I so badly want a source for this.
It’s in the picture, just read the tablet
I read the tablet and it’s more about the quality of copper ingots delivered than the general decline of civilization.
I don’t know where the best quality copper ingots could be found in Ancient Mesopotamia, but I’ve definitely learned not to bother dealing with Ea-nāṣir!
Found Nanni’s Lemmy account.
There’s a lot of references to this, but it looks like there’s not a known source. Interestingly, the first reference to this tablet was from 1908. https://quoteinvestigator.com/2012/10/22/world-end/
So it’s a fake story from 1908
It’s annoying that they referenced several times the quote appeared since the early 1900s, but didn’t take a single step to determine if such a thing was written down in a museum in Istanbul.
Party pooper here - https://skeptics.stackexchange.com/questions/4923/was-this-quote-on-a-clay-tablet-about-unruly-kids-written-by-an-assyrian
Quoting the answer from there:
In summary:
- I have not shown whether or not this is a quote from an ancient work.
- I’ve shown that the quote, and its provenance has survived largely intact since the 1920s at least.
- In particular, it has been traced far further back than Sir Isaac Asimov’s book (as suggested by others here).
- However, I have shown it was not both Assyrian and from 2800 BC. It may have in Akkadian, a related language, from 2800 BC, but that is earlier than any references I found so I find it unlikely. It might have been Sumerian.
- IMHO, given the dubious provenance of the source, a more likely scenario is that it is either a true quote, oddly translated, from a much later date, or invented in the early 20th Century.
Oh man if it is Akkadian and not Assyrian then it ruins the whole joke!
It was never over 🤯
We are so back 😎
it being over is over
Sounded fake as fuck to me, but I appreciate the hard data to back up my hypothesis.
There’s no doubt whatsoever that people thousands of years ago expressed these things, but yeah, it’s too bad we don’t have an actual surviving example.
I don’t see a problem viewing our current predicament a post apocalypse
The bronze age collapse happened ~1600 years after that tablet was written, i guess that could count as an end of the world(that they knew)
This is what some people on Fox News are saying because they saw drag queens at the Olympics. The end times are coming. 🙄
Yes, the drag queens will destroy the world, not unfettered capitalism.
The goddamn frustrating thing is that it only happened because it’s normal and accepted in Europe. It’s only because of the bs puritanical culture war in the US that they think it’s somehow relevant to them. Haven’t even stopped to think that there are other cultures at the… Olympics
Gotta keep the smoke screens as thick as their viewers’ skulls, lest they see through it
I for one welcome our new drag queen overlords
And of course, the best way to prevent this doom is more religion. That always works out so well…
Especially when one of the loudest religions actively want to doom the world so that their sky daddy can show everyone else how right they were this whole time…
Ah yes, I’m certain Jesus would want his “followers” to hasten the end of the fucking world. Wait a minute, didn’t have supposedly let himself be crucified to save us? And Christians consider his sacrifice something of a big deal.
It is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of the Asyrian Empire.
Mesopotamia has fallen, billions must die.
Or bodies are in a constant state of getting older and undergoing collapse. I think that believing in the good old days is a reaction to getting old. I think that believing in some golden past is it reaction to our own bodily degeneration. Fear of our mortality is a powerful force, and I think that a large amount of people externalize/project that fear onto their perception of society.
The end of the world hasn’t happened for everyone yet, but the world does end for some individuals every day.
Reminds me of the poem the florist has in Grim Fandango that goes something like: it may be years, it may be hours, but sooner or later everyone pushes up flowers.
Man that game is a damn masterpiece
Saving this comment. It’s a fantastic observation you’ve made, you convinced me.
I think it’s more that you get taught the “right” way of doing, speaking, etc. and people are geared to dislike challenges to that idea until they learn to accept change. Another example would be people who’ve learnt how to do a particular task at work being shown a better way of doing it but having a niggling sense that the way they’d learnt first is ipso facto better.
Same as it ever was…
Letting the days go by…
I’m currently reading “All the Knowledge in the World: A History of the Encyclopedia” by Simon Garfield. It mentions a similar thought held by some around the time of the creation of the Encyclopedia Brittanica. (Late 1700s, if I recall correctly)
There were too many books, and they were being printed by just anyone. Who needs a really long dictionary, anyway?
Maybe it never began
And nobody wants to work anymore!!!
His favourite movie was probably Idiocracy
big frosted miniwheat
Important
children no longer obey their parents? mf you have no idea what is to come
I understand the point. But it misses an extremely important factor: technology.
Yes, humans have played pretend we were this world’s owners/masters since civilization began.
But our toolbox is filled with tech that can literally reverse terraform the climate against us, and we’re using it with abandon and without restraint. Add to that AI, CRISPR derived bioweapons, etc. We’ve gotten to the point where we cobble together yet another means of world wide destruction every decade or two, and we all know we’re too stupid and selfish not to for the prospect of short term, individual gain.
They were monkeys with spears and swords, a threat to rival monkey tribes, but in no way the entire species. We are monkeys with nukes and beyond.
“It has become appallingly obvious that our technology has exceeded our humanity”
-Albert Einstein