Aye fine...but what exactly does it explain.......campbell wrote:This might help, Robin:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeitgeist
"time spirit", "spirit of the time", "spirit of the age" etc.
Subtle shift but enough to bridge the gap?!

Aye fine...but what exactly does it explain.......campbell wrote:This might help, Robin:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeitgeist
"time spirit", "spirit of the time", "spirit of the age" etc.
Subtle shift but enough to bridge the gap?!
I had to look that one up toorobin wrote:Sure, but it doesn't really tell you anything does it? It's a bit of a tautology IMHO.
tutGregR wrote:isn't, "deliberate pun," tautology Tut?
The greeks pay for nothing, every member of the Parliment, every doctor basically everyone to be fair didn't pay any tax.Kelvin wrote:well maybe except for the Greeks.
Without going into it too much - Germany are still valuing houses and commercial real estate on 2007/2008 economic assumptions (and I know this for a fact as it's my line of work - we hold £bn's in German assets/debt). Their Red Book values are caveated to specifically state "normal market conditions" (we are not allowed to do this under UK law apparently). This in simple terms means all the banks look nice and rosy, keep lending as normal etc, when really they are just managing things a different way.Noops wrote:What to the Germans do / know??? that the rest of us don't.
or is this a silly Q
tut wrote:Look what the Romans did for us.
tut