English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

1. family was originally from product unit, the productivity of several people is higher than one person, especially in primitive society, cooperation means life and death.

2. with the development of productivity, business started, then some people got rich, some got poor, conflicts emerged.

3. conflicts expanded, in order to maintain the social order and defend outsiders, military, prisons showed up, ruling class and ruled class were formed....the state formed then

Do you agree?

2007-11-03 03:38:10 · 1 answers · asked by Anonymous in Social Science Sociology

1 answers

I don't disagree with your idea because it is how you perceive objective reality to have evolved. Add that on to the ideas of others and perhaps you can expand and or change or modify your idea as you go along and learn new things.
I think family actually evolved with the propagation of the DNA and the need to protect that new propagation during the dependent stages of its existence.
The need to obtain energy to survive developed into an activity that also derives large social benefits that incline to favor the more powerful energy situations at all times. Not all individuals are able to take advantage of the energy as are others. Conflicts arise and have always accompanied energy due to the contradicting multi-complex and subjective situations that require more than most modern day intellects have to resolve.
Now we live in a time and place where the individual self will is the boss. We are effected by our reality but we also effect our reality. This is not all distributed evenly amongst human civilization in that not all individuales all the time maintain a stasis of stability. More we have a situation where an individual is socially active now more so than at other times, not allways totally active and not always totally inactive.
Prisons are the expression of some power or other.

2007-11-03 05:19:19 · answer #1 · answered by JORGE N 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers