Book 14. (1 results) Fighting Slave of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
420
Cruelty on Gor, though it exists, is usually purposeful, as in attempting to bring, through discipline and privation, a young man to manhood, or in teaching a female that she is a slave.
Cruelty on Gor, though it exists, is usually purposeful, as in attempting to bring, through discipline and privation, a young man to manhood, or in teaching a female that she is a slave.
- (Fighting Slave of Gor, Chapter 11, Sentence #420)
Book 14. (7 results) Fighting Slave of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
11
417
Also, it might be noted that most Gorean warfare is carried out largely by relatively small groups of professional soldiers, seldom more than a few thousand in the field at a given time, trained men, who have their own caste.
11
418
Total warfare, with its arming of millions of men, and its broadcast slaughter of hundreds of populations, is Gorean neither in concept nor in practice.
11
419
Goreans, often castigated for their cruelty, would find such monstrosities unthinkable.
11
420
Cruelty on Gor, though it exists, is usually purposeful, as in attempting to bring, through discipline and privation, a young man to manhood, or in teaching a female that she is a slave.
11
421
I think the best explanation for the Gorean political arrangements and attitudes is to be found in the institution of the Home Stone.
11
422
It is the Home Stone which, for the Gorean, marks the center.
11
423
I think it is because of their Home Stones that the Gorean tends to think of territory as something from the inside out, so to speak, rather than from the outside in.
Also, it might be noted that most Gorean warfare is carried out largely by relatively small groups of professional soldiers, seldom more than a few thousand in the field at a given time, trained men, who have their own caste.
Total warfare, with its arming of millions of men, and its broadcast slaughter of hundreds of populations, is Gorean neither in concept nor in practice.
Goreans, often castigated for their cruelty, would find such monstrosities unthinkable.
Cruelty on Gor, though it exists, is usually purposeful, as in attempting to bring, through discipline and privation, a young man to manhood, or in teaching a female that she is a slave.
I think the best explanation for the Gorean political arrangements and attitudes is to be found in the institution of the Home Stone.
It is the Home Stone which, for the Gorean, marks the center.
I think it is because of their Home Stones that the Gorean tends to think of territory as something from the inside out, so to speak, rather than from the outside in.
- (Fighting Slave of Gor, Chapter 11)