Social and cultural communication in early history

In ancient times, the process of social communication and exchange of information was not studied by classical historians, or rather, was not in the center of attention. At the beginning of civilization, various questions of people about nature and man, in addition to everyday needs, were discussed...

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Main Author: Kazimi Parviz Firudin Oqlu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Technium Science 2021-06-01
Series:Technium Social Sciences Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://techniumscience.com/index.php/socialsciences/article/view/3418
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spelling doaj-8b3cbfd9eb3a4b67adbfd647b757cacd2021-06-08T18:27:37ZengTechnium ScienceTechnium Social Sciences Journal2668-77982021-06-01201Social and cultural communication in early historyKazimi Parviz Firudin Oqlu0Baku State University, Associate Professor, Doctor of Philosophy, Azerbaijan In ancient times, the process of social communication and exchange of information was not studied by classical historians, or rather, was not in the center of attention. At the beginning of civilization, various questions of people about nature and man, in addition to everyday needs, were discussed in interaction, and in the absence of science, "words and interpretation" formed the basis of communication. The people who proclaimed and interpreted the divine source of the Word became "wise" and soon began to distinguish themselves from others, claiming their superiority. Thus, priests, priests, preachers, monks and dervishes were formed as carriers of divine wisdom. We can assume that first the Logos (word), then the sages who were the carriers of "thoughts" (information), then associations, organizations, and then alliances were formed between them. These unions were to either become religious communities with limited activity, or grow at the expense of state power. Many materials from ancient mythology confirm this "idea". We see that the ancient sages (that is, the bearers of wisdom) were extremely "tolerant." These sages, who are open to new ideas, listen to different ideas, accept them, combine them into a single doctrine, try to understand them when contradictions arise, and thus new concepts arise. Religious doctrines are the result of a "cultural hybrid". https://techniumscience.com/index.php/socialsciences/article/view/3418Zoroastrianism, Avesta, social communication, Mithraism, anahid, religious hybrid.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kazimi Parviz Firudin Oqlu
spellingShingle Kazimi Parviz Firudin Oqlu
Social and cultural communication in early history
Technium Social Sciences Journal
Zoroastrianism, Avesta, social communication, Mithraism, anahid, religious hybrid.
author_facet Kazimi Parviz Firudin Oqlu
author_sort Kazimi Parviz Firudin Oqlu
title Social and cultural communication in early history
title_short Social and cultural communication in early history
title_full Social and cultural communication in early history
title_fullStr Social and cultural communication in early history
title_full_unstemmed Social and cultural communication in early history
title_sort social and cultural communication in early history
publisher Technium Science
series Technium Social Sciences Journal
issn 2668-7798
publishDate 2021-06-01
description In ancient times, the process of social communication and exchange of information was not studied by classical historians, or rather, was not in the center of attention. At the beginning of civilization, various questions of people about nature and man, in addition to everyday needs, were discussed in interaction, and in the absence of science, "words and interpretation" formed the basis of communication. The people who proclaimed and interpreted the divine source of the Word became "wise" and soon began to distinguish themselves from others, claiming their superiority. Thus, priests, priests, preachers, monks and dervishes were formed as carriers of divine wisdom. We can assume that first the Logos (word), then the sages who were the carriers of "thoughts" (information), then associations, organizations, and then alliances were formed between them. These unions were to either become religious communities with limited activity, or grow at the expense of state power. Many materials from ancient mythology confirm this "idea". We see that the ancient sages (that is, the bearers of wisdom) were extremely "tolerant." These sages, who are open to new ideas, listen to different ideas, accept them, combine them into a single doctrine, try to understand them when contradictions arise, and thus new concepts arise. Religious doctrines are the result of a "cultural hybrid".
topic Zoroastrianism, Avesta, social communication, Mithraism, anahid, religious hybrid.
url https://techniumscience.com/index.php/socialsciences/article/view/3418
work_keys_str_mv AT kazimiparvizfirudinoqlu socialandculturalcommunicationinearlyhistory
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