No. Pederasty has a meaning that we apply. Pederasty happened, it just wasn't considered normal as part of the institution for bringing up Athenian youth.
The Greeks and their philosophy were very instrumental in building the foundation of Christian society.
EHHHHH. I'm not so sure Peter & Paul would agree with that. Rome was far more influential in spreading Christianity than Greece.
We'll they're not. The Romans took a more... regal(?) approach to their theological views. The Greeks felt like the gods were directly involved in a lot of things that happened, as if the conflict between gods was something that played out in the face of man. The Romans saw them as more of a static and distant force.
Philosophically, the Romans were far more violent, efficient, brutal, and anti-Democratic than Athens, and many Greeks generally.
No. Pederasty has a meaning that we apply. Pederasty happened, it just wasn't considered normal as part of the institution for bringing up Athenian youth.
EHHHHH. I'm not so sure Peter & Paul would agree with that. Rome was far more influential in spreading Christianity than Greece.
And you think that Rome's philosophical and theological views weren't practically copies of Ancient Greece's?
We'll they're not. The Romans took a more... regal(?) approach to their theological views. The Greeks felt like the gods were directly involved in a lot of things that happened, as if the conflict between gods was something that played out in the face of man. The Romans saw them as more of a static and distant force.
Philosophically, the Romans were far more violent, efficient, brutal, and anti-Democratic than Athens, and many Greeks generally.