There is always the perfect religion, the perfect government, the perfect and accomplished manners in all things."
"All our efforts cannot even succeed in reproducing the nest of the tiniest little bird, its contexture, its beauty and convenience; or even the web of the puny spider. All things, says Plato, are produced by nature, by fortune, or by art; the greatest and most beautiful by one or the other of the first two, the least and most imperfect by the last."
Montaigne is saying throughout the essay that even though we may not live like certain groups of people, that we should not be quick to judge them or criticize them in comparison to our way of life. Who is to say that our way of life is better?
"So we may well call these people barbarians, in respect to the rules of reason, but not in respect to ourselves, who surpasses them in every kind of barbarity."
"Each man calls barbarism whatever is not his own practice." This insight is a continuation on the attack of ethnocentrism. However, it goes beyond just ethnocentrism, this could pertain to a number of things in