Did We Really Need Seven New Wonders? 324
freakxx writes "Seven new 'wonders of the world' have been announced today in a ceremony in Lisbon, Portugal. People throughout the world have voted actively to elect the new 7 out of 21 finalists.
The final lineup is: Chichen Itza, Mexico; Christ Redeemer, Brazil; The Great Wall, China; Machu Picchu, Peru; Petra, Jordan; The Roman Colosseum, Italy; and The Taj Mahal, India. The Pyramids of Giza was the only candidate that used to be among the original seven wonders. Did we really need seven new wonders of the world? Why was this decided via a website poll (pdf) and SMS messages?"
because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:5, Insightful)
this is just a very big SCAM (Score:5, Insightful)
These are pretty dumb (Score:5, Insightful)
1. The internet
2. The electric grid (this really can be seen from space, the great wall can't, really)
3. Voyager probes
4. Global Positioning System
5. The Human Genome Project
6. Nuclear power
7. Cochlear implants
representativity ? null. (Score:3, Insightful)
The previous list was enumerated by a Greek philosoph of the ancient time, it was not some marketing bullshit from Realizar Marketing.
99% of people who voted never saw any of them (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:These are pretty dumb (Score:5, Insightful)
eing 38 m tall and built using 20th century technology, it's nowhere near as big an accomplishment as the 33m high colossus of Rhodes which was finished in 282 BC.
Even the statue of liberty (built in the 19th century and 46 meters tall) is a bigger accomplishment than the Brazilian statue.
I won't even start to compare it to the other six Wonders because it will fade into nothingness.
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing is only 77 years old. Give it a few more centuries and we'll talk. If you want interesting statues, the Easter Island heads were on the list of finalists, but apparently the Easter Islanders must've had trouble getting online.
whatever (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:1, Insightful)
The orginal list has no value, and the recent one has less.
How many are really wonders? (Score:5, Insightful)
A wall of mud/straw bricks, a rather basic statue? The Colosseum wasn't counted by the Greeks and Romans, because they didn't see it as particularly spectacular. Machu Picchu and Petra I can understand. Those are genuinely wonders, in my books. The difficulty in construction was more tan just a matter of patience and time - there were genuinely major technological problems that required solving.
Then consider the marvels of their use. The Great Wall was a showpiece - it had negligible defensive value and did far more to engender paranoia within the culture. Not particularly marvelous - politicians create such illusions to feed paranoid tendencies all the time. Petra was the trading capital of the world, even into Roman times. It was to ancient commerce what the major ports and stock exchanges combined are to modern commerce. And it was built by a bunch of nomads who were tired of trail rations, not some major advanced civilization.
When you look at the Ancient Wonders, you look at things that maxed out (or exceeded) the capabilities of those building it. There are several that are so staggering that people are still unsure if they ever existed. The fact that the upper Pyramid blocks were poured like concrete hardly diminishes them - it shows how much they had to push their engineers that they had to invent a whole entire branch of material science to just finish the damn thing.
"Christ the Redeemer" needed what? Some reinforced concrete and a layer of soapstone. A big construction, sure, worthy of being considered a great feat of sculpting, but hardly in the same league as requiring entire new sciences and technologies.
I like the idea of seven new wonders, but they really should be wonders. They should highlight the true pinnacles of the human spirit. The list presented highlighted the pinnacle of what looks good on a postcard. Not exactly what I'd call wonders.
As for the question of whether they should have been decided by vote, I'd have split this up. I'd have given votes to people over the Internet/phone/whatever, but I'd have made some effort to limit it to one person one vote. I would THEN have given a panel of scientists/engineers an equal number of votes to represent the technological/scientific wonderfulness of each site. Finally, I'd have given another equal portion of votes to anthropologists, sociologists and cultural experts covering as many cultures and nations as possible.
The winning seven would then be decided by the merits of the awe in individuals, the awe in the achievement and the likely longevity and universality of that awe. Anything that can do well in all three categories is deserving of being called a Wonder. In practical terms, this means stepping through each list until you find seven that every group agrees is top. If you go more than a few percent without finding seven, you keep the winners so far, dump the rest of the list, and start with fresh achievements. And you keep going until you have achieved a universal agreement on the seven greatest Wonders.
Not all of them are that amazing (Score:1, Insightful)
The Taj Mahal is an impressive building but still just a big house. Christ the Redeemer is iconic but not astounding.
The Great Wall is certainly something that belongs in the list. The Eiffel tower is another one - there are now taller structures but Eiffel built this at almost twice the size of the previous tallest building. A fantastic achievement in the 19th century. So, what else is there? Can we justify the footprints on the moon as a wonder of "the world"? And now I'm out of ideas.
Re:These are pretty dumb (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:2, Insightful)
Not to mention it isn't, as far as I know, man-made.
Gimmick. (Score:5, Insightful)
There are thousands of fantastic places in the world. The UN's world heritage sites (660 cultural, 166 natural) are but a start at cataloguing and an attempt to protect them.
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:How many are really wonders? (Score:5, Insightful)
The original wonders, actually, were compiled as a list of "must see" sites. Not necessarily because it was hard to build them. The statue of Zeus, for example, was a 12mt tall statue that was not by any means difficult to build. By the time it was built, there were many more taller statues. But it was something to see, as awe-inspiring was the Father of the Gods for the ancient greeks.
I'd call the original seven wonders exactly the same "tourist scam" as other slashdotters are pulling their hairs in shock.
So, you're correct when you say "it should still produce real shock and awe hundreds or thousands of years later [...] and should inspire wonder in the majority of people, without regard to culture or nationality". That's exactly what the present list (tries and) does.
The Cristo Redentor? Yes, a basic 38mt concrete statue. But built upon an almost vertical, 700m tall granite dome, reachable only with a twisting trail, or a tiny railroad, that overlooks a 10 million inhabitants city. Building the statue was trivial, even in 1930. Building the statue THERE was an engineering nightmare. Remember: there were NO helicopters in 1930. But the value of that piece of concrete is not the difficulty to build it. Is the image of a big guy "hugging" every citizen in the city from his tall pedestal. The statue can be seen from almost any part of the huge city, and the sense of "he's protecting me" is the awe you were referring to. Not just the trivial block of soapstone.
The Colosseum? Well, a stadium, give or take. Big as you want, but still just a fancy arena. The only engineering feat you can find there is the mechanic devices (mostly pulleys and leverages) that allowed access to the battlefield from the dungeon below. The picture changes a lot if you consider that - during the "technical life" of the Colosseum - an estimated 400'000 people died there. Check which entire metropolitanean area contain 400'000 people in US: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_State
Oh, and Antipater wrote about such list in 140BC. The colosseum was built in 80AC. Unless Antipater was able to see 220 years in the future, I don't understand how he could have added it to the list.
Re:modern wonders (Score:3, Insightful)
Building the Great Pyramid using ancient technology is impressive - as it either causes modern engineers to wonder how it was built, or causes considers forign reproductions to be treated as "cheap plastic imitations". However, building an extra-large bridge or structure nowadays isn't as impressive. Any country con build what's equivalant to the CN Tower, and thus such towers aren't considered to be wonders.
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:3, Insightful)
I have to laugh... (Score:4, Insightful)
The fact that you dismiss it without having actually seen it (the fact that you describe a mausoleum built by an Emperor to honour his dead wife as a house says it all) blows my mind. It's the single most breathtaking building I've yet to see, and I've seen many (but not all) of the others that made the shortlist, too.
One thing I would say about the voting for this new list is that it was let down by being turned into a national and even a religious pride pissing contest. In some countries people were strongly encouranged to vote for the entrants that were in their borders and there were similar ballot-stuffing manouvres by religous groups for those icons that were significant to their faiths.
Indeed, there had been some concern that some of the shortlist were only chosen for that reason. To be honest, as iconic as it is as part of the Rio de Janeiro skyline, Christ the Redeemer doesn't even strike me as being one of the most worthy Christian monuments to pick from. Gaudi's La Sagrada Familia, unfinished though it might be, is far more impressive.
There are lots of criticisms that you can make about this list. That the Taj Mahal is on it really doesn't strike me as being anything close to being one of them.
Re:Why lament it? (Score:5, Insightful)
Because nobody can appreciate the idea of building, say, the Hanging Gardens of Babylon or the Lighthouse at Alexandria using only ancient technology and materials without actually seeing them?
"Just a compilation from the Greco-Roman point of view."
The list itself was a Greek idea. Deal with it.
"This time this could have more international flavor."
If by "international" you mean "has access to SMS."
"This is also good exposure not just to the 7 winners, but to all the nominees."
Because it's possible to have heard of this cheesy marketing stunt but not to have heard of any of the ancient structures and modern tourist traps listed?
"Unless you think us Americans really ought to go to stay ignorant and go to Disneyland every year"
Oh, I'm sure if Disneyland needed any more marketing and appeared in the list offered, it would have made the finalists.
"(I give no money to that company)."
"I've never owned a Mickey Mouse watch" isn't enough to be able to safely claim that you've never patronized any business or subsidiary of the Disney corporation in any way.
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:because it's dumb. (Score:3, Insightful)
You have 21 candidates ? Ok, only people who has ever visited (no photos) all of them should be allowed to pool.
As things stand, people voted on the one on their own country (mostly). I know that is what happened in Brazil (being a brazilian myself).
Re:because it's dumb. (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyway, 7 wonders may have been appropriate back when there were only 7 wonders. Nowadays, any sort of classification should A) be a factor of 10 (why 7?) and B) be categorized by date, region, and type -- statue/building/etc.
Re:because it's a publicilty stunt (Score:1, Insightful)
The real list should be:
1) Empire State Building.
The archetypical skyscraper that held the title of world's tallest building for decades.
2) Tranquility Base
An almost impossible feat of enginering and science just to get a footprint on the moon.
3) Panama Canal
Connect two oceans through inhospitable jungle and friable soil that turns to slush every rain season unleashing mudslides that sweep away men and equipment.
4) Dubai's Palm Islands
Man made structures that can only be appreciated as a whole from space, increasing the length of Dubai's coast line from 80km to 1000km.
5) Trans-Antarctic Highway
A road built across the ice going to the south pole, one of the most extreme areas on Earth.
6) The Louvre
The most visited museum on the planet, filled with the most famous pieces of art on the planet.
7) North Sea Protection Works, Netherlands
Holds back the ocean, and protects a whole country.