Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think of psychology everyday.
how people think, why people do things the way they do things, why sibling are the same/different, why different cultures do things differently, how good is integrated differently in different cultures.
Not really equivalent of thinking about Empire - more a modern popular culture phenom …
Lol. No. You don’t understand the assignment.
Psychology has been around longer than the Roman Empire
But… thinking about your ex best friend is like the Roman Empire. Ffs.
I was different PP sorry and forgot to clarify.
Neither examples are good equivalents for thinking about the Roman Empire - that was the assignment right?
No the assignment is what do women think about more often than you could ever imagine.
Shouldn’t it be what women think about far, far more than men can imagine?
One answer might be how to avoid sexual assault.
This. Personal safety, sexual harassment, sexual assault. How much of our mind space is devoted to these subjects and how much of our lives we adjust because of these concerns.
It was more fun to consider empires but when it comes down to actual mental attention, yes, avoiding predatorial men is up there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The gruesome slaughter really began when the Europeans invaded and leaned on literal slaughter (enslaving and chopping off limbs and other body parts leaving them to suffer infection and slow death).
I think the Mayan civilization is more interesting to contemplate because it isn't as explicitly documented down to the smallest detail as the Roman Empire. The Aztecs are interesting too in terms of mythological belief systems.
The Romans (to me) are more exciting for movies, novels and history classes because it's like a well documented soap opera with lots of intrigue, turnover and the architecture and sculpture to back up each rulers' legitimacy and how they align with their predecessors or
This is the opposite of what actually happened.
Sorry, you do not know history. I've studied this including original first hand writings by Diego de Landa. Mayan libraries filled with their books were also burned to the ground. Another reason there is way more info about the Roman empire.
Can you ever hear yourself?
Do you often wonder why you gave few friends? Never get invited to the cookout?
Lol, I'm just fine, not stunted enough to turn to personal attacks when I'm wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think of psychology everyday.
how people think, why people do things the way they do things, why sibling are the same/different, why different cultures do things differently, how good is integrated differently in different cultures.
Not really equivalent of thinking about Empire - more a modern popular culture phenom …
Lol. No. You don’t understand the assignment.
Psychology has been around longer than the Roman Empire
But… thinking about your ex best friend is like the Roman Empire. Ffs.
I was different PP sorry and forgot to clarify.
Neither examples are good equivalents for thinking about the Roman Empire - that was the assignment right?
No the assignment is what do women think about more often than you could ever imagine.
Shouldn’t it be what women think about far, far more than men can imagine?
One answer might be how to avoid sexual assault.
This. Personal safety, sexual harassment, sexual assault. How much of our mind space is devoted to these subjects and how much of our lives we adjust because of these concerns.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The gruesome slaughter really began when the Europeans invaded and leaned on literal slaughter (enslaving and chopping off limbs and other body parts leaving them to suffer infection and slow death).
I think the Mayan civilization is more interesting to contemplate because it isn't as explicitly documented down to the smallest detail as the Roman Empire. The Aztecs are interesting too in terms of mythological belief systems.
The Romans (to me) are more exciting for movies, novels and history classes because it's like a well documented soap opera with lots of intrigue, turnover and the architecture and sculpture to back up each rulers' legitimacy and how they align with their predecessors or
This is the opposite of what actually happened.
Sorry, you do not know history. I've studied this including original first hand writings by Diego de Landa. Mayan libraries filled with their books were also burned to the ground. Another reason there is way more info about the Roman empire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think of psychology everyday.
how people think, why people do things the way they do things, why sibling are the same/different, why different cultures do things differently, how good is integrated differently in different cultures.
Not really equivalent of thinking about Empire - more a modern popular culture phenom …
Lol. No. You don’t understand the assignment.
Psychology has been around longer than the Roman Empire
But… thinking about your ex best friend is like the Roman Empire. Ffs.
I was different PP sorry and forgot to clarify.
Neither examples are good equivalents for thinking about the Roman Empire - that was the assignment right?
No the assignment is what do women think about more often than you could ever imagine.
Shouldn’t it be what women think about far, far more than men can imagine?
One answer might be how to avoid sexual assault.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think about lost cities a lot. Like what happened right before everyone decided to leave these huge thriving communities.
I have recently been thinking about population collapse. Cities can be abandoned very quickly when the conditions are right - or wrong. There are some indicators that we will see it happening soon, rather than only in the past.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The gruesome slaughter really began when the Europeans invaded and leaned on literal slaughter (enslaving and chopping off limbs and other body parts leaving them to suffer infection and slow death).
I think the Mayan civilization is more interesting to contemplate because it isn't as explicitly documented down to the smallest detail as the Roman Empire. The Aztecs are interesting too in terms of mythological belief systems.
The Romans (to me) are more exciting for movies, novels and history classes because it's like a well documented soap opera with lots of intrigue, turnover and the architecture and sculpture to back up each rulers' legitimacy and how they align with their predecessors or
This is the opposite of what actually happened.
Sorry, you do not know history. I've studied this including original first hand writings by Diego de Landa. Mayan libraries filled with their books were also burned to the ground. Another reason there is way more info about the Roman empire.
Can you ever hear yourself?
Do you often wonder why you gave few friends? Never get invited to the cookout?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think of psychology everyday.
how people think, why people do things the way they do things, why sibling are the same/different, why different cultures do things differently, how good is integrated differently in different cultures.
Not really equivalent of thinking about Empire - more a modern popular culture phenom …
Lol. No. You don’t understand the assignment.
Psychology has been around longer than the Roman Empire
But… thinking about your ex best friend is like the Roman Empire. Ffs.
I was different PP sorry and forgot to clarify.
Neither examples are good equivalents for thinking about the Roman Empire - that was the assignment right?
No the assignment is what do women think about more often than you could ever imagine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The gruesome slaughter really began when the Europeans invaded and leaned on literal slaughter (enslaving and chopping off limbs and other body parts leaving them to suffer infection and slow death).
I think the Mayan civilization is more interesting to contemplate because it isn't as explicitly documented down to the smallest detail as the Roman Empire. The Aztecs are interesting too in terms of mythological belief systems.
The Romans (to me) are more exciting for movies, novels and history classes because it's like a well documented soap opera with lots of intrigue, turnover and the architecture and sculpture to back up each rulers' legitimacy and how they align with their predecessors or
This is the opposite of what actually happened.
Sorry, you do not know history. I've studied this including original first hand writings by Diego de Landa. Mayan libraries filled with their books were also burned to the ground. Another reason there is way more info about the Roman empire.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think of psychology everyday.
how people think, why people do things the way they do things, why sibling are the same/different, why different cultures do things differently, how good is integrated differently in different cultures.
Not really equivalent of thinking about Empire - more a modern popular culture phenom …
Lol. No. You don’t understand the assignment.
Psychology has been around longer than the Roman Empire
But… thinking about your ex best friend is like the Roman Empire. Ffs.
I was different PP sorry and forgot to clarify.
Neither examples are good equivalents for thinking about the Roman Empire - that was the assignment right?
No the assignment is what do women think about more often than you could ever imagine.
Hating men?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The gruesome slaughter really began when the Europeans invaded and leaned on literal slaughter (enslaving and chopping off limbs and other body parts leaving them to suffer infection and slow death).
I think the Mayan civilization is more interesting to contemplate because it isn't as explicitly documented down to the smallest detail as the Roman Empire. The Aztecs are interesting too in terms of mythological belief systems.
The Romans (to me) are more exciting for movies, novels and history classes because it's like a well documented soap opera with lots of intrigue, turnover and the architecture and sculpture to back up each rulers' legitimacy and how they align with their predecessors or
This is the opposite of what actually happened.
Anonymous wrote:I think about lost cities a lot. Like what happened right before everyone decided to leave these huge thriving communities.
Anonymous wrote:The gruesome slaughter really began when the Europeans invaded and leaned on literal slaughter (enslaving and chopping off limbs and other body parts leaving them to suffer infection and slow death).
I think the Mayan civilization is more interesting to contemplate because it isn't as explicitly documented down to the smallest detail as the Roman Empire. The Aztecs are interesting too in terms of mythological belief systems.
The Romans (to me) are more exciting for movies, novels and history classes because it's like a well documented soap opera with lots of intrigue, turnover and the architecture and sculpture to back up each rulers' legitimacy and how they align with their predecessors or