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Pg. 33
The Egyptian’s strong sense of selfhood and personal worth
brought forth both the quest for immortality and an ethic of responsibility toward his fellow human beings, a responsibility
which translated quite specifically into fair-dealing and beneficence. Practiced in the privacy of family life, these virtues were called “goodness”; but on the larger stage of public life they were defined as “doing Maat”.-
Will look into this later,
But I always like tp point out how Eurasians, ESP paler & more melanin deficient variety, say “human”….
The Kmtyw were clearly racial nationalist understanding rather than a “universal” humanity crap
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Irrespective of the dynasty or kingdom, essential to raising up maat was giving bread to the hungry, clothes to the naked, housing the orphans, and caring for widows.
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