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essay on universal cultural values​

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Answered by davstudent10th
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Answer:On an otherwise ordinary day in England, a shadowy figure wearing a Guy Fawkes mask enters the state controlled television studio and at gunpoint, forces its employees to broadcast a specially prepared video addressing the people of England. In the video, the very same mysterious masked man chastises the English people for their disregard for the once cherished values of duty, freedom and honor, values shared by many ancient civilizations. While at first glance, western culture as represented in the movie, V for Vendetta, may seem drastically different from those of ancient societies, many underlying philosophical similarities do emerge deep down. Even though modern westerners enjoy enhanced lives due to technology, medicine, and…show more content…

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Answered by Anonymous
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On an otherwise ordinary day in England, a shadowy figure wearing a Guy Fawkes mask enters the state controlled television studio and at gunpoint, forces its employees to broadcast a specially prepared video addressing the people of England. In the video, the very same mysterious masked man chastises the English people for their disregard for the once cherished values of duty, freedom and honor, values shared by many ancient civilizations. While at first glance, western culture as represented in the movie, V for Vendetta, may seem drastically different from those of ancient societies, many underlying philosophical similarities do emerge deep down. Even though modern westerners enjoy enhanced lives due to technology, medicine, and education, they share many similar values and cultural beliefs with the societies of Ancient India, Rome, and China.

The civilizations of Ancient India and the Modern West cherish the idea that all individuals have a responsibility to contribute to society. However, because these two different civilizations existed in drastically different epochs of history, Ancient Indians and Modern Westerners have different perspectives of what constitutes duty. Ancient Indian society divided itself into a caste system of five different groups of people: priests, warriors, merchants, commoners, and the untouchables. Once a person was born into a certain caste, Indian society ascribed certain duties and obligations based on his particular caste. Priests performed religious ceremonies, warriors fought in battles, merchants sold goods, and untouchables cleaned the streets. In the Indian epic, the Bhagavad-Gita, a reluctant warrior named Arjuana refuses to go to war because he worries for the lives of his brothers and un...

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