Commenter Archive

Comments by wj*

On “Feel the Burnham!

The biggest single positive step would be to rejoin the EU. We’ve got to the point where that’s not unimaginable.

I can see calling it imaginable. But possible any time soon? It seems like that would require some significant portion of the population to accept that they were conned by the pro-Brexit campaign into thinking that the economy would benefit, rather than suffer. (They were told there would be negative consequences, but chose not to believe it.). Oops.

Getting people to accept that they made a mistake, is really difficult. Nobody likes to admit, even to themselves, that they were played for fools. I'd guess that it will take a bunch of Brexit believers dying off, and being replaced by younger voters who have no personal history in voting for it I'd live, for Britain's sake, to be wrong about that. But....

On “Monkey business

I’m not really sure how marriage is something you want to take as something that, I don’t know, argues against cultural relativism? 

I'm having a really bad day thread for explaining myself. :-(

I would say that marriage is an example of cultural relativism. While, at least in my view, every culture has an institution of marriage, the forms it takes, the ceremonies involved (if any), etc. vary widely. Cultural relativism says that those forms are equally valid.

Suppose your culture, like American culture, includes civil marriage. Another culture requires a religious ceremony for a marriage. Does the second culture get to say that anyone with a civil marriage in the first culture is immoral because they are "living in sin"? After all, they didn't get the reqiured-by-the-second-culture religious stamp of approval. Cultural relativism says no.

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We can argue whether these sorts of differences are enough to undermine a term of marriage, but regardless, I’d avoid making claims about the universality of marriage until you specifically define what you mean.

OK, I can take a shot at that.

Marriage: a term signifying that two (or more**) individuals have taken a legal and/or ceremonial step to form a new, publicly acknnowledged, social unit that includes both of them. That is, they did not just start cohabitating. They are not just "friends with benefits". There was some public action to establish the new unit. And, generally, some kind of legal and/or ceremonial action is required to later dissolve the joint unit -- stipulating that dissolution is, in some cultures, not an option.

What kind of legal action or ceremony is used varies widely, of course. But there is some kind of public acknowledgement that a new social unit now exists.

Hope that helps.

** Until very recently, either one man and one or more women, or one woman and one or more men. With everyone assumed, at least for social purposes, to be having sex primarily if not exclusively with those of the opposite sex.

"

You have to either argue that there are no morals outside of culture or you have to argue that morals within a culture can’t be questioned from outside. Seems both are pretty problematic.

Or you can consider that the purpose behind cultural relativism is to provide a way for the ethnographer to describe a foreign (to him) culture and describe how it works. From the viewpoint of the members of that culture, without injecting into the description a lot of discussion about the way a member of his own culture would react if living in that culture (rather than just visiting).

Ideally, ethnographers from the US or China or Japan or India, describing the culture of a native group in the Amazon, would produce very similar descriptions. In reality, it's impossible to successfully set aside all of your cultural baggage, no matter how hard you try. If nothing else, your attention tends to be drawn to the parts of the culture which are most different from your own. But it is possible, and useful, to reduce the impact of the observer's culture on the description you produce.

"

This is kind of where the wheels come off. When you mean marriage, I assume you mean partnering up. 

Actually, no. That's exactly what I don't mean. Because, as you say, partnering up has been going on forever.

What I mean is a socially recognized partnering, one which confers various rights and obligations which the culture recognizes and will enforce. Sometimes there are legal processes involved. But even if a particular culture doesn't do much with legal formalities, it will still have norms about marriage and socially enforce them.

If it will help (and the terms are still in use), consider the difference, in American culture, between "getting married" and "shacking up." The obvious difference being that, if you're married, you can't just walk away and it's over. Not only are there legal consequences, those around you will expect you to provide for the other party appropriately. Whereas, if you're shacked up, you can pack and move out, and nobody will expect you to do anything else.

"

I think part of wj’s framing comes from it being an undergraduate major.

Doubtless where I picked it up initially. On the other hand, that particular framing didn't change when I was in grad school. It seemed to be a solid feature of the subculture which was Anthropology at UC Berkeley in the late 60s (undergraduate) and early 70s (grad school).

"

Are you saying that there are no objective morals? And no one has any grounds to criticize cultures that fall short of those morals?

I'm saying that morals arise out of, and are part of, particular cultures. Certainly you can criticize other cultures for falling short of your morals. But can you demonstrate that your morals on a particular point are superior to theirs? A demonstration which would convince someone from a culture which doesn't happen to have a position on the issue, and is therefore arguably objective.

There are some moral precepts which are, if not quite universal, are very widespread. You can probably make a decent argument that the anomalies have missed the boat somehow. But it's also possible that they got it right, and the rest of us will eventually get it right, too.

Consider this: marriage, in some form or another, seems to be pretty universal. But gay marriage did not (to my knowledge) occur anywhere, was not even raised as a serious possibility, until the last few decades. There might be recognized relationships, but they were not (and nobody in their culture would have characterized them as being) marriage. Was that universal rejection of the idea a universal moral precept? Are those places which still reject it being immoral for doing what everybody in the world did a century ago?

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Cultural relativism is an analytical framework, but it shouldn’t become a moral compass.

The point is, everybody thinks that their morals are, and should be, universal and applied to all of humanity. But nobody has found anything resembling an objective way to prove that. (Just like nobody has found an objective way to show which religion is right.) Hence "relativism."

The people who you think are behaving immorally, presuming they are from another culture, have their own ideas about what is moral behavior. And probably wish to apply that moral compass to correcting your behavior.

All that cultural relativism says is that immoral behavior should be identified as doing something that your own culture considers immoral. Which may be part of pushing your culture to change. But that doesn't change how it will be viewed initially by other members of your culture.

To return to the earlier question, cultural relativism would look at MAGAs and say: this is how those who hold their culture's old morals inevitably react when the changes to the culture are past the tipping point. It's a hysterical attempt to turn back a clock. In most cases, even if it is briefly successful, it will be seen in retrospect as a last gasp.

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Boas, who argued for cultural relativism, with no culture being superior to another. (yay!) Though I wonder how they would deal with MAGA culture…

My recollection (It's been half a century since I was a Cultural Anthropology major) is that it distinguishes cultures and sub-cultures. MAGA would be a subculture of the general American culture. That is, something which shares the vast majority of features with the general culture, while having multiple features which are peculiar to itself. It can take exposure to foreign cultures to realize just how much the subculture share with the general culture. But be assured, you have an enormous number of points of cultural agreement with MAGAs.

Cultural relativism is about understanding a culture (or subculture) in its own terms. Look at how its cultural norms work for the benefit of its members -- how they impact others from outside the culture is irrelevant.

Look at it this way. You, in your culture, may find certain features of another culture peculiar or even abhorrent. But your opinion is irrelevant because you are not part of the culture. In short, cultural relativism rejects the concept of universality between cultures. Your views on, for example, universal human rights are just that: your views. Another culture may have other, equally valid, views of what constitute human rights which ought to be universal.

This is not to say that you shouldn't try to change features of your culture that you dislike.** Cultures change constantly. (There's an entire specialty withing Cultural Anthropology which focuses of how that change happens.) Anyone who demands that their culture never change might as well argue that the sun circles the earth or that gravity doesn't apply to people and inanimate objects equally. That just ain't the way the universe works.

Sometimes those changes are apparently adjustments to external forces. If you contact a different culture, a lot of people in your culture may find something new and attractive there and embrace it -- see the impact of Hollywood, or of K-pop, outside their culture of origin. Or economic forces force an adjustment -- think the spread of the railroads or cell phones. Nobody said: let's change our culture. But it happened anyway.

Other changes are the result of conscious effort by some group. Think of women's sufferage or gay marriage. This tends to generate more pushback, partly because pushback can work more successfully. But what is more common is change in fits and starts. Or, if you prefer, two steps forward, one step back. Which is very irritating for advocates of the change, who typically have trouble taking a long view of just how much change they have made successfully.

** You can also try to change features of other cultures that you dislike. Just don't try to convince a believer in cultural relativism that you are morally correct in any univerally vaild sense.

On “Open Thread

What it comes down to is this: the ways that people learn best differ.

Some people absorb information best by reading. (We tend to do well academically as a result.) Other people learn best by listening. Could be identical words to reading something themselves; the channel still makes a significant difference.

For learning to do something physical, the same applies. You still have that dichotomy. But you now also have people who learn best by seeing someone else go thru the motions. And other people who do best by going thru the motions themselves, even if the teacher has hold of their hands, arms, etc. and is guiding those motions.

It is probably unfortunate that the people who design our school curriculums, and who create directions for stuff (whether for filling out government forms or for running stuff you bought for your own use) are almost universally from the "learn by reading" segment of the population. (And yes, that does include the authors of nearly incomprehensible directions for software.) They frequently aren't even aware of the phenomena. And, as a result, exclaim "RTFM!" regularly as a result. (Guilty as charged.)

On “Monkey business

...because people think that the Bible is somehow historical fact (or ignore it because they don’t want to get in fights) has them fail to see how people and situations are archetypes 

What bugs me particularly is how often obvious figures of speech are translated and taken literally. A couple of examples:

  • "Jonah was in a whale." But if you say of someone you know: "Jonah is in a pickle," do you really expect your listener to think a giant cucumber is involved?
  • "Jesus was walking on the water." And if you say, "I have a house on the lake," does anyone assume a houseboat? Sure, it could be. But the most likely meaning is lakefront property, with the house being high and dry, albeit with a view.

And that ignores cases of simple mis-translations, due to the different ways different languages parse the world. Hebrew, like English, distinguishes conceptually between a young woman and a virgin; Latin does not. So a prophecy that "A young woman shall conceive," doesn't actually require a virgin birth.

It seems like the literalists are aware of the potential problem. Hence their insistence that the translations were all divinely inspired. Avoids numerous awkward facts.

"

Wj’s observation that Monkey D Luffy is an homage to Dragonball is spot on.

I'd love to take credit. But I didn't, at least not consciously.

On “Open Thread

the level of corruption in the current US and MAGA specifically continues to astound, along with the largely lackadaisical reaction of the public 

I wonder how much of that lack of reaction stems from those same people having, for years, told their followers that Washington and everyone there was massively corrupt. So when they turn out to be massively corrupt, their followers (and even the general public) yawn and think "Old news".

Pure Speculation on my part, of course. But it makes more sense than the other, frankly ludicrous, explanations I've seen.

On “Monkey business

Most of my experience with manga stems from my wife's infatuation with One Piece. Primarily the animated TV series, although we've also seen the live action adaption. Hero's name: Monkey D. Luffy. [emphasis added]

Of interest is that characters can gain (a) super power by eating a Devil Fruit. But they don't seem to have any control over, or way to predict, just what super power it will be. Those super powers all seem to take some work to master, and all seem to have some weakness which can be exploited by enemies. Other characters have extreme skills of one kind or another.

"

it does occur to me that Abrahamic religions could really use a trickster figure, and the absence of one is probably one reason the world is currently such a dumpster fire.

I was hoping you would elaborate on this a bit. But I realize it's a non-politics post. Maybe another time. 

On “Open Thread

I sometimes wonder if it would work better to go with bullet points. The sort of thing you do for slide presentations. Especially for senior managers.

It might make the people who need that level of direction feel like they are being talked down to**. And they'd not be wrong. But when you've demonstrated that it's what it takes....

** Personally, while I can navigate the regular instructions, I appreciate having what is basically a check list. But then, I don't suffer the agonies of a massive insecurity complex

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I'm definitely not an algae expert. But from what I've read, the critical element in this algae bloom is phosphate, which their metabolism needs. Unfortunately, the "new and improved" Reflecting Pool is designed to use that to deal with another flaw in the new water circulation system.

The price of giving incompetents no bid contracts.

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...one of the companies corruptly hired by Trump to work on the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool is called ‘Greenwater Services’.

I suppose they should get some credit for truth in advertising. Even though it was doubtless inadvertent.

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“for every tear of an Israeli mother, a thousand Lebanese mothers must weep”

The saddest thing is that not that he’s a psychopath but that a fair chare of people voted him into power and agree with him.

Indeed. One is remined of a promjnent member of the American government saying that an entire civilivation (i.e. Iran) would be destroyed.

On “A future so bright

Thanks, lj. I think now I've got a better handle on what you meant. Sorry I missed it originally.

"

I’ve seen a lot of dudes afraid of playing the part of the victim/loser in sparring drills because that “trains failure into your mindset.”

I've seen something similar, but never understood it. My aim, when training others, was always to dial it down to where, if the kid did his very best, he'd win about 40% of the fights. Because the idea was both to teach technique and to teach them that they could win. Against anybody. Worked, too.

Never noticed that it had any kind of impact on my tournament success rate.

But then, I never suffered from the kind of overwhelming insecurity that people like Trump and Hegseth seem to. (Granted, they have good reason to feel inferior. I suppose that can eat at you.)

"

So, are you seeing Japan becoming more negative on homosexuality, for example? Or negative changes in other aspects of culture?

On “Open Thread

6-10% of people don’t/won’t/can’t follow all of the instructions.

Let us all chant in chorus: "RTFM!" All together now: "RTFM!"

I know in California, and I'm sure in Colorado as well, an enormous effort goes in to writing those instructions to make them clear. But, as you say, some people just don't seem to absorb it. Makes you wonder how they manage to function in the rest of their luves.

On “A future so bright

lj, could you perhaps elaborate on which gender roles you see as having been imported from the West? And how they compare/contrast with what was there before.

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Anyone arguing that Western misogyny was imported to East Asia ought to be expected to, at minimum, show historic evidence that things were otherwise back in the day.

I don't know about Korea. But traditional Chinese culture is pretty strongly prejudiced againsy women. That's why the One Child Policy so drastically skewed the sex ratio for that generation: lots of female infanticide because having a son was considered so critical. Given how strongly China influenced Korea and Japan, it wouldn't be amazing if some of that spilled over (even assuming it wasn't there already).

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