That's a wrong question.
— unenlightened
Sorry 'bout that, boss. ;) — Baden
If dignity is a zero sum game, then humiliation is how the dignity one is self-evidently born with is taken from one.
— unenlightened
Then equality is a pipe-dream for we can only increase our freedom by taking other's away? If that is the case, then it's survival of the fittest.
It isn't a zero sum game. I don't believe it is because I can talk highly of myself without bringing others down — Harry Hindu
If it really is the "us" that defines the "me", then how is it that you (part of the "us") got this wrong?I always thought of you as a woman. — unenlightened
Who is more humiliated here?
— Baden
That's a wrong question. — unenlightened
" If dignity is a zero sum game... ", I said in my second post. And since then there has been a fruitless discussion of whether it is or it isn't.
As if there were a fact of the matter. :roll:
There is no fact of the matter because it is a social construct and can be constructed either way. And that was the point of mentioning its featuring on television, a major means of social construction. — unenlightened
The second is rejection by a superior, for example, the moderator deletes your pearls of wisdom. — unenlightened
'can be constructed either way'
One part of me - the sensitive, sad - really wants this to be true. Another part - the agonistic, eristic - doesn't. The reflective part of me isn't sure, but skews pessimistic. — csalisbury
Rich (or socially established) whites maintain their identity by denying it and decrying identity in general. So too maintaining and denying dignity-through-de-dignifying.
Is it escapable? In the vale of tears? — csalisbury
I can talk highly of myself without bringing others down, — Harry Hindu
Cheese for everyone, or only for those whose bread is "worse"?My bread is good, and it really doesn't matter if someone else's bread is better or worse, as long as there is cheese. — unenlightened
Rich (or socially established) whites maintain their identity by denying it and decrying identity in general. So too maintaining and denying dignity-through-de-dignifying. — csalisbury
Some people don't like bread and like only cheese. Some people are lactose intolerant. — Harry Hindu
Are you saying humiliation is socially constructed? If so, are you saying it's a recent thing? I believe that's what you're saying but I need confirmation. — Judaka
Humiliation is the feeling of loss of status. In a zero sum game the winner gains status and the losers lose it in proportion.What do those things have to do with humiliation — Judaka
I don't think that. People have aways tended to like sugary foods, modern people tend to eat more of them, because bla bla.and what makes you believe that we didn't always have a penchant for things like sensationalism and melodrama?
Media need to excite because viewing is passive. Specifically, watching a food programme does not tickle the taste buds or satisfy hunger. So they need to make a bland experience exciting by turning it into a competition with winners and losers. So the topic of food is no longer ideologically about sharing, meeting each others needs, cooperating, but about competing to impress the experts and win the Masterchef crown, or apron or whatever it is. And there can only be one winner, so it mainly about people losing and leaving.If society is trending towards isolation, passivity and despair, why is the media partly to blame for this and why do you think society is trending towards those things?
I think in general our society is actually becoming more ideologically disposed against competition. Instead, we tell everyone that it's not about winning but having fun, everyone is special and great. — Judaka
People have always and will always think about things in competitive terms and will enjoy competition and the public humiliation of not just losers but anyone really. — Judaka
if as I have been suggesting, humiliation is loss of status - a public matter, if somewhat nebulous, of social standing, then we can answer the question. And the answer will have to do with how the incident feeds out into the wider world, who controls the story, how the other managers and other workers respond. — unenlightened
In short: The less humble, the greater the ego(ism), and hence the greater the potential humiliation—and, thereby, the greater the want/need to crush others who could make one humble. (acknowledgedly, this coming from someone with an ego of notable size, me thinks). Those who are humble in dignified manners, however, will in due measure not be humiliated by ridicule (though they might lose their ability to accomplish what they want). — javra
Well that is your judgement to make. I will defend and deny my identity by not arguing either way. Indeed, I am not arguing against competition and zero sum games. I'm just saying that when I was a kid, we used to go to the beach and build a sandcastle, and pick up some pretty wet stones and go for a swim. and nobody won, and nobody lost, and everyone got a prize of an ice cream. And that was an exciting wonderful day, even though when the stones dried out they looked rather dull. And once a year, there would be a ploughing competition, and someone would win and the others lose, but the rest of the time folks would just plough as needed, and it would be good enough. — unenlightened
I think you are reminiscing about a past that never really existed but perhaps I'm wrong. — Judaka
Humiliation can be defined as depriving someone of their previously held pride. Double-checking with Wiktionary, it can also be defined as making someone humble, i.e. endowing them with humility.
Here’s a possible monkey wrench thrown in: humility is not always a personal negative, as humiliation is understood to always be. — javra
Those who identify with a zero-sum worldviews shall always be humiliated in being made humble. In this worldview, to not be on top of others is to necessarily be trampled by those who are on top. Here, to be humble is to be trampled upon as someone else’s inferior (and being trampled upon is here always shame-worthy).
The same entailment does not apply to those who do not so identify with zero-sum worldviews (egalitarians included, I presume). More likely, here the “other” is found to be those who strictly pertain to a zero-sum worldview of winner/looser relations—regardless of their physical attributes (be they rich or poor, etc.). That guy who was filmed standing in front of tanks in Tiananmen Square (hope most know of him) seems to serve as an example of this personal identity type: He didn’t lose pride in so doing, — javra
And it also isn't a rhetorical thing when I say that I'm realizing more and more that I've unconsciously edited out the negative parts of these memories. Kids are dicks, kick over other kids sandcastles. Perfect memories usually are founded on near-perfect repressions. These idylls feel uncomfortably close to the idylls of nostalgic germans or russians circa when its relevant — csalisbury
I think you'll actually find the greatest potential humiliation comes from not big egos but weak egos and insecurity. — Judaka
What's the difference between feeling embarrassed and humiliated? — Judaka
People who think their high status is untouchable are less likely to feel humiliated than people who care about their status and fear to lose it. So whether you've got a big ego or not, only impacts how likely you are to perceive loss of status, bigger ego mightn't see it as easily because they always see themselves in an unrealistically positive light. — Judaka
People who think their high status is untouchable are less likely to feel humiliated than people who care about their status and fear to lose it. So whether you've got a big ego or not, only impacts how likely you are to perceive loss of status, bigger ego mightn't see it as easily because they always see themselves in an unrealistically positive light. — Judaka
Or—my ego sayin’ this might be an even better rebuttal—big egos necessarily require insecure egos to be subservient in order to so be or become big egos. Deprived of subservient insecure egos, big egos become insecure egos themselves — javra
So if a person wears extravagant clothing not to show off or to get compliments but due to it being an honest portrayal of what they deem to be aesthetic, and is well grounded in their reasoning and emotions, some popular other claiming the attire to be awful will not humiliate the person—because the person will know better. No big ego required. Though the experience would likely yet be unpleasant for the individual. — javra
In the book/movie Dangerous Liaisons, the villainess had one of the bigger egos one can imagine. Yet when publicly booed at the end of the story, was mortified by humiliation. Does this seem unrealistic to you? (Other easily expressed examples don’t currently come to mind). — javra
But generally, we are playing in the field of competing images, and some images are supported by power structures. — unenlightened
This is quite interesting to me. It looks as though there are in the case of the guy in front of the tanks, 2 conflicting world views, both of which might be zero sum, but with opposing signs ... the guy is hero or villain he is humiliated or the army is humiliated.
If so, then it doesn't quite get to the place I am wanting to contrast with zero sum. — unenlightened
I don't want to dismiss the personal side of identity, but [...] you can think what you like - in Lala land. — unenlightened
Your argument for this in simplified format:
I don't want to dismiss the personal side of identity, but [...] you can think what you like - in Lala land. — javra
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