Also central to her book is the contention that in their opposition to the totalitarian Roman state, «Christians forged the basis for what would become, centuries later,
the western ideas of freedom and of the infinite value of each human life.»
This led Brague to the Biblical roots of
the Western idea of freedom, where we can find something completely fresh — a basic, radical new idea that comes before all other talk of what it means to be free in our society.
Not exact matches
Stardew Valley deals with this
of this
idea of freedom and what is important throughout the game and ends up being both, enormously fun and a meaningful critique
of Western values.
She discusses the ever more globalised art scene and the growing culture
of biennales and art fairs, noting that many
of the biennials take place in countries «which are politically and economically problematic or in crisis, and it is about the projection
of one context into another; trying to impose some
western idea of how inspirational art can be to those people and then leaving that place and not taking any responsibility for the
idea of intellectual
freedom they have proposed.»