T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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652.1 | | RANCHO::HOLT | Robert Holt UCS4,415-691-4750 | Wed Jan 11 1989 19:57 | 18 |
|
I don't buy the premise that brutish men were ever the norm or
were ever more likely to be successful in surviving.
Nor do I buy the idea that men need to be remade in order
to fit into a more well ordered world.
Man dominated the earth because of cleverness, and because
there was an intellect behing the muscle power.
Bach and Handel were both gentle, loving, family men capable of
great tenderness. Brutish men never contributed much to the
store of knowledge nor to security; that was almost always the
province of men of reason, insight, and sensitivity. There are
some exceptions, such as Peter I or Ivan IV of Russia, but even
their success pales besides that of Fredrick the Great of Prussia,
a noted flautist and cultivator of the luminaries of the Age of
Reason, or of the men of the Continnental Congress.
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652.2 | | TOOK::HEFFERNAN | Dawn after dawn - the sun! | Wed Jan 11 1989 20:06 | 13 |
| RE: .-1
> Man dominated the earth because of cleverness, and because
> there was an intellect behing the muscle power.
Do you see this "domination" as a problem as I do? Seems like all
this domination is getting us into trouble as a species and a
different, more gentle, and balanced approach may be called for.
john
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652.3 | Nice doesn't mean Weak... | MCIS2::AKINS | We'll have to remove it then | Wed Jan 11 1989 20:20 | 10 |
| Re: .0
Just because someone is "too" nice, doesn't mean that they are whimps.
I admit I'm in both the "too" nice and the "too" thin notes but
I know that I'm strong. I have wrestled guys that weigh 100 lbs.
more than me an I have won. I also feel that it takes not physical
strength but mental strength to protect, and provide. I just don't
agree with the premise in which this note is based.
Bill
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652.5 | why must it be so? | TOOK::HEFFERNAN | Dawn after dawn - the sun! | Thu Jan 12 1989 08:58 | 13 |
| RE: .4
> There is no way to avoid domination.
>
> It's been with the human race since the beginning and will be
> with us until the end.
I have to disagree with you Mike. The Native Americans are one
example that come to mind. They lived in a balance with Mother Earth,
acting as her caretakers and not as dominators.
john
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652.8 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Jan 12 1989 12:02 | 8 |
| Re: .5
>They lived in a balance with Mother Earth, acting as her caretakers
>and not as dominators.
Even "caretaker" implies an element of control, of being in charge
and having some degree of authority or power over that which is
being cared for.
|
652.9 | Yep | YODA::BARANSKI | Peace is breaking out all over! | Thu Jan 12 1989 12:07 | 9 |
| RE: 0. I agree.
RE: .1 Not all men were "brutal", but forcefullness in general was a survival
trait. Perhaps it still is in some ways, but certainly less then in the past.
The problem is that a certain amount of forcefullness is still necessary as
there are still 'unenlightened' people out there.
Jim.
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652.10 | | AKOV13::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Thu Jan 12 1989 12:16 | 8 |
| And not all Indians were non-violent. Was it the Cherokees that
used to raid other Indian tribes, much like we have in modern society
with regional wars? The human species is instilled with a certain
amount of violent tendencies. The key is to be able to control
and channel those tendencies for the good of the society as a whole.
Ed..
|
652.11 | Whatever | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | just a revolutionary with a pseudonym | Thu Jan 12 1989 16:03 | 70 |
|
(This is a mega-ramble, written in the male context. No offense or
insensitivity toward Women readers is meant.)
Brawny, as a necessity for survival, has long ago been replaced
by cunning I believe. Man's survival as a species depended on the
fact that he was simply smarter than any other animal. He could easily
bring down beasts 10 times larger than himself by using his gifts of
reason and intelligence - in combination with physical strength.
Soon man became obsessed with this gift, in trying to find a
cause/effect reason for *everything*. Some were quite obvious, others
still a mystery. Through his creative desire, man extrapolated what
he knew for sure into what he thought was reasonable, in an effort
to solve these mysteries. Where reality did not obviously show "why"
something happened, an explanation was *generated* in an effort to
calm the ever_rationalizing mind. That which makes man "different"
went into a runaway state; man lost control of his reasoning.
Man's big mistake was this obsession with reason. This may have
been, whenever it occurred, the very first closing of the human mind.
The possibility that there actually is no reason is unacceptable
to a mind obsessed with reasoning all things out. Yet, there are
plenty of things that happen that defy reason all together. Man
creates a reason in those cases, to satisfy what he cannot understand.
Being a social creature, man organized himself into a structure
called a family or band. This structure, as a whole, faired much
better than did a single man alone. In order to make it work, a
set of conditions which define the structure were needed, specifically
the heirarchy of the structure. Some of these conditions were based
on hard truth, others, on conjectures and whatever the "currently
accepted explanations" were.
So, man creates a structure within which to live, with "rules"
or defining conditions made up of both actual truths and what
man "thinks is right". Supplanting what man thinks is right became
difficult at best, even when it's dead wrong. Leonardo DaVinci is
quoted to say "...experiments never err, it is only the interpretation
of them which errs, when a man stubbornly insists on a different result
from what he has seen with his own eyes" (50 years before Copernicus
he wrote; "The sun does not move" *That* realization was a biggie!)
Within any structure defined by agreed-on rules and conditions,
there will be judgements made. Since man is a obsessively reasoning
creature, the tendency toward making judgements is also obsessive.
Since everything must have a cause/effect reason, given a reason
(whether true or not) man will try to effect a cause. This is why
"innocent until proven guilty" is so important, because until recently,
you'd gladly be seen as the cause of an effect, quite possibly one
you really couldnt have anything to do with - like this years weather.
This explains why we are judged sometimes against a currently
held belief that is simply not true, whether we deserve to be or not.
With the benefits of social structure also comes it's liabilities;
one must be accepted to have the other.
As our culture evolves, man is learning to release himself from
the shackles of past experiences. i;e; to let go. He's learning
that shame-based reasoning is a big waste of energy at best and is
losing this cause for making judgements. He's learning that everything
cannot always be completely explained; it's been proven that there can
be problems with no solution even for the greatest rule-based science
of them all, Mathematics. He's learning to calm the ramblings of
his ever rational mind and lose interest in interpretating the actions
of others. He's glad to trade all the noise, pain and sickness that
his rationaly judgemental mind has created over the years for a more
contented, blissful feeling of connectedness with others and nature.
Joe Jas
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652.12 | The Good of Society according to ME! | LITE::REINBOLD | | Fri Jan 13 1989 15:21 | 8 |
| re .10 - "...for the good of society as a whole."
By whose definition? Mine?
re. the Native Americans - I thought they lived more in harmony
with Nature, as a part of it, not quite as caretakers.
Paula
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652.14 | | CURIE::THACKERAY | Ray Thackeray MR03 DTN 297-5622 | Wed Jan 18 1989 12:18 | 36 |
| I think everyone has missed the central reasoning behind the original
note.
One has only to look at television, advertising, films, newspapers,
etc. to realise that the culture is heavily oriented to the
"muscle-man" and "muscle-woman" syndrome. I've lived all over the
world, but I can guarantee you that nowhere else is there such a
high proportion of people "working-out" and engulfing anabolic steroids
in an effort to comply with the culturally stimulated stereotype.
This must all have an effect on people's mate selection preferences;
one notes very readily that Europeans are generally of a slighter
build and have a different set of criteria.
One example: I recently had a conversation with a girl who has been
travelling the world for the last six months. She is Swiss (from
Zurich) and made the following comments:
"I've spent the last 3 months in the USA and have been to every
State. I hate the way people interact. People value others for
the way they look, not the way they are.
"People appear to continually talk about how much they own,
how much money they have, how much better they are than
anyone else because of their posessions.
"I haven't met a single person here who was interested in
intellectual discussion of current affairs, or any other
topic other than themselves or their posessions or what's
on television or the movies"
Looking in from other cultures, it's really quite clear that American
origins definitely affected the current societal mores; in fact,
it's quite blatent.
Ray
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652.15 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu Jan 19 1989 13:40 | 15 |
| Re: .14
>Looking in from other cultures, it's really quite clear that American
>origins definitely affected the current societal mores
Not so clear from the example of the woman from Zurich. Her statements
don't express a comparison. Americans might be like that, but she
hasn't said (or you haven't mentioned her saying) that Europeans
*aren't* like that. Maybe she sees the same thing in Europe and
she likes it just as little there.
Also, the validity of generalizing from her comments depends not
on how long she spent here or how many states she visited, but how
many people she met and talked to, which isn't mentioned. Also,
how diverse were the people she met?
|
652.16 | | CURIE::THACKERAY | Ray Thackeray MR03 DTN 297-5622 | Thu Jan 19 1989 15:45 | 11 |
| The comparison is implicit in her statement. Otherwise she woundn't
have said it.
Also, I agree it is a gross generalization (I said so) but it's
a RELATIVE generalization and, incidentally, aligns with my own
observations (I'm British and lived in North America for nearly
5 years).
Regards,
Ray
|
652.17 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Mon Jan 23 1989 16:32 | 11 |
| Re: .16
>The comparison is implicit in her statement. Otherwise she woundn't
>have said it.
Oh, I can think of other reasons, but there's no point in a debate
since she's the only one who knows for sure.
>incidentally, aligns with my own observations
But not with mine, neither with my friends or coworkers.
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652.18 | Reply from base note author | QUARK::HR_MODERATOR | | Tue Jan 24 1989 21:42 | 50 |
| The following reply is from the anonymous author of the base note.
RE:14
Thank you Ray, for reading the base note. I am not sure that
all "missed" the intent but they certainly seemed to be discussing
a different issue.
---
RE: the rest...
Again, I really feel this discussion as it is going trys to pin
the "cause" of an identifiable event on the "results" of the same
event.
For instance, natural selection works because we select using
natural selection....
What I was trying to say....badly it seems, since I obviously was
not very clear...
Is that..
We are *all* taught many things as we grow up...
Right and wrong....in the opionion of our parents
Good and bad....in the opinion of our parents
Nice and not-nice...in the opinion of our parents
ad naseum...
It is a rare bird who flies successfully away from the mores and
guidelines of the culture that raises him/her...
So is it not reasonable to expect that the attributes with which we judge
our fellow men[women] are also a reflection of our culture? And in being
such, sometimes will totally ignore the relative worth of an individual
in lieu of the relative needs of the culture?
My point...[again badly made it seems in .0...grin]...is that our
cultural agenda is out of synch with our societal goals....in other
words...we tlk a good line, and even believe it, but when we act,
we often continue to display our up-bringing....
The question is...how do you sucessfully short-circuit the cultural
agenda?
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