Ronn! Blankenship wrote:
> At 04:48 PM Monday 10/27/2008, Claes Wallin wrote:
>> [snip]
>>
>> Modern version (and possibly a digression):
>>
>> (1) If a country's government is forced out of the capital and loses
>> control of most of the country, is the area controlled by that
>> government still the original country, only with a drastically
>> diminished territory?
>>
>> (2) If the opposition of a country's government forces the government
>> out of the capital and announces a new constitution, is the entity ruled
>> by the new constitution simply the same country, only with a new
>> constitution?
>>
>> In 1949-1972 the governments of the world seem to have felt that
>> the answer to (1) was "yes" and the answer to (2) was "no". In 1972 the
>> position was reversed. So which is true?
> 
> 
> 
> Which specific country[ies] are you thinking of which changed in 1949 and 
> 1972?

The Chinese Nationalist Party of the Republic of China were driven to 
Taiwan by the Chinese Communist Party in 1949, and the People's Republic 
of China was founded in Beijing. The world still considered the ROC to 
be the "real" China and the PRC had no official diplomatic relations and 
was not recognized as a country.

In 1972 the countries of the world changed their mind and recognized the 
PRC as a country. The ROC lost its acknowledged countryhood and official 
diplomatic relations and the PRC received the "China" chair in the UN.


According to the Mereological Theory of Identity (MTI), that the 
scavenger's ship or the disassembled+assembled ship would be the 
original ship of Theseus, the PRC is the natural successor of the 
pre-Civil War China. The PRC government rules over most of the Chinese 
cultural/geographical area and the most of the Chinese population.

According to the Spatio-Temporal Continuity (STC) theory, that the ship 
Theseus is on and the parts of which were gradually replaced, the ROC is 
the natural successor of the pre-Civil War China. Indeed, the name "The 
Republic of China" was the name of the country founded in 1912, and 
which encompassed most of the Chinese cultural/geographical area and 
most of the Chinese population. When founded, it did not include Taiwan, 
but the "planks" of Taiwan were added at the end of World War II and 
Mainland China was removed in 1949.


To be sure, China is not the only interesting country in this aspect. 
See East and West Germany, Czechia and Slovakia, the former Yugoslavian 
countries, the North and the South in the American Civil War etc. But 
China is more interesting, because it is still ambiguous today -- both 
governments call themselves the "real" China.

    /c

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