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Not Guns, Nor Lead, But Men's Vices
American Digest ^ | 18 January 2005 | Pat Cummings

Posted on 01/18/2005 12:03:46 PM PST by 45Auto

The first illustrated "how-to" book for mining and metallurgy was written by the German Georg Bauer in the mid-16th century. The book has been in print and used from then to now with only minor changes were needed to accommodate modern materials. ("Bauer" was Latinized to "Agricola", probably by his teachers at the University of Leipzig.) Agricola was a teacher, philosopher and doctor as well as the world's first industrial publicist, and the opening of De re Metallica ("Concerning Metals") reflects his philosophical bent.

While re-reading it recently, I was struck by this passage in Chapter One. In the midst of a dissertation on the economics and politics of mining and the monetization of metals, Agricola diverts to make several points about the "evil" of metal weapons. It does not take much editing to apply his thoughts directly to today's debate on the "evil" of gun ownership.

"The curses which are uttered against iron, copper and lead have no weight with prudent and sensible men, because if these metals were done away with, men, as their anger swelled and their fury became unbridled, would assuredly fight like wild beasts, with fists, heels, nails and teeth. They would strike each other with sticks, hit one another with stones, or dash their foes to the ground. Moreover, a man does not kill another with iron alone, but slays by means of poison, starvation or thirst. He may seize him by the throat and strangle him; he may bury him alive in the ground; he may immerse him in the water and suffocate him; he may burn or hang him; so that he can make every element a participant in the death of men... From these examples we see that it is not metals which are to be condemned, but our vices, such as anger, cruelty, discord, passion for power, avarice and lust."

-- Georgius Agricola, De Re Metallica

It is not explosives that carry evil, it is the suicide bomber who carries the explosives. It is not the knife in the hand of the chef that stabs a man, but the one in the hand of the murderer. And it is not guns that kill. In all these examples, it is the murderer's desire to kill which is at fault, not the instruments used to act on those desires.


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: 16thcentury; bang; guns; history; metallurgy; mining

1 posted on 01/18/2005 12:03:59 PM PST by 45Auto
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To: 45Auto

--and the translation to English from Latin was done by Herbert Hoover and his wife--


2 posted on 01/18/2005 12:06:53 PM PST by rellimpank (urban dwellers don' t understand the cultural deprivation of not being raised on a farm)
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To: 45Auto

bump


3 posted on 01/18/2005 12:06:55 PM PST by jonestown ( A fanatic is a person who can't change his mind and won't change the subject." ~ Winston Churchill)
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To: 45Auto

If you don't study history you repeat it. A need to read big time.


4 posted on 01/18/2005 12:07:48 PM PST by handy old one (Never confuse the facts with the issues!!)
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To: 45Auto
In all these examples, it is the murderer's desire to kill which is at fault, not the instruments used to act on those desires.

Scot Peterson did NOT us a gun to murder his wife and son. It was the thought.

5 posted on 01/18/2005 12:10:24 PM PST by elbucko (Feral Republican)
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