I think this is important to emphasise because too often - in my opinion - does social discussion focus on the 'psychology' or the ‘values' of individuals involved in any one situation. — StreetlightX
Is there an individual or are we collectively better off being saturated by such a system — TimeLine
But I don't see an either-or relation here: we are individuals to the extent that we belong to a 'system', or rather a series of systems that generally travels under the name 'society': the relevant question is one of relation - what kind of relation to society is it that we want to cultivate? Not: are we better off in a society of not? The latter question isn't one that can be entertained in any meaningful way, as far as I'm concerned. — StreetlightX
That is how the faux 'authenticity' behind genocides... — TimeLine
Yes, I am well aware that that's what it wants to contest. I don't see it as successfully doing that at all. Just a fantasy.Your whole reading of the video - in terms of 'society' against the 'individual', 'community' against the 'self' - is exactly what it aims to contest. It's not clear that you understood it at all, which is unfortunate. — StreetlightX
Marxism has by and large become identified with social science. Marx always claimed he was doing social (and economic) science, not Marxism for that matter.Marxism? Try basic social science. — StreetlightX
Yeah, I get you claim that, I'd like to see some proof. I look around, and I look through history, and I see that the big changes in society occur as a result of individuals, not collective action (unless that collective action is also driven by an individual, like Ghandi).Ah well I guess reality has a Marxist bent then. — StreetlightX
Don't you think a sensible first step in sociological critique would be to examine the lens through which you yourself view social relations instead of simply presenting it as the ultimate viewing aid? — Baden
No, actually I don't. It's not any more sensible than when writing an instruction manual for welding I would examine the lens through which I actually view the process of welding instead of simply presenting it as the actual view that must be adopted.Don't you think a sensible first step in sociological critique would be to examine the lens through which you yourself view social relations instead of simply presenting it as the ultimate viewing aid? — Baden
Again, the question is what forms an agent of change (whether positive or negative)? And the answer is, among other things, a particular way of viewing the world. How can you disengage the process of causing change from the spectacles that permit one to see that process itself?If you don't do that you'll blindly project onto your critique the results of your own immersion in the social milieu you find yourself in and that will completely undermine your analysis. So, yes through your unexamined lens in the context of the particular society that's formed you, you think we should look at individuals rather than society as a whole when understanding social change. — Baden
What I love about it is that it speaks to what I think ought to be the basic analytical instinct for anyone attempting to discussing social problems: the instinct to look not at the behaviour of individuals, but at the social milieux by which any such behaviour is conditioned. — StreetlightX
That's not an interesting perspective for me, since I look and see that historical change is made by the individual, not by the collective (unless again, the collective is used by the individual as a tool for change). If I don't like the society I live in, or my social conditions, it's up to me to change them. There's no one else who can change them for me.The question that follows then is not "What forms an agent of change"? but something like "How do we allow for collective change" — Baden
I don't see this at all being like this. Rather some individual says "I enjoy sexually teasing women, so I want to look for a workplace where this is acceptable - and if no such workplace exists, then I will make one". So the evil does, in fact, come from the individual, and not from the social structure. Sure, this individual lives in a society. So what? He wants to live as his heart desires in that society - if his heart desires that he lives like Nero in debauchery, etc. that's what he will try to do. The social structure will maybe restrict that. But his heart's desire will not change. The moment he gets an opportunity, he will act. So it just ends up being hypocrisy, just changing social structure.But if you look at the macro social level and ask yourselves what social forces have led to the creation of workplaces like these and should those forces be reinforced or weakened, the answer seems clearer. — Baden
I criticise the hypocrisy of the media and Hollywood who point the finger at Trump, even though they are that which actually spreads this worldview. Now, I have not seen evidence that Trump is a super-effeminate guy like say, Silvio Berlusconi. So I can just assume that he wants to portray the macho-guy appearance because he's been taught that it's cool, and that's how alpha males behave. His desire is to be admired, not to have as much sex as possible. So having sex for him is part of being admired. In his case, I tend to think that it's something that he ended up doing out of a failure of character and the society he lives in.It occurs to me too by the way that your constant refrain with regard to Trump is that he is a product of his society, a society that must change, and rather than focus on his failings you tend to focus on and criticize the forces that shaped him. Why then take the opposite tack here? — Baden
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