<!--QuoteBegin-ramana+May 12 2008, 05:27 AM-->QUOTE(ramana @ May 12 2008, 05:27 AM)<!--QuoteEBegin-->in the last thread there were refs to Bible and its description as the ultimate book by Hitler and his remarks. I have been thinking about Nazism, Hitler, and Pope and the theory of super races. I have come up with a sound byte to describe Hitler and his new thinking- 'Evangelical Darwinism'. Unfortunately it was called National Socialism but it really was evangelized Darwinism based on evolutionary concepts applied to social sciences mixed with religious views.
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RM describes the Indic influence on Darwin. In such a case, social darwinism would be another case of the garbling of Indic categories by the religious/secular western paradigm.
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Geopolitics and Sanskrit Phobia
Around the 1860s, Sir Charles Lyall worked in geology in morphological studies of fossils, which is a special case of what became later known as structuralism. <b>This was a major discontinuity in European thought, and is believed to be the influence of Sanskrit structure of knowledge. Charles Darwin's work in the 1880s was also morphological in method. </b>In the 1890s, Germany developed morphological schools, and Russian formalist schools also came up. Morphological schools came up in Europe in geology, botany, literary theory and linguistics.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
[right][snapback]81557[/snapback][/right]
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RM describes the Indic influence on Darwin. In such a case, social darwinism would be another case of the garbling of Indic categories by the religious/secular western paradigm.
<!--QuoteBegin-->QUOTE<!--QuoteEBegin-->Geopolitics and Sanskrit Phobia
Around the 1860s, Sir Charles Lyall worked in geology in morphological studies of fossils, which is a special case of what became later known as structuralism. <b>This was a major discontinuity in European thought, and is believed to be the influence of Sanskrit structure of knowledge. Charles Darwin's work in the 1880s was also morphological in method. </b>In the 1890s, Germany developed morphological schools, and Russian formalist schools also came up. Morphological schools came up in Europe in geology, botany, literary theory and linguistics.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->