Review: Why Taiwan Matters, Small Island, Global Powerhouse
<p><em>At the heart of Roman politics, from the beginning of the republic until virtually the end of the imperial era, stands the conviction of the sacredness of foundation, in the sense that once something has been founded it remains binding for all future generations,”</em> the great political theorist <strong>Hannah Arendt</strong> famously wrote in her piercing work <strong><em>Between Past and Future (1961)</em></strong><em>,</em> “ <em>and the most deeply Roman divinities were Janus, the god of beginning, with whom, as it were, we still begin our year, and Minerva, the goddess of remembrance.” </em>Arendt delivered her wise insights on the notion of history, using a metaphor of Janus — the high Roman god who has two sets of eyes, one looking into the past and the other into the future.</p>
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