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Post by uz on Mar 13, 2011 15:15:47 GMT -5
So the only way to know love, is to be well aquainted with hate?
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Post by terroreign on Mar 13, 2011 15:22:52 GMT -5
yeah, i think there's a famous quote about that, somewhere
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Post by uz on Mar 13, 2011 15:39:09 GMT -5
Once you know what love and hate is, why do you need to keep getting reminded?
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Post by terroreign on Mar 13, 2011 15:46:06 GMT -5
You can't love, without being prone to hate, make sense?
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Post by uz on Mar 13, 2011 15:52:07 GMT -5
I don't see the sense, no.
Can one hate, without being prone to love?
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Post by terroreign on Mar 13, 2011 22:00:05 GMT -5
It's a fairy simple concept; there are frequencies of emotional capacity, at the frequency where one can love, one can also hate.
Obviously if one can truly hate something, they are capable and likely to love as well.
And vice versa; if one doesn't have the ability to really hate something, they also lack the ability to truly love.
*I use words like "truly" to express the fact that much of modern society feign love or hate.
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Post by uz on Mar 13, 2011 23:17:37 GMT -5
Not all "hateful" people have the ability to feel love. Lust is something different. We need to use an example to be able to make our points clear.
Any suggestion?
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Post by terroreign on Mar 13, 2011 23:28:50 GMT -5
Many people fake hate, for a reason or another, and in reality don't have the ability for either.
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Post by terroreign on Aug 29, 2012 10:37:35 GMT -5
there is no such ethnicity as "albanian", that is a region of the world, you are a shiptar - if you're not from kosovo or macedonia but from the region of albania you're albanian too..
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Post by valmir on Sept 1, 2012 15:53:42 GMT -5
there is no such ethnicity as "albanian", that is a region of the world, you are a shiptar - if you're not from kosovo or macedonia but from the region of albania you're albanian too.. True. I am not Albanian but i am Shqiptar, just like the Croatians are Hrvats and just like the Greeks are Hellenes,We got these kind of names from the ancient writers and historians and they only tried to describe the territory with those names.
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Post by ralphtpika on Sept 1, 2012 16:52:23 GMT -5
'Albanoi' as a people appeared first in Ptolemy 3.12.20. In his description of the Roman world, the southernmost part of the province Illyricum included Scodra, Lissus and Mt Scardus (Sar Planina); and, adjoining it the northernmost part of 'Macedonia' included the Taulantii (in the region of Tirana) and the Albani, in whose territory Ptolemy recorded one city only, Albanopolis or Albanos polis. Thus the Albani were a tribe in what we now call Central Albania, and they were an Illyrian-speaking tribe, like the more famous Taulantii, in the second century A.D. Men of this tribe appeared next in 1040, alongside some Epirotes (their neighbours on land) and some Italiotes (their neighbours across the sea), in the army of a rebellious general, George Maniakis. Two chieftains of this tribe, Demetrios and Ghin, pursued an independent policy in the early years of the thirteenth century...The gap between Ptolemy and Acropolites is bridged by the mention of "Ducagini d'Arbania" in a seventh-century document at Ragusa (Dubrovnik). These Ducagini instigated a revolt against Byzantine rule in Bosnia and in particular at Ragusa, but they had to submit after the second unsuccessful intervention at Ragusa, to which they were said to have come "de terra ferma," i.e overland (15). The name 'Ducagini' is evidently derived from the Latin 'dux' and the common Albanian name 'Ghin'; indeed an Albanian chieftain in 1281 was referred to as "dux Ginius Tanuschus"(16). Moreover, the leading family of northern Albania from the thirteenth century to the Turkish invasion in the fifteenth century was called 'Dukagjin' (Lek Dukagjini the codifier was one of them), and their properties lay between Lesh (Lissus) and the bend of the Drin. It is here then that we should put the ‘Arbania' of the seventh century. The conclusion that 'Albanians' lived there continuously from the second century to the thirteenth century becomes, I think, unavoidable... N. G. L. Hammond Migrations and invasions in Greece and adjacent areas By Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière Hammond Edition: illustrated Published by Noyes Press, 1976 Original from the University of Michigan Digitized Jun 24, 2008ISBN 0815550472, 9780815550471
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qej
Membrum
Posts: 172
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Post by qej on Sept 22, 2012 7:06:27 GMT -5
The Illyrian Empire was from 700 bc to 230 bc when the Roman empire took over with the defeat of the last illyrian king gentus in 169. just finished reading high albania, there's also something there about a magic cave in dukagjin with an underground city that has a pazar and if you touch the things oras or snakes appear. many of the highlander tribes migrated from bosnia such as geg lazar who came there with his 4 sons in hoti i believe so the illyrian empire extended well into bosnia/yugoslavia
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