The Case for a True Worldview is a Chronological study of Finland over 500 years. A period characterized by insolent foreign encounters that defiantly tried to swindle the people of Finland's territory and assets to a foreign power. The nomadic nature-loving Finns over the 2000 year history had a healthy fear and respect for life. They were born and raised in the Natural State and inspired by the natural environment. Their experiential and spiritual Worldview was the State of Nature, with the Spirit of the Natural Law in their family life to guide them morally.
Before the King of Sweden started taking an interest in Finland's territory around the 12th Century, Finnish-language speaking Finns, and the indigenous Sami peoples, lived according to seasonal cycles. They traveled north and south along the Bothnia Sea's shores, the central lakes, the Gulf of Finland, and the Lake Ladoga. Beginning of the 14 century, the Russian Moscow Kremlin became a cultural center. Over the next 400 years, Russia's domination expanded, growing bigger by invading indigenous people's territory in all directions. Including Ingria, Karelian Isthmus, Karelia Ladoga, and East Finland to the White Sea. Soviet-Russia was never content or satisfied by the expansion rate; they continued to encroach territory every which way when the opportunity to bounce was opportunistic.
The foreign military and political encroachments affected Finland's people spiritually, culturally, politically, economically, and emotionally, galvanizing, and riveting the home guard. The Nordic peoples had their own homegrown State of Nature Worldview. The indigenous people and the early pioneers lived in the region for many thousand years in real-time, with the first-hand experience of life's realities. They had beliefs and faith in the moral Spirit of Natural Law. They had seen and witnessed the primary evidence of the Creator of Life.
The Bolshevik anarchists flipped the Russian Monarchy Rule of Law on its head. The Russian Civil War broke out in 1917 and continued until 1923. There was a push back attempt to defend law and order principles and resist the Bolshevik's lawlessness and erroneous Socialist Worldview. 1922 the Bolsheviks rebellion established the Russian government State Atheism. It introduced a new Worldview for Russian people, calling it the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR).
The Finns 2000 years ago had a healthy fear and respect for life. They were born and raised in the Natural State and inspired by the natural environment. Their Worldview was the State of Nature, with the Spirit of the Natural Law in their family life to guide them morally. The Nordic land people of Finland were independent and self-sufficient, living in the State of Nature without a government overlord.