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The Genos of the Earth?

anon_ruvo said in #5181 2d ago: received

Does anyone know of a book that describes historical shifts in international racial and civilizational delineation from the European point of view, particularly from 1000-2000 (i.e. not classical civilization)? In a manner similar to how the spatial ordering of the world in Europe across time is discussed in The Nomos of the Earth does perhaps the desired work treat its subject.

It would be preferred for the work to be as up to date as possible, and if possible not contaminated with megalib distortion.

Does anyone know of received

anon_hodo said in #5182 1d ago: received

I would recommend the following book, which I have personally read in the past, that I hope may come within the scope of your search:

Racisms: From the Crusades to the Twentieth Century by Francisco Bethencourt

While there is a general background slant to the text that can be described as liberal, it is surprisingly bereft of megalib distortions or ideological pandering to the reader, which is to be appreciated. The author is also a Portuguese historian who has a specialty in Portuguese colonial history and its racial nuances, which further attests to the virtues of the latter treatise he penned

I would recommend th received

anon_wela said in #5183 14h ago: received

This seems to be the original of Der Nomos der Erde. GL Ulmen, the English translator, is a Jew who annotated and re-wrote Schmitt's work. In particular they like to say "new world order" instead of "world-order."

Megalib distortion is just post 1960s Jewish scholar distortion, which finds itself opposed to European telos. You can Google Translate this probably.

https://z-library.im/book/YK5dzjqDJo/der-nomos-der-erde-im-v%C3%B6lkerrecht-des-jus-publicum-europaeum.html

When reading the book, the distinction between land and sea is first made. Land, which is fixed and has boundaries and ploughs and farmshares, lets one delineate their reward and justice in labor. The sea is one where people freely pluck and plunder, and only after the establishment of maritime empires (thalassocracies) were these bought to heel. Thus, the origin of law comes from acquisition of land.

referenced by: >>5184

This seems to be the received

anon_wela said in #5184 14h ago: received

>>5183

It's a boring book imo, but maybe it's because history itself is considered dangerous

70 pages in and distinguishes the concept of just war/anarchic war against 'inhumans' or infidels, lots of descriptions of old Greek/German/Roman/Christian history.

It's a boring book i received

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