Multicultural Commonwealth: Diverse Identities in Poland-Lithuania - SESSION 1

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  • Опубликовано: 18 окт 2024
  • An audio recording of SESSION 1 of a conference held at Sidney Sussex College, University of Cambridge, on 14 December 2017, convened by Stanley Bill, Lecturer in Polish Studies at Cambridge.
    Session Chair: George Gömöri (Emeritus Fellow, Darwin College)
    Leszek Korporowicz (Jagiellonian University) - 3:05
    Bridging Cultural Diversity: Axiological Roots of the Jagiellonian Commonwealth.
    Karin Friedrich (University of Aberdeen) - 22:55
    ‘Into hell, where a third of all devils speak German’: The Polish Reformation between Wittenberg and the Torun Colloquy of 1645.
    Magda Teter (Fordham University) - 48:40
    How Jewish is Polish History?

Комментарии • 7

  • @asrerere9061
    @asrerere9061 5 лет назад +21

    The question should not be: how Jewish is Polish history but rather how Polish is Jewish history. Tree does not fall from the apple... Minority living in Poland absorbs Polish culture and mindset not the other way arround. Poland would exist with jews or without, jews at that time would not live peacefully as they were slaughtered in pogroms in whole europe. Im feed up in that nonsense narratives that portrait Poles as some kind of mindless sheeps lead by Jewish pioneers of civilisation. That is nonsense.

  • @mr.q8426
    @mr.q8426 2 года назад

    Do not mix science with humanities.
    And to the matter.
    It is sometimes possible to have the same ideal goals derived from different perspectives.
    Poland-Lithuanian Commonwealth was based on Catholic faith. Undistorted and honestly taken.
    “Catholic” etymologically means “common” or “universal”.
    This means that vast majority of people hold a belief that their faith is precisely the condition allowing co-habitation with different cultures and religious perspectives.
    Today’s leftist approach to multiculturalism is very different.
    It is based on a assumption that nothing can be valued and consequently there is no “better” and “worse”. No moral recognition of culture is allowed and all judgments are only designed to divide and cause pain.
    This is a polar different idea and mixing these two together as a one is a gross misunderstanding. .

  • @civishyperboreum6853
    @civishyperboreum6853 3 года назад +2

    Cringe leftist take

  • @werhoff7171
    @werhoff7171 5 лет назад +3

    This is propaganda

    • @wojciechkobylinski7021
      @wojciechkobylinski7021 3 года назад +2

      What exactly?

    • @fidenemini111
      @fidenemini111 2 года назад +1

      If you suggest the propagation of scientific knowledge, then yes - it is a propaganda.

    • @mr.q8426
      @mr.q8426 2 года назад

      Do not mix science with humanities.
      And to the matter.
      It is sometimes possible to have the same ideal goals derived from different perspectives.
      Poland-Lithuanian Commonwealth was based on Catholic faith. Undistorted and honestly taken.
      “Catholic” etymologically means “common” or “universal”.
      This means that vast majority of people hold a belief that their faith is precisely the condition allowing co-habitation with different cultures and religious perspectives.
      Today’s leftist approach to multiculturalism is very different.
      It is based on a assumption that nothing can be valued and consequently there is no “better” and “worse”. No moral recognition of culture is allowed and all judgments are only designed to divide and cause pain.
      This is a polar different idea and mixing these two together as a one is a gross misunderstanding. .