1 result for (book:ur2 AND session:737 AND stemmed:social)
[... 14 paragraphs ...]
[The Borledim] are the stock that so far has always seen to it that your species continues despite catastrophes, and they are more or less equally distributed about the planet and in all nationalities. They are most like the Sumari. They have the same love of the arts, the same general attitudes. They will usually seek fairly stable political situations in which to bear their children, as the Sumari will to produce their art. They demand a certain amount of freedom for their children, however, and while they are not political activists, like the Sumari their ideas often spring to prominence before large social changes, and help initiate them. The one big difference is that the Sumari deal primarily with creativity and the arts, and often subordinate family life (as Jane and I have done), while this family thinks of offspring in the terms of living art; everything else is subordinated to that “ideal.”
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
The next family (Ilda) is composed of the “exchangers.” They deal primarily in the great play of exchange and interchange of ideas, products, social and political concepts. They are travelers, carrying with them the ideas of one country to another, mixing cultures, religions, attitudes, political structures. They are explorers, merchants, soldiers, missionaries, sailors. They are often members of crusades.
(10:01.) Throughout the ages they have served as the spreaders of ideas, the assimilators. They (the Ilda) turn up everywhere. They were pirates and slaves as well, historically speaking. They are often primarily involved in social changes. In your time they may be diplomats, as they were also in the past. Their characteristics are usually those of the adventuresome. Very seldom do they live in one place for long, although they may if their occupation deals with products from another land. Individually they may seem highly diverse in nature, one from the other, but you will not find them as a rule in universities as teachers. You might find them as archaeologists in the field, however.
A good many salesmen belong in this (Ilda) category. In your terms they may be cosmopolitan, and often wealthy, so that frequent travel is possible. On the other hand, however, in certain frameworks, a humble merchant in a small country who travels through nearby provinces might also belong to this family. These are a lively, talkative, imaginative, usually likable group of people. They are interested in the outsides of things, social mores, the marketplace, current popular religious or political ideas. They spread these from place to place. They are the seed-carriers, both literally and figuratively.
[... 57 paragraphs ...]
1. Gramada | (736) | To found social systems |
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2. Sumafi | (736) | To transmit “originality” through teaching |
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3. Tumold | (736) | To heal, regardless of individual occupations |
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4. Vold | (736) | To reform the status quo |
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5. Milumet | (736) | To mystically nourish mankind’s psyche |
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6. Zuli | (736) | To serve as physical, athletic models |
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7. Borledim | (737) | To provide an earthstock for the species through parenthood |
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8. Ilda | (737) | To spread and exchange ideas |
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9. Sumari | (723, 732, 734–36) | To provide the cultural, spiritual, and artistic heritage for the species |
To found social systems
[... 38 paragraphs ...]