Lets just say that both collage & the History Channel shit on everything I was taugh in highschool American History.
No, you can'tcaptainwillies said:hmmmm i feel that there may be a loss of communication because of semantics somewhere in these posts/replies. Very well! may i request some sources and references on this knowledge.BlueMage said:No, Nike was the personification of victory. Calling Nike a goddess would be a stretch. Although feminine in aspect, she didn't have the powers normally attributed to the Olympians.captainwillies said:yeah. so? were did she get that info from? western history books often get things wrong. Besides Athena can't be the goddess of victory because "Nike" was the Greek goddess of victory/triumph look it upLooK iTz Jinjo said:Actually she was bothcaptainwillies said:Athena was the Greek goddess of war/victory. WRONG she was the goddess of wisdom. what makes it even worse is the teacher was greek![]()
(Yeah my mums Greek and taught yr12 Classics for 10 years) Athena was the Goddess of War and Victory as well as being the Goddess of Wisdom, you were both right
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Yes, I fancy myself an amateur classical greek mythology scholar.
what was the book called? The Greek Myths? Greek Gods and Heroes?BlueMage said:No, you can'tthe particular book was a gift from my dear sister when I was 9 years old. It .... has not survived the rigours of being read and re-read so often. Robert Graves was one of the primary contributors and editors, however.
radio head?Sark said:My English teacher liked to tell us that 2 + 2 = 5.
A half cookie for an easy reference.
Hahaha win.UltraParanoia said:I was taught that everyone is equal.
What a load of horseshit that turned out to be. My boobs aren't anywhere near as awesome as the ones on the wimmenfolk.
Wasn't that called Pangea? The universal continent?skyfire_freckles said:I was spinning a globe during free time in second grade, looking at all the continents, when I suddenly realized that Africa and South America would fit together almost perfectly. It made me think about what my dad had said about earthquakes, so I went to my teacher and explained my theory: that once upon a time, the continents had all been together once, but earthquakes had broken them apart over time.
She said, "No, of course not," like it was ridiculous. Then she went on to say that the world had always been just the way it was, and would never change.
What the hell?