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23122460 No.23122460 [Reply] [Original]

Is this the oldest period one can learn from? Or perhaps one should study physics or biology first? Obviously this an extreme goal that most likely nobody can reach but it's also really fun and interesting to attempt.

>> No.23122466

Drop the "Mesopotamian" thing.
You are retroactively adding like 5 distinct cultures under one term, that they never called themselves.
Drop the term, and you are going to see, there if far more bronze age, things that you realize.

>> No.23122469

>>23122466
I'm just starting on this path so I'm completely cluess, thanks for the information.

>> No.23122483

>>23122469
Great.
It's an easy mistake people make.

>> No.23122485

>>23122469
The term is fine for an introduction, but if you actually want to learn the cultures, you are going to realize you have to drop retroactive terms like that.

>> No.23122499
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23122499

>>23122460

Start with economics unironically. Once you see the shitshow for what it is, you'll be asking questions that will lead you towards sociology, biology, history, laws and legislation, encoded language, corporatism and even occult. To answer your question, the oldest history you can learn is encoded in esoteric and religious texts or in (((discredited))) historical sources that clashed with modern narratives. Think memory of Atlantis being preserved by Ancient Greeks, and modern historians desperately trying to either fraud the entire concept, or paint to be something less than it was.

I also think that the list should have jeetcore like Sanscrit epics and Hindu texts. Chances are things like Vimana, the flying fortresses/chariots/palaces, were actually real in the ancient God-knows-when past. I know that poojeets are icky, but they're not the people who wrote those texts - more like they mutted and corrupted to niggerdom descendants. The ancient east-asian stories are also worthy of an examination, thought it seems that they preserved most of it in allegoriries that are better suited to their bugmindset. Takes a while to decode their cultural condition for a westerner, fortunately not impossible, just switch between slavebug and autist-grandstrategy player and you'll nail it.

>How will bankingjew redpill me on the world
It's easier to learn history by retroactively going back century by century in my experience. It worked for me at least, but then again, I did start originally in Mesopotamia, then jumped to 20th century etc and from there went back to 19th, 18th till I returned to ancient world.

>>23122466
>Drop the "Mesopotamian" thing
Agreed.

>> No.23122507

>>23122469
Add these texts/books as well, if you can get them:
>https://www.amazon.com/Evolution-Gilgamesh-Epic-Jeffrey-Tigay/dp/0865165467
~
>https://www.amazon.com/Political-History-Post-Kassite-Babylonia-1158-722/dp/B005CKSMK8/ref=sr_1_1?crid=22JPPWHBXSC11&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.I2QorO3gQoyR0QojMI845w.MyN67-JgxsPrv1ToIcbHi507Czmm6MOw5xjTea6s6IU&dib_tag=se&keywords=Political+history+of+Post-Kassite+Babylonia+%281158-722+b.+C.%29+%28A%29&qid=1709051367&s=books&sprefix=political+history+of+post-kassite+babylonia+1158-722+b.+c.+a+%2Cstripbooks-intl-ship%2C438&sr=1-1
-
>https://www.amazon.com/Laws-Eshnunna-Ancient-Near-East/dp/9004085343/ref=sr_1_1?crid=2Z67U7PBIYWXS&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.gv6L5A3fM4i2kn8wKWVKLQ.JJUv-_xI70j_yr9ufBlSVSihK9XvMN_Jl7qGAW-GWbk&dib_tag=se&keywords=Reuven+Yaron%2C+The+Laws+of+Eshnunna&qid=1709051541&s=books&sprefix=reuven+yaron%2C+the+laws+of+eshnunna%2Cstripbooks-intl-ship%2C213&sr=1-1

>> No.23122631

I wish I was a 200 year old wizard who knows everything anyone has ever known and lives in a huge mansion with half of it dedicated to a 20 meter tall library.

>> No.23123430

>>23122507
Thanks!