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Best WGT Player of all Time!

Fri, Apr 12 2024 1:42 PM (1,957 replies)
  • opyeuclid
    6,710 Posts
    Wed, Jan 6 2021 4:36 PM

    HenryKawa:
    I would like to challenge you to a match play round. 

    forget that , I challenge you to find a 12 day Christmas thread where a player asked for a player and said gift was not sent .  so it was said , So I will go to that thread and you can follow me ( As to my next post in the forums after this one ) and Match me .

    OPY 

  • opyeuclid
    6,710 Posts
    Wed, Jan 6 2021 5:55 PM

    Sorry Henry , that issue was solved . never mind .

    OPY

  • DodgyPutter
    4,690 Posts
    Thu, Jan 7 2021 2:22 AM

    Robert1893:
    By the way, the same is true for the word "republican." 

    "conservative" and "labour" too.  I did know that really, my intrest was a site that is instructing in good English didn't appear to. If I had found it I'm pretty confident it would have been a billboard sponsored by the Democratic Party.  That was probably lost with all the unnecessary nonsense.

  • Robert1893
    7,722 Posts
    Thu, Jan 7 2021 7:49 AM

    Not to get too far down the rabbit hole here, but democratic theory and republican theory (or republicanism) are distinct. While one might see some overlap or affinities between the two, they should not be equated.

    So a "republican" would be one who embraces "republicanism." 

    Apologies for not drawing that out.

     

  • Yiannis1970
    3,306 Posts
    Thu, Jan 7 2021 11:20 AM

    Etymologically democratic is the same as republican. It's the Latin translation of the Greek word. 

    Demos + cratos means public power (power to people)

    Res + publica   means the public thing (which means that people has the power over all public things).

  • Robert1893
    7,722 Posts
    Thu, Jan 7 2021 11:42 AM

    I'm going to have to disagree with you on that. Etymology, while important,  does not always capture the full range of meaning. 

    Res publica has much broader connotations and implications than simply the idea of a public thing. Embedded in the idea is the responsibility placed upon the citizenry as well as the concept of a shared goal by the community. Most famously, the responsibility of civic engagement was expressed in Pericles' Funeral Oration:

    "We alone regard a man who takes no interest in public affairs, not as a harmless; but as a useless character."

    Democracy does not necessarily have that same connotation. Democracy does not posit a shared common good that the citizenry embodies. Indeed, one can argue that a shared goal can only happen in a highly homogenous community rather than a diverse one, which democracy encourages. Moreover, until recently (i.e. about the last 150 years), democracy has been viewed with suspicion if not outright contempt. Plato's extended metaphor of the ship comes immediately to mind:

    "The common citizenry trying to direct the state is analogous to sailors on a ship quarreling over the control of the helm; each thinks he ought to be steering the vessel, though he has never learnt navigation and cannot point to any teacher under whom he has served his apprenticeship; what is more, they assert that navigation is a thing that cannot be taught at all, and are ready to tear in pieces anyone who says it can.” 

  • craigswan
    31,832 Posts
    Thu, Jan 7 2021 11:52 AM

    A new video has emerged of henry on his last day before retirement .

  • craigswan
    31,832 Posts
    Thu, Jan 7 2021 12:07 PM

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