教訓》( The Lessons of History)的書中。他在這本歷史結論的書中說:即使現代交通工具時速可達兩千英里,我們還是兩隻腳穿着長褲的猿猴。5.39.217.76* Z) H8 F6 I+ }' M* B' i

- k4 p$ R6 x. m7 i0 ]6 u5.39.217.76這是「以生物法則重新檢討人類歷史」所下的結論。他敲醒了人類的自大。此書已完成了 30年,但這種「獨到見解」也如「鮑氏之子」,一直被「人是地球主宰」的主流思想漠視。人主宰萬物的結果,是人類自己受到自然的報復。回歸到生物法則之後,人類應該更謙卑對待地球、對待萬物,也包括對待弱勢族群。
$ |, u! [! g, v5 _, y* r( b公仔箱論壇5.39.217.769 t7 U1 E+ a8 D" c
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Will Durant does not only give answers but poses questions as well in the book that we may have reflection on the subjects. His writings is pleasant and enjoyable. Anyone who are interested in history, "The Story of Civilization" (11 volumes) is a must-read.公仔箱論壇7 U' ?$ t5 z( G1 K
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本帖最後由 felicity2010 於 2011-11-9 09:14 AM 編輯
% v( c7 b# D$ c' |" R5 i1 fTVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。
: t, |$ B( q, wHere is the chapter on hesitations in the book "Lessons of History", @8 X' h% K; c% [# c' S

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THE LESSONS OF HISTORY TVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。1 G3 s4 M# J* ^" [
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I . Hesitations TVBNOW 含有熱門話題,最新最快電視,軟體,遊戲,電影,動漫及日常生活及興趣交流等資訊。8 H- Y) m) V5 t! I9 h+ A$ z

0 ~' t* h3 X! X( m$ @$ O% M6 e/ vAs his studies come to a close the historian faces the challenge: Of what use have your studies been? Have you found in your work only the amusement of recounting the rise and fall of nations and ideas,and retelling "sad stories of the death of kings"? Have you learned more about human nature than the man in the street can learn without so much as opening a book? Have you derived from history any illumination of our present condition, any guidance for our judgments and policies, any guard against the rebuffs of surprise or the vicissitudes of change? Have you found such regularities in the sequence of past events that you can predict the future actions of mankind or the fate of states? Is it possible that, after all,"history has no sense," that it teaches us nothing, and that the immense past was only the weary rehearsal of the mistakes that the future is destined to make on a larger stage and scale?
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At times we feel so, and a multitude of doubts assail our enterprise. To begin with, do we really know what the past was, what actually happened,or is history "a fable" not quite "agreed upon"? Our knowledge of any past event is always incomplete, probably inaccurate,beclouded by ambivalent evidence and biased historians, and perhaps distorted by our own patriotic or religious partisanship.
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; j4 N  N& z6 x& f/ w# |"Most history is guessing, and the rest is prejudice." Even the his
torian who thinks to rise above partiality for his country, race, creed, or class betrays his secret predilection in his choice of materials, and in the nuances of his adjectives. "The historian always oversimplifies, and hastily selects a manageable minority of facts and faces out of a crowd of souls and events whose multitudinous complexity he can never quite embrace or comprehend."  公仔箱論壇7 a- f: L' W1 S1 o

' q, G5 j# o. FAgain, our conclusions
from the past to the future are made more hazardous than ever by the acceleration of change. In 1909 Charles Peguy thought that "the world changed less since Jesus Christ than in the last thirty years"; and perhaps some young doctor of philosophy in physics would now add that his science has changed more since 1909 than in all recorded time before. / B# v% ?* b- h4 f2 p' `9 U
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Every year — sometimes, in war, every month — some
new invention, method, or situation compels a fresh adjustment of behavior and ideas. — Furthermore, an element of chance, perhaps of freedom, seems to enter into the conduct of metals and men. We are no longer confident that atoms, much less organisms, will respond in the future as we think they have responded in the past. The electrons,like Cowper's God, move in mysterious ways their wonders to perform,and some quirk of character or circumstance may upset national equations, as when Alexander drank himself to death and let his new empire fall apart (323 b.c), or as when Frederick the Great was saved from disaster by the accession of a Czar infatuated with
2 h5 f' g6 j. Q5 N4 k公仔箱論壇Prussian ways (1762). 5.39.217.767 v& |# d, _6 K+ ?$ j3 S

. G5 s; c- D" Z  T- f& [. P0 itvb now,tvbnow,bttvbObviously historiography cannot be a science. It can only be an industry, an art, and a philosophy — an industry by ferreting out the facts, an art by establishing a meaningful order in the chaos of materials, a philosophy by seeking perspective and enlightenment. "The present is the past rolled up for action, and the past is the present unrolled for understanding"  — or so we believe and hope. In philosophy we try to see the part in the light of the whole; in the "philosophy of history" we try to see this moment in the light of the past. We know that in both cases this is a counsel of perfection; total perspective is an optical illusion. We do not know the whole of man's history; there were probably many civilizations before the Sumerian or the Egyptian; we have just begun to dig!We must operate with partial knowledge, and be provisionally content with probabilities; in history, as in science and politics, relativity rules, and all formulas should be suspect. "History smiles at all attempts to force its flow into theoretical patterns or logical grooves; it plays havoc with our generalizations, breaks all our rules; history is baroque."  Perhaps,within these limits, we can learn enough from history to bear reality patiently, and to respect one another's delusions. tvb now,tvbnow,bttvb: r) W$ S- m( N/ O, Z

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Since man is a moment in astronomic time, a transient guest of the earth,a spore of his species, a scion of his race, a composite of body, character,and mind, a member of a family and a community, a believer or doubter of a faith, a unit in an economy, perhaps a citizen in
5 G7 z& g: a3 E1 e& ]a state or a soldier in an army, we may ask under the corresponding heads— astronomy, geology, geography, biology, ethnology, psychology,morality, religion, economics, politics, and war — what history has to say about the nature, conduct, and prospects of man. It is a precarious enterprise,and only a fool would try to compress a hundred centuries into a hundred pages of hazardous conclusions. We proceed.
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