“For the average person, all problems date to World War II; for the more informed, to World War I; for the genuine historian, to the French Revolution.”
Where do all problems date to for the /his/torian?
>not dating problems to fall of Rome
fucking pleb
The investiture controversy.
>>1476804
That time Clara used up all the hot water in the apartment. Fuck you, Clara!
the invention of agriculture and the subsequent development of classes and states
>>1476804
I'm not sure about "all" but Zoroastrian dualism ultimately led to the idea of good vs evil, and that sort of simplistic thinking has caused more human suffering then I care to contemplate.
The overthrow of the Rhodesian government
The birth of Jesus.
>>1476804
Eden
Vietnam war
>>1476832
This
>>1476816
Go to bed Engels
The creation of 4chan
>>1476885
I have no idea what disliking dualism has to do with reddit.
Does reddit just mean 'a thing I don't like' now?
>>1476889
>>Does reddit mean 'a thing I don't like' now?
What do you mean now? It's been that way for years.
>>1476832
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=N_PZ6xtdfgc
>>1476910
Seriously, go back
>problems are new to humanity and only began after a certain point
God you faggots are insufferable.
>>1476804
The problems are inherent in human nature, they were with us from the beginning, no one wants to admit it because the emotions and memes responsible are dear to them.
The inception of consciousness
Non-meme answer.
To the 1350 disasters. Black Death and Hundred Years War led to the destruction of the Franco-Catholic order that had been the foundation of Western civilisation, and to the spread of the Reformation and Humanism.
The West eventually recovered from the destruction and obscurantism, but it never regained its unity or its spiritual vitality.
>>1476804
The moment the first human thought about something else but surviving.