Dagery wrote:
I'd say that our real decline started with Lyndon Johnson, though the obvious failures began with Bush, Sr. So that's a check.
My parents' opinion - and I'd agree - is that it began with the assassination of JFK.
I think most Romans would agree - and they'd be completely correct - that the decline of the Roman Empire began with the immensely tragic Battle of Pharsalus.
Dagery wrote:
Most effective military devices during the time of, say, Romulus Augustus had already been in use for centuries. But in our age, modernity equates to fighting ability. While we may not be savages, we've still got the strongest military in the world and would still have the technological advantage in a wartime situation. So this one's a no-go.
Pretty much. It's also worth noting, as Pericles pointed out, that the Athenians, like many others, were more civilized than the Spartans but "were willing to face all the same dangers all the same".
Except, by the fall of the Empire, Roman military technology had actually regressed, and their weapons and armor were no better than those of the barbarians, because exorbitant military spending and oppressive policies were not sustainable.
The Byzantines (who were more Greek than Roman) hung on for another thousand years with a very well-refined "fight smarter not harder" approach.
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The thing that always gets me about comparing the US to Rome, though, is that neither of them have really contributed anything to culture with their mark on it. I mean, yeah, we came up with the Internet, the atomic bomb, (working) television, and a lot of other game-changing things. But we've been influenced so much by Western Europe, much like the Romans were influenced by the Greeks, that a lot of our inventions and cultural contributions seem like knockoffs of European innovations. We're a pretty shitty empire. Our peak lasted only a few decades until the world started hating us, and during that peaks we accomplished very little relative to what the Romans managed to do. And compared to Alexander's empire, we're dust in the fucking wind.
Not true at all. Our legal system is still fundamentally Roman. Cicero wouldn't be totally lost in an American court of law. Our government is heavily based on the Roman system of government. Our ways of thinking - rational and fair - are still very Roman. The entire history of European hegemony and colonialism was driven largely by Roman example, and if it wasn't for the Romans it's likely none of that would have come to pass. Our notions of civil law and civil leadership are Roman notions.
Centuries after America fades from dominance, English will still be an important and useful language, just as Greek and Latin were for over a thousand years after Rome fell, for the same reason: there's important information available in English, written or reproduced by American authors. Future civilizations will still look to American laws and institutions for informative examples. People will still debate the nature of American civilization and character for millenia to come, just as we today still debate such issues about Greece and Rome. People will still use American infrastructure and installations for centuries to come, just as we use Roman roads and aqueducts even today. People will still use the engineering and academic standards created by Americans. They will probably still use our everyday pictographic symbols for everything. They will still be inspired by our social and political efforts even if they are not wholly successful. People will continue to read, watch and enjoy those American works that will become classics.
Future civilizations will look back on the
Apollo 11 mission in the same way we today look back at explorers like Columbus or Cook, or conquerors like Alexander or Genghis Khan - they'll say, "These people must have been incredible to have achieved so much, so long ago". They will put Armstrong's quote next to Caesar's.
I bet you anything that in a thousand years, there will be classes teaching "Introduction to 20th Century American Science Fiction" right next to the classes teaching "Introduction to Homeric Epics" and "Introduction to Chinese Classics".