To get a better grasp of the subtleties of culture and law allow me to give a few pointers without inundating you:
Think of the " anglo-saxon" model (normanic) and the Rheinland model.
What is the position of a married girl under Common law and Germanic law? Husband (husbandry =?) & wife vs mann und FRAU?
What is a FRAU? Etymology? What is FREYA?
Man, in Latin is a name/nomen. In German it is actually an adjective: manly, as it is about becoming and showing to be, not a position. Yet FRAU is an honorable position.
Also consider this: The words: Sun and moon. In Latin, what gender is Sun and what gender is Moon? And in German? How does that reflect in terms of religion, views in life, philosophy? Is there roman healthcare? Is there Germanic healthcare?
You' ll notice a subtle yet stark difference when it comes to these two worlds. I do not have it at the ready, but there is a study on language and views of life regarding the gender specific nature. Think of bridges. It is male in Latin, but female in Germanic languages. And what does it mean for how people look at things?
A funny way to exemplify this is the following:
We would say: you have the future ahead of you, no? Well, in paleo-Hebrew it is the other way around. There you have your past before you, as you cannot see the future. In a way, going into the future is walking backwards.
Does that make a huge difference? Yes, as the two views do not go together.
Language is an expression tied in with culture and law, is decisive for jurisdiction. Fucking up language, means fucking up culture and law: i.e. the way in which a nation lives together. And that is where we are.
To get a better grasp of the subtleties of culture and law allow me to give a few pointers without inundating you:
Think of the " anglo-saxon" model (normanic) and the Rheinland model.
What is the position of a married girl under Common law and Germanic law? Husband (husbandry =?) & wife vs mann und FRAU?
What is a FRAU? Etymology? What is FREYA?
Man, in Latin is a name/nomen. In German it is actually an adjective: manly, as it is about becoming and showing to be, not a position. Yet FRAU is an honorable position.
Also consider this: The words: Sun and moon. In Latin, what gender is Sun and what gender is Moon? And in German? How does that reflect in terms of religion, views in life, philosophy? Is there roman healthcare? Is there Germanic healthcare?
You' ll notice a subtle yet stark difference when it comes to these two worlds. I do not have it at the ready, but there is a study on language and views of life regarding the gender specific nature. Think of bridges. It is male in Latin, but female in Germanic languages. And what does it mean for how people look at things?
A funny way to exemplify this is the following:
We would say: you have the future ahead of you, no? Well, in paleo-Hebrew it is the other way around. There you have your past before you, as you cannot see the future. In a way, going into the future is walking backwards.
Does that make a huge difference? Yes, as the two views do not go together.
Language is an expression tied in with culture and law, is decisive for jurisdiction. Fucking up language, means fucking up culture and law: i.e. the way in which a nation lives together. And that is where we are.