And your comment above just adds to my point that here you do have to put into context the present with a historical comparison. — ssu
It's quite convoluted, because you're 'avoiding' the problem, rather than going through it.Nothing convoluted about trying to avoid racist and sexist language — Izat So
That's fine. I maintain that the brain does not need culture to back up its feats, much as AI doesn't.Several researchers in the field would disagree with you. — Izat So
Well see, I don't remember it that way.Well women couldn't vote. They were paid much less than men for the same job. If they married, their husbands became the owners of their property. They spent most of their time working in the home while men spent most of their time in the public sphere. Among the men, the privileged were wealthy landowners, the rich, the well connected, who set the laws, the norms of public behaviour and the stories about what women could and could not achieve given their "frailer" minds and bodies. Ideas deeply rooted in history often take centuries to be transcended, so the narrative is still mostly the old patriarchal one, but with the invention of the pill, factory produced food, labour saving devices in the home with the introduction of electricity - with these technologies - women came to occupy positions in public more and more. Optimistically and I think more realistically, the narrative will resume its progress after this backlash to rather primal patriarchal behaviours or we will just end up in a tribalized nightmare world. This short summary of Obama's recent talk in Ottawa seems pretty dead on vis the last point. — Izat So
I maintain that the brain does not need culture to back up its feats, much as AI doesn't.
Culture is just a consequence of the realisation of the brain, rather than a prerequisite.
Well sure, there's one contingent of humans, but there's plenty of human breeds, which didn't necessarily originate from the same ancestor.“Race” is common parse is a societal phenomenon and a complete misnomer. Scientifically speaking there is only ONE race of humans. — I like sushi
Why not? There were different groups of humanoids all wandering the earth; it wasn't one group that spread out. What's the problem with having some of these groups evolve in to the modern breeds?Clearly not scientifically minded then? — I like sushi
Sure, but DNA is still under scrutiny.Of course. And from there I can tell you that the two most genetically similar chimps on earth are more genetically dissimilar than the two most genetically dissimilar humans on earth. — I like sushi
I personally disagree on the lack of subspecies.Point being there are not subspecies of humans AND there is far more diversity within groups than between them. — I like sushi
I'd disagree that they're not different; they're clearly different.Meaning some people from Siberia are no different than people from the amazon genetically speaking, scientific speaking and in scientific terms of what “race” is defined as. — I like sushi
The growth of the right-wing is not confined to a couple of murderous hicks but to murderous apparatuses of power that are growing all across the West. — StreetlightX
I'd disagree
No one without one or a full one either, but that's irrelevant.No one with half a brain should care whether you agree or not. — I like sushi
It's not a fact, it's the most recent assertion.The scientific consensus isn’t even a ‘consensus’, it’s and plain and simply fact of how “species” and “race” is defined in the sciences. — I like sushi
It's not about whether you're talking rubbish, but whether it sounds convincing and to me it doesn't.You can of course simply refuse to take my word for it or you can ask anyone who knows the basics of zoology and genetics whether I’m talking rubbish or not. — I like sushi
Nice. So what's your problem with that?This is such a Steven Pinker-esque argument. — Maw
So why then the ferocious attempt to link terrorism and political correctness? What's the link?The discussion is around the increase in right wing terrorism, and the charts provided clearly show this to be the case. — Maw
It seems to me that those concerned with the potential negative effects of Political Correctness to the extreme, such as Jordan Peterson and various pundits, are responding to the effects of something, not the causes. That area of their concern doesn't really extend too far beyond academia. These pundits ought to be far, far more concerned with a rise in rightwing extremism, and their unwitting contributions toward it in the broader public. — Izat So
I do think people should talk about PC issues because I think that there are some problems with PC extremism. What I don't get is why pundits seem so much more concerned about the relatively piddling cases of political correctness gone bad than the rise of the right with its potentially deadly xenophobia and misogyny. — Izat So
Nice. So what's your problem with that? — ssu
So why then the ferocious attempt to link terrorism and political correctness? What's the link? So the basic argument is that the topic is somehow wrong, because ...there's right-wing terrorism. — ssu
So why then the ferocious attempt to link terrorism and political correctness? What's the link? — ssu
So the basic argument is that the topic is somehow wrong, because ...there's right-wing terrorism. — ssu
Critics of extreme PC do have a point, but what I am concerned about is that they
also seem to be rejecting PC at large and
in doing so are inadvertently feeding into the deeply regressive political movements
in evidence throughout the world
(e.g., Farage, LePen, Hungarian leadership, Brazilian leadership, Trump, new xenophobic legislation in Quebec, etc.),
which ought to be much more of a concern to them
since it is far more deadly. — Izat So
But to Izat's point, the concern over political correctness is largely overblown — Maw
Pinker's modus operandi is take a typically a downward long term trend, and presenting the current state of this trend as acceptable, or that solutions to these problems would be a mistake etc. In this example, a downward trend of terrorist attacks from the 70's to the present is used as an argument to downplay the increase of right wing terrorism (despite, as I've shown deaths have remained fairly consistent) — Maw
But to Izat's point, the concern over political correctness is largely overblown
— Maw
By far. — Izat So
It's the opposite. Concerns about PC have been leveraged by the far right IF those digesting social media accounts do so in McCarthyist spirit. So my ernest friend, you've missed the point by a mile or two. — Izat So
I don't think that's true in the USA. Today the administration announced that all visa applications, including those simply for tourism, will have to include all the applicant's social media accounts for the prior five years. It's difficult to say concerns about PC are overblown any more. — ernestm
So while concerns about left-wing political correctness are certainly overblown, right wing censorship certainly is not. — Maw
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