and? It's the attempt to stop people hearing or reading that is the point. That's why I used the word listening earlier. It was ad_o who started talking about books.so again I ask, relevance?
If you look at the history of ideas, the very attempts to stop them have generally led to their greater dissemination. If Spinoza hadn't been 'silenced', would his ideas have gained the credibility and underground spread that they did?
I'm not condoning the repression that included him; just pointing out that history often proves that repression backfires on itself.
Let me give you a modern example. In the 1960s, there were probably no more than 100 or 200 Nepalese Christians living in Nepal and pretty well all lived in Kathmandu, Tansen and Pokhara. By the end of the 70s, following a period of 12-15 years of imprisonment of Christians in those places, often followed by internal exile into the far reaches of the country, the number of places that 'hosted' Christian communities had grown exponentially and the number of believers had grown to a couple of hundred thousand. They are now between 1.4% (Government figures) and 3% (church figures) of the population - which is about about 26.5 million (2011 census) - or up to half a million people.