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  1. Welcome to Hellenism.Net Satyr.

     

    We've had a discussion about Liantinis a few years back. I was in fact in Greece this past summer and I visited Lakonia, and drove by that spot where Liantinis took his life. He was certainly a controversial personality. Some like his teachings and think he was an exceptional teacher and philosopher, others think he was a mediocre teacher and philosopher who did not add anything new to the philosophical thinking.

     

    I haven't studied his works and I only know him from reading 3rd party opinions about his work, and also about listening to some short excerpts of him speaking in classes etc. (as the ones you provided earlier in this post). Based on this I cannot take sides as to whether he was an important teacher and philosopher or not. I guess it's up to those who enjoyed his teachings and his works to introduce to the rest of us the man and the philosopher.


  2. Not to mention of course that travelling those vast distances to find those "aliens" would be virtually impossible with our current technology (even if we somehow manage to travel at the speed of light...). On the other hand, alien life may be present even in our own solar system in the form of microorganisms living in one of the planets or their moons. Who knows...


  3. And I meant that in a sense we're aliens ourselves. We came from the stars. There's a theory saying that most of the material that we're made of comes out of dying stars, or stars that died in explosions (supernovas). This material travelled (and still travels...) through the universe for millennia and landed on earth, so today there are traces of this material in our bodies.

     

    Not sure if you know a well-known singer from the 1970's, Joni Mitchell. In one of her songs (Woodstock) she sang: "we are stardust". Well, seems that this may be true in a literal way.


  4. A thought provoking article in the Guardian today about democracy and the voting system in modern democracies. Worth a read.

     

     

     

    Why elections are bad for democracy
    Our voting system worked well for decades, but now it is broken. There is a better way to give voice to the people

     

    http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/jun/29/why-elections-are-bad-for-democracy


  5. According to polling data from YouGov, 75% of 18- to 24-year-olds voted to remain in the European Union. On Friday, the UK voted to leave, with 52% of the overall vote.

     

    How does it feel to be one of that 75%?

     

    When we tweeted a callout asking young readers for their responses, rather than the 20 or so we expected, we received more than 200 emails in half an hour. While a handful said they were pleased with the outcome, reading through them a picture develops of a generation angry about the direction the UK has taken.

     

    This reaction was not limited to young people of voting age – we received responses from 16- and 17-year-olds who did not have the chance to have their say in this momentous decision.

     

    Here’s a selection of their responses:

    http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/jun/24/meet-the-75-young-people-who-voted-to-remain-in-eu

     

     

    Great article at the Guardian.

     

    At least there's hope for the UK since its youth in huge numbers see themselves as European citizens and they want to be part of a united Europe. They will eventually join EU again when the xenophobic elders pass away.

     

    In Greece it's the opposite. The young people want to see Greece out of Europe. This is a scary thought for Greece's future.


  6. Greek grammar is no more difficult or different than the grammar of the latin languages. Greek is easier to learn for French, Italians, Spaniards etc. (and vice versa...) because the grammatical rules are very similar. English is in a league of its own when it comes to grammar :)

     

    Even though the grammatical rules in English are in the most part simpler and easier to learn, there are so many exceptions to the rule which make it almost impossible even for native speakers to speak the language properly :)

     

    It never ceases to amaze me how native English speakers in executive positions (mainly Americans and Canadians, Brits are a bit better) make a ton of grammatical errors when they speak and especially when they write in English.


  7.  

    Hemingway says there is always a next time and the hope for victory. Kazantzakis says: Embrace defeat cause that's all there is. I value the message of Hemingway. I cant see any value in Kazantzakis.

     

    You understand that these are literary characters right? Also, different people see/understand things in different ways. I see nothing about embracing defeat in Kazantzakis' characters, especially Alexis Zorbas.


  8. I don't think that's the case. As it is right now ISIS probably has no reason to strike Greece. If they'd have a reason then don't think that they wouldn't strike because of "imaginary" relationships.

    The terrorists in Paris all had French and Belgian citizenships. Is this Greece's fault that the French and the Begians handed out citizenships to those people? I think not...

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