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December 23rd, 2006, 09:55 AM
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Sergeant
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Re: Scenario: 300 Van versus 1 Million C\'Tisians
Epaminondas--check the wikipedia link in my earlier post. Different historians believe different things. I had always heard it was 150,000. The subject of my post refers to the movie though--and in the movie there are supposed to be a million persians....
It will be interesting to see the Immortals, how they are depicted, etc.
Endoperez--Gemmel does too have ridiculous stupidity in his books! The difference is that the idiot dies young and fast and is nevermore mentioned....
Yeah, I get your meaning. However, the comic book/graphic novel was a dramatization of thermopylae, and the movie was based on the graphic novel and further dramatized.
Personally, I don't look for that much realism in a fantasy movie. I don't want to know that half the people are going nuts due to the nervous system damage of syphilis and gonnorrhea, that the beautiful women had mouths full of crooked and rotten teath, that complexions were the opposite of creamy and smooth, that lice and fleas were the norm, and that people routinely drank the clear water out of sewer ditches, becaus as long as it was fairly clear it must be healthy. Diarrhea was common. Tooth aches caused more fights than slights to honor. Etc. ad nauseum. I'd rather a Homer's or Herodotus' view of these times/men/heroes--tough, strong men of cunning and skill. Tall and handsome and full of vigor and vitality. Heroes, who answer the call and fight the day through. Strong armed and gods blessed, swift of foot, sure of sight.
I classify this movie as a fantasy, and I look forward to it (now watch it turn out to be the worst movie of the new year.)
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December 23rd, 2006, 11:25 AM
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Sergeant
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Re: Scenario: 300 Van versus 1 Million C\'Tisians
The trailer was awesome. But I doubt they made a full movie this stunning
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December 23rd, 2006, 01:56 PM
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Sergeant
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Re: Scenario: 300 Van versus 1 Million C\'Tisians
Quote:
Uh-Nu-Buh said:
Epaminondas--check the wikipedia link in my earlier post. Different historians believe different things. I had always heard it was 150,000. The subject of my post refers to the movie though--and in the movie there are supposed to be a million persians....
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Uh-nu-Buh,
I did briefly glance through the Wikipedia article but you have to understand that Wikipedia articles are not always to be taken seriously. They are seldom written by experts in the field, and in fact any Joe Shmoe can enter his 5 cents.
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December 23rd, 2006, 04:49 PM
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Sergeant
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Re: Scenario: 300 Van versus 1 Million C\'Tisians
Normally written by fanatics. Definatly take them with the grain of salt. Give me a scholarly source any day of the week.
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December 23rd, 2006, 06:09 PM
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Sergeant
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Re: Scenario: 300 Van versus 1 Million C\'Tisians
Quote:
Epaminondas said:
Quote:
Uh-Nu-Buh said:
Epaminondas--check the wikipedia link in my earlier post....
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Uh-nu-Buh,
I did briefly glance through the Wikipedia article but you have to understand that Wikipedia articles are not always to be taken seriously. They are seldom written by experts in the field, and in fact any Joe Shmoe can enter his 5 cents.
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True, that's why they/we have citations. In a study done a few months ago, a random sampling of articles in both a regular encyclopedia written by experts and wikipedia were shown to have an almost comparable number of errors.
Aside from that, it pretty much says what you said--except it shows several different perspectives: i.e. this historian believes this (citation), this other historian believes something different (citation), etc. It also shows the history of the history: e.g. Herodotus believed it was about 5.3 million men including logistics personnel; Simonides gave a figure of ~4 million; Ctesias, a Persian historian, reported ~800,000; the list goes on into contemporary times giving schools of thought. Here are a small sampling of excerpts. Note that they are all accompanied by citations in the article.
"One school of thought rejects the figures given in ancient texts as exaggerations on the part of the victors"
"A second school contends that ancient sources do give realistic numbers. "
"Dr. Manousos Kampouris argues that Herodotus' 1,700,000 for the infantry plus 80,000 cavalry (including support) is realistic for various reasons"
"On the other hand, Christos Romas believes that the Persian troops accompanying Xerxes were a little over 400,000."
I've written/edited/contributed to several articles on wikipedia (cars, japanese archery, various authors, literature) so I know what you say is true: any dork can write anything they want. That is backed by the Colbert-mania elephant extravaganza and etc. However, if the article says something that you disagree with you can check the citations and read the discussions in the meta-article to see if there is any disagreement or controversy. To me, and many others, this lends/gives/assures credence/quality to the system.
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December 23rd, 2006, 10:30 PM
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Corporal
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Re: Scenario: 300 Van versus 1 Million C\'Tisians
Quote:
Uh-Nu-Buh said:
True, that's why they/we have citations. In a study done a few months ago, a random sampling of articles in both a regular encyclopedia written by experts and wikipedia were shown to have an almost comparable number of errors.
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And you can't bother to look up this study?  The citation is: Giles, J; Internet encyclopedias go head to head; Nature 438, p900-901, 15 Dec 2005. This study was savaged by critics for methodological problems, notably:
numbers of errors were counted, but not types or magnitudes. Both "The Mon is generally believed to have been created by a Mars-sized object colliding with Earth." and "The Moon is made of green cheese." were counted as one error.
no accounting was made for Encyclopedia Brittanica articles generally being longer and more comprehensive than Wikipedia articles. So the error count is nothing like signal-to-noise.
Quote:
Here are a small sampling of excerpts. Note that they are all accompanied by citations in the article.
"One school of thought rejects the figures given in ancient texts as exaggerations on the part of the victors"
"A second school contends that ancient sources do give realistic numbers. "
"Dr. Manousos Kampouris argues that Herodotus' 1,700,000 for the infantry plus 80,000 cavalry (including support) is realistic for various reasons"
"On the other hand, Christos Romas believes that the Persian troops accompanying Xerxes were a little over 400,000."
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The first one dates from 1929, the second from 1930, and the last two are from what appear to be popular magazines*. These are not useful scholarly citations. Archeology and speculation from 70 years ago is generally regarded as junk, and popular writing doesn't have to meet any criteria for correctness.
*: other than the Wikipedia hits, I can find the title of the first offered only by an on-line wargaming store, and the second doesn't appear at all. I'd expect even tiny scholarly journals to have websites under their own names.
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December 24th, 2006, 09:29 AM
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Sergeant
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Re: Scenario: 300 Van versus 1 Million C\'Tisians
Evil Dave: sounds like you are well informed and have your mind made up. I'll respect that for the most part, but I can't let a few items go.
Newton's works on gravity and mathematics are over 70 years old. In hindsight, he was nutty as a pancake. A complete fruitcake.
Darwin's works are over 70 years old. From the modern perspective, his crazy theories don't stack up compared to intelligent design and spontaneous generation.
Herodotus' Histories are also over 70 years old. Worthless garbage. I am unsure why they are still published. I have no idea at all why they are regarded so well by the Encyclopedia Britannica.
Frankly, I am amazed you have a limit of 70 years. That seems so old fashioned. In this marvelous digital age, if it is older than an hour or two, I regard it as pap-smear. For example, your post from yesterday--especially your quote from Helmut von Moltke (for whom there is a very nice article on Wikipedia if you are interested)--is junk and "doesn't have to meet any criteria for correctness." It's garbage. Outdated. Digital archeology. Musings and speculations on history and information theory from literally hours ago!! Gah!
I'll also pick on your childish eye rolling. To me, that immediately means you are a dick. No matter how correct you are, you are still a dick. You could be 100% right, but you would still be a dick.
To paraphrase Churchill: 'Tomorrow I will be wrong, but you will still be a dick.'
Note to anyone other than Evil Dave: I read wikipedia articles with a grain of salt. I just do not immediately pan them due to methodology. Like everything, I am skeptical of them--but I actually like the methodology. If you want to check something, you are free to check the citations and meta-article--as Evil Dave did. You are free to choose what you believe in a wikipedia article, based on your own researches. That makes it a good reference, imo.
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December 24th, 2006, 03:24 PM
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Major General
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Re: Scenario: 300 Van versus 1 Million C\'Tisians
Quote:
Uh-Nu-Buh said:
Evil Dave: sounds like you are well informed and have your mind made up. I'll respect that for the most part, but I can't let a few items go.
Newton's works on gravity and mathematics are over 70 years old. In hindsight, he was nutty as a pancake. A complete fruitcake.
Darwin's works are over 70 years old. From the modern perspective, his crazy theories don't stack up compared to intelligent design and spontaneous generation.
Herodotus' Histories are also over 70 years old. Worthless garbage. I am unsure why they are still published. I have no idea at all why they are regarded so well by the Encyclopedia Britannica.
Frankly, I am amazed you have a limit of 70 years. That seems so old fashioned. In this marvelous digital age, if it is older than an hour or two, I regard it as pap-smear. For example, your post from yesterday--especially your quote from Helmut von Moltke (for whom there is a very nice article on Wikipedia if you are interested)--is junk and "doesn't have to meet any criteria for correctness." It's garbage. Outdated. Digital archeology. Musings and speculations on history and information theory from literally hours ago!! Gah!
I'll also pick on your childish eye rolling. To me, that immediately means you are a dick. No matter how correct you are, you are still a dick. You could be 100% right, but you would still be a dick.
To paraphrase Churchill: 'Tomorrow I will be wrong, but you will still be a dick.'
Note to anyone other than Evil Dave: I read wikipedia articles with a grain of salt. I just do not immediately pan them due to methodology. Like everything, I am skeptical of them--but I actually like the methodology. If you want to check something, you are free to check the citations and meta-article--as Evil Dave did. You are free to choose what you believe in a wikipedia article, based on your own researches. That makes it a good reference, imo.
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Am I a dick too? 
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December 24th, 2006, 06:02 PM
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Sergeant
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Re: Scenario: 300 Van versus 1 Million C\'Tisians
__________________
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December 24th, 2006, 03:48 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Re: Scenario: 300 Van versus 1 Million C\'Tisians
Quote:
Uh-Nu-Buh said:
Evil Dave: sounds like you are well informed and have your mind made up. I'll respect that for the most part, but I can't let a few items go.
Newton's works on gravity and mathematics are over 70 years old. In hindsight, he was nutty as a pancake. A complete fruitcake.
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If you reread Evil Dave's post, he didn't attack all science older than 70 years, only "archeology and speculation". I don't know about archeology (my guess is that there was some serious archeology work done way before that, even though a lot very probably lacked enormously in seriousness), but he could very well be right on speculation.
But then, to attack him with examples of older scientific theories which are solid work is, at best, unfair.
Now I'll all let you go back to your usual flamewars.
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