Views are often inculcated through upbringing and education. Once they've become part of the system, of the psychological makeup, it may be difficult for somebody to consciously isolate, identify, and analyze them in any meaningful way. And what if subconscious memories from previous lives, or genetic factors, play a role? — Apollodorus
what if instead of connecting such complex ways of thinking with reductive causes like lesions in the brain, or reinforcement contingencies, we saw them as akin to scientific theories? That is, if we saw every social-political-ethics stance as the manifestation of an underlying ‘scientific’ theory that was constructed by the person on the basis of the evidence as they interpreted it? Would you then agree that coercion, condemnation, peer pressure and violence would not be particularly effective in changing their theoretical view? — Joshs
Group rules and ostracization only work when those being ostracized have enough overlap of their thinking with the dominant group. It has the opposite effect when the two parties have profoundly different worldviews. — Joshs
Conservatives and liberals interact online all the time in the U.S. on comment sections and blogs, but studies have show that rather than causing them to come closer to the other’s point of view, it simply reinforces their differences. — Joshs
All you will end up with, at best, is a clever soul who learns how to ape the superficial aspects of your ways of acting in order to keep out of trouble. — Joshs
in the meantime that person will strategize how to gain power in order to overthrow what they never bought into to begin with. — Joshs
Even pigeons have been known to outfox reinforcement contingencies. — Joshs
We never simply , blindly internalize ideas
from the culture. We are not vacuum cleaners , we are interpreters. We make use of the informational resources of our culture , and that limits us , but we can only select from those resources what is consonant with our own system of understanding — Joshs
How much is it about culture, how much about past events? Things what we look as "our culture" are quite positive things. So why political differences can lead to violence in some places where in others the issues are handled cordially. History plays a crucial part.Norms are inculcated , but every one of us interprets those norms in slightly different ways in relation to our own outlook. We never simply , blindly internalize ideas from the culture. We are not vacuum cleaners , we are interpreters. We make use of the informational resources of our culture , and that limits us , but we can only select from those resources what is consonant with our own system of understanding, even when it seems at a distance like an entire community is in lockstep with each other. — Joshs
The sight of Spanish national police beating voters, and politicians being jailed, revived disturbing memories, for some, of the Franco dictatorship.
Something that people should be reminded when their views of Marxism-Leninism become too rosy, I should add. — ssu
It's good to be in the small coalition of power in an autocracy but the people always do better in a democracy, I understand. — praxis
I really doubt that. Especially as this forum isn't so popular, actually. Only few people read this.But you better be careful how you talk about Marxism-Leninism these days or else you'll be heading for that reeducation camp in Xinjiang before you even know it. — Apollodorus
And were people fundamentally unhappy before the introduction of political parties? — Apollodorus
The Provisional IRA, even if with quite different political ideologies from the "old" Irish Republican Army, still has roots in the IRA of the Irish war of Independence, the organization that then basically morphed into the current Óglaigh na hÉireann, the Irish Defence Forces, even if the "Provos" had little to do with the Irish Defence Forces. — ssu
I imagine that many are happy that the party system can be so divisive because they benefit from its divisiveness. — praxis
I really doubt that. — ssu
Something that people should be reminded when their views of Marxism-Leninism become too rosy, I should add. — ssu
Well, the Chinese aren't alone in that field...Well, the cyber activities of the Chinese Communist Party division called "United Front Work Department" are well known. Ask the CIA and MI6. But I don't need to tell you. — Apollodorus
If this was a top discussion board I guess then it would be different, but PF is backwater. — ssu
Reminded of what specifically? That some prefer Nazism to Communism based on that childish nugget? Or that Communism kills people? Surely this is the most obnoxious cliché people reach for when discussing this subject and is rarely not reached for by some 'incisive' thinker.... — Tom Storm
Why is it so hard to admit that communism isn't any better? Why can't we just reject all forms of totalitarianism? Where exactly is the problem? And what is the explanation, psychological or whatever? — Apollodorus
Huh? Sounds like I missed an exciting debate on here about totalitarianism. — Tom Storm
It's just a question. — Apollodorus
My question was "And what makes us so defensive when discussing opposite views?" — Apollodorus
You are VERY preoccupied by totalitarianism. Why is that? — Tom Storm
By us I assume you include yourself. Start with that. What makes you so defensive? — Fooloso4
You sound pretty defensive yourself, that's why you joined the discussion isn't it? — Apollodorus
You may take this as a personal attack but it is not. — Fooloso4
Sure, there are some who would call themselves Marxists, but they aren't the majority. — ssu
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