Is globalization really Westernization?
enrico_dandolo wrote:
Mike1 wrote:
World Territories - 1942


This map is misleading. Only half of what is British Africa on the map was really British, the rest being Belgian, French and Italian colonies occupied/protected during the war. Persia was not a British territory, only occupied by Allied troops, and half of those were Soviet.
It is wrong on many other levels. I guess it was taken from a game, which is a very bad idea. (The other one has an anachronic Dutch flag and forgot to include Sweden in Sweden.)
I couldn't find another World War II world map that indicated who possessed each territory. After taking a close look at it, I guess you're right, it is inaccurate. I didn't determine that the British Empire holds the world record for having control over the most territory at one time based on this map though. I found the approximate number of total square kilometers that they once had from another source.
nominalist wrote:
Globalization has really been Americanization. T.
I disagree. Globalisation really started with the European powers. Especially the British Empire. The main spheres around the world are of French, Spanish and British influence.
In the case of American globalisation, it was a case of the student becoming the master. However the American empire is unique and the first of its kind because it is a private empire, not a state owned one.
In answer to the original question, yes Globalisation is a western phenomenon. How many non western nations are you seeing spreading out its influence, in a orchestrated way?
Mike1 wrote:
enrico_dandolo wrote:
This map is misleading. Only half of what is British Africa on the map was really British, the rest being Belgian, French and Italian colonies occupied/protected during the war. Persia was not a British territory, only occupied by Allied troops, and half of those were Soviet.
It is wrong on many other levels. I guess it was taken from a game, which is a very bad idea. (The other one has an anachronic Dutch flag and forgot to include Sweden in Sweden.)
It is wrong on many other levels. I guess it was taken from a game, which is a very bad idea. (The other one has an anachronic Dutch flag and forgot to include Sweden in Sweden.)
I couldn't find another World War II world map that indicated who possessed each territory. After taking a close look at it, I guess you're right, it is inaccurate. I didn't determine that the British Empire holds the world record for having control over the most territory at one time based on this map though. I found the approximate number of total square kilometers that they once had from another source.
The first map was entirely adequate to show the extent of the British Empire at its height, even though it would grow a bit more. The only changes between 1900 and 1942 were the independence of Ireland and the annexation of some German colonies and Ottoman territories.
Last edited by enrico_dandolo on 21 Aug 2012, 8:20 pm, edited 2 times in total.
nominalist
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ruveyn wrote:
John Mayard Keynes was a recognized world authority on economics. There is nothing wrong with expert opinion and one does not get much more expert than Keynes.
There is nothing wrong with evidence. The fact that Keynes commented on the issue might justifying looking at his arguments. However, you did not present his arguments. You only gave his opinion. That is why I called it the fallacy of authority.
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nominalist
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Oldout wrote:
Globalization is Western propanganda that all should honor the greatness of multinational corporations and bow to their wishes.
Yes, economically, globalization is corporate capitalism. However, globalization can also be used in other senses.
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nominalist
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thomas81 wrote:
I disagree. Globalisation really started with the European powers. Especially the British Empire. The main spheres around the world are of French, Spanish and British influence.
In the case of American globalisation, it was a case of the student becoming the master. However the American empire is unique and the first of its kind because it is a private empire, not a state owned one.
In the case of American globalisation, it was a case of the student becoming the master. However the American empire is unique and the first of its kind because it is a private empire, not a state owned one.
You are referring to what we call in sociology, neocolonialism. That is the basis of what I mean by globalization.
thomas81 wrote:
In answer to the original question, yes Globalisation is a western phenomenon. How many non western nations are you seeing spreading out its influence, in a orchestrated way?
I don't think it is orchestrated. That is conspiratorial. Corporations act in the perceived interests of their owners or stockholders.
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thomas81 wrote:
In answer to the original question, yes Globalisation is a western phenomenon. How many non western nations are you seeing spreading out its influence, in a orchestrated way?
What has orchestration to do with it? Globalization is not imperialism.
Globalization is about how all the planet comes to be one global system. It's about how you can buy something in New York that was made in India, and how you can buy something in Addis-Abeba that was made in Paris, how people can move with (relative) ease from Jakarta to Recife, from Mexico to Casablanca, from Vologda to Lisbon, how people who live in Palermo, Tbilisi and Guangzhou can undestand each other and know things in common.
Of course, one of its consequence is the fact that the country (or countries) who are leading the movement have a greater influence, probably even a negative influence on the others, and there is no way to deny that the Americans are pushing it for themselves, not for those whom they effectively dominate, but it is not just a one-way process. I live in Montreal, yet I have books which were printed in the UK, France and Iran, my t-shirt was made in India and my phone is Korean, I went myself to Syria, Iran, Greece, the USA, France, Switzerland and Italy (I'll admit that I was a baby for the first three), and I eat Lebanese, Greek and Chinese food frequently (in any case, "traditional" Quebec food is either made with maple products or not so traditional). It seems all banal or trivial, or like I'm oppressing factory workers in Bangalore/not giving work to people in Canada, but five centuries ago, almost all my possessions would have been made within (random number) 50 km of where I lived, possibly with raw materials taken a bit further away, I would probably not have met many people from further away, and certainly not have done so myself. That is not trivial.
nominalist wrote:
I don't think it is orchestrated. That is conspiratorial. Corporations act in the perceived interests of their owners or stockholders.
Bingo. Corporations do not exist to create jobs. They do not exist to benefit society. The exist to produce profits for those who invested their money and time in them. Corporatism is rational self interest writ large.
ruveyn
nominalist wrote:
There is nothing wrong with evidence. The fact that Keynes commented on the issue might justifying looking at his arguments. However, you did not present his arguments. You only gave his opinion. That is why I called it the fallacy of authority.
It's not a fallacy unless ruveyn used Keynes' opinion deductively.
So, Keynes saying "X is true" can be taken as evidence that one should regard X as true. It's not STRONG evidence, but it certainly does inform the person of some fact that should lead them to change their mind on an issue. Now, you may dispute calling this "evidence" but that's a purely verbal quibble.
If you want to push this even further, then by denying authority the ability to justify a position ultimately denies authorities the ability to control opinions in situations where non-authorities cannot be informed enough to make a rational opinion. So, if you go to the doctor, and he tells you "You have a heart condition and need medication", he's not actually provided you any argument on the matter, but your opinion on your health ought to change, and his statement is the evidence that changes your opinion.
Going further most sources describing the "argument from authority" claim that uses where the fallibility of the authority is recognized and the argument inductive are not fallacious. And that's because non-fallacious arguments from authority rely on the very similar reasoning to the sort we would use for trusting the expert opinion of our doctor on whether we have a heart issue.
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ruveyn wrote:
Corporatism is rational self interest writ large.
That is the problem. It is rational self-interest.
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Awesomelyglorious wrote:
It's not a fallacy unless ruveyn used Keynes' opinion deductively.
I disagree. The fallacy of authority presents "name dropping" as evidence. That is precisely what happened in this case.
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nominalist wrote:
Awesomelyglorious wrote:
It's not a fallacy unless ruveyn used Keynes' opinion deductively.
I disagree. The fallacy of authority presents "name dropping" as evidence. That is precisely what happened in this case.
Keynes was a proven economic genius. He analyzed Germany's economic value right on the dot during the Treaty of Versailles negotiations. It was the U.S. and France who preferred to ignore what Keyne's had to say and they busted Germany down to the ground which laid the path to yet another world war.
Keynes' expertise was proven again and again. That is because he was an expert mathematician and a leading theorist in probability theory.
ruveyn
nominalist wrote:
ruveyn wrote:
John Maynard Keynes wrote about the global economy that existing before the Great War.
Fallacy of authority. Someone else's opinion is not evidence.
I traced this back because I love me some fallacies.
Although Ruvy took a different tack in his later posts. I think what he did here is cite a counter example. Keynes was interested in the global economy before the dates you have given and he was alive in that period. If we see Keynes not as an expert but as a informant (you use that term in your field too I think.) To get a "slam dunk" Ruve has gotta show that Keynes or anyone talked about the global economy before 1944. It should not be hard because Johnny Keynes died in 1946.
With this said I completly agree with you that globalization in its current form is Americanization. I also think my favorite secular Rabbi of New Jersey is very keen in point out that Americanization is a continuation of the British Imperial programme.
Of course this is all arbitrary 1944 seems a good a date as any to call the begining of a period.
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