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To: The Wharf who wrote (8023)4/14/2006 12:02:41 PM
From: gpowellRead Replies (1) | Respond to of 24758
 
In hindsight I might change that last sentence to, "those societies that choose needs over dogma survive, while those that choose dogma are relegated to the dustbins of history."



To: The Wharf who wrote (8023)4/14/2006 1:25:04 PM
From: ahhahaRespond to of 24758
 
Dogma can suppress. Laws throughout history have been and will be broken.

In Hegel's dynamic of history it is claimed that the breaking of laws is part of a cycle that's necessary for societal evolution, and development of dogma is merely the eventual outcome of education in any era. You can see here where Marx, in his 1844, "Philosophical Communism", gets its raison d'etre, and later where he seeks a solution to capitalist dogma. The entire society and its complete body of laws need not be broken though for evolution to proceed. The US Constitution attempts to address this issue through its elastic clause.