Re: Anniversaries
Grishny, on host 12.29.132.98
Tuesday, September 17, 2002, at 13:00:55
Re: Anniversaries posted by Faux Pas on Tuesday, September 17, 2002, at 10:21:38:
> In short, we have a common method to measure time. When a date that something happened on comes around a year later, we notice the similarity in the dates. We remark on the similarity. > > This is also how traditions begin.
Here's a thought: is not the entire field of study known as "history" nothing more than a collection of anniversaries? What do history students learn, anyway? Large lists of events that happened in the past, all categorized by the months, days, years, and sometimes even moments that they started and/or ended.
Certainly there are some aspects of history that aren't that way, but then those are some of the things we know the least about, such as ancient history, or (and why do you think they call it this?) pre-historic times. It's been almost ten years since my last history class, but I seem to recall that the closer we got to the present day in our studies, the more we were concerned with dates and times. The study of history is nothing more than the study of anniversaries... remembering significant dates and what happened on those dates.
I suppose Baffled does not have a problem with history, though, since outside of coincidence you're not remembering stuff that happened on certain dates on the same dates in the present. After all, anniversaries outside of strict historical studies are only significant to those who were directly involved in whatever happened on that particular date. In other words, I'm thinking that a historical event is always an anniversary, but not vice versa. The anniversary of my wedding date is important to me, but two hundred years from now it will be forgotten, at least in that aspect. However, events like D-Day, the attack on Pearl Harbor, or 9-11-01 will most likely not be forgotten as long as the nations involved continue to exist. Even after the people who fought for their countries and their lives on those dates are long gone, they will still be observed in a national sense. Yes, the historical events will be studied and the dates memorized in classrooms year round, but when those significant dates roll around each year, people will continue to observe them, however they choose to do it. Why? Because there's just something in the human psyche that makes us feel the need to do so. If you lack that something, then to be honest, I don't know whether I should envy you or pity you.
Gri"Will they remember me when I'm gone?"shny
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