Ok so what if there was no logic, it's literally mimetic in that everyone's ancestors did it from way back when? — schopenhauer1
I don't think I believe in this. Can you cite an example? Even very strange religious practices have a logic to them. — BitconnectCarlos
I was thinking more like three year olds playing in the street or letting dogs roam neighborhood without being confined to owners property…that’s how it was done in the old country isn’t really a logic. — schopenhauer1
I wasn’t necessarily thinking religious practice though there could be just no reason for it — schopenhauer1
It seems to be the case this is what happens in multicultural societies or when dealing cross-culturally. If let's say a subgroup individual does X "bad" action, we say, "Oh he is a product of that culture". If the dominant culture individual does X "bad" action, we say "He made a bad decision" or at the least make it much more atomized (it's his family at the most, or his own personal background or life story, not necessarily cultural). — schopenhauer1
If you're allowing the children to be out late that's a sign of a high-trust society and the practice reflects that. — BitconnectCarlos
I can't think of one. — BitconnectCarlos
It would be cool if everyone could be looked at as individuals. But it's also true that some people have challenges where others have privilege, you know? — frank
Three year olds in a busy urban street? Trust who? Do you just argue to argue? — schopenhauer1
I’m sure a lot of religious practices had no discernible origin and later ideas and stories made it have a backstory — schopenhauer1
Can that contribute to self-fulfilling prophecy? Is that itself treating others as having less agency? — schopenhauer1
It's possible. One source of counter message is in forms of Christianity that teach having faith in yourself. They focus on how to avoid the pitfall of pity. Someone may think they're helping you with their pity when it's actually destructive. — frank
In a multicultural society how much is it incumbent to teach the subgroup the dominant customs? — schopenhauer1
Why is the latter shunned, or is it? — schopenhauer1
because there is no one there to witness it or not enough at least to really do much about it except shake their heads or tacitly accept this is their way... — schopenhauer1
Not sure what you mean.. — schopenhauer1
I'd say terrorism is simply a method of warfare usually done by a non-state actor, sometimes just by a single individual (example of Anders Breivik comes to mind). It's intention is usually to get media coverage and is different from an insurgency. And naturally "terrorism" is used in narrative to describe any non-state actor (or even state actor) that isn't viewed as a legal combatant or doesn't apply to the laws of war. Or then simply is a term used in propaganda for describing the enemy.An easy example of this would be terrorists. There is a certain school of thought that might say terrorism is a product of the "oppressors". The opposite side would say that terrorism is a result of culture. Some might provide a mix of the two. — schopenhauer1
Female circumcision in Muslim countries - is this an expression of their religion or their culture? Or both? Muslim apologists in the West will frequently argue that this phenomenon is not a part of Islam, but a cultural phenomenon. I wonder how easy it is to separate culture from religion. Is American evangelical Christianity a form of Christianity? Or is it an American cultural phenomenon? Or both - a religion reimagined through a cultural milieu. — Tom Storm
provides its members with meaningful ways of life across the full range of human activities, including social, educational, religious, recreational and economic life, encompassing both public and private spheres. — SEP: Culture
the sum total of a given people's beliefs, customs, knowledge and technology. These are learned and constitute a dynamic system. This system exists outside the body and is not inherited through biology. — The Royal Anthropological Institute
So there are various factors one can attribute the behavior of a subgroup of people within a population. This can be any subgroup- geographic, ethnic, political, religious, etc. — schopenhauer1
If you're allowing the children to be out late that's a sign of a high-trust society and the practice reflects that.
— BitconnectCarlos
Three year olds in a busy urban street? Trust who? Do you just argue to argue? — schopenhauer1
Can one be a "culturist", meaning can one morally be "against" certain cultures, or should people be tolerant of all cultural aspects, whether you agree with them or not? — schopenhauer1
The local culture where it is practised is such that Islam in that culture allows or encourages it --- but there is no necessary connection. Which seems obviously true. — Jamal
This bypasses my question, and doubles down even. It is assumed "virtue building" such as a program that one might enter into as an Aristotlean or Stoic or whatnot, would seem to be a freely chosen philosophy that one is intending to follow. A culture seems to be something one generally falls into, though one can take it on too. — schopenhauer1
What if one is about virtue-building but isn't following any particular program, just their own.. Is that culture? — schopenhauer1
Is the practitioner of a philosophy and an individual acting under the enculturation of a subgroup's culture the same thing? — schopenhauer1
Is there a substantive difference or is it all culture all the way down? — schopenhauer1
Virtue is a kind of habit of a use of a kind of habit; it is not habit per se. I drew the parallel between culture and habit, not culture and virtue. — Leontiskos
I've said that a culture is a kind of societal habit. On that view nothing an individual does in themselves has any necessary connection with culture (because the action or habit of an individual is not necessarily the action or habit of a culture). — Leontiskos
One is intentional and the other is not necessarily intentional, no? — Leontiskos
Suppose we have a norm, "Do not treat others as you would not like to be treated." Suppose a culture instantiates this norm. Suppose there are two people in the culture that are baptized into the cultural norm, Bob and Joe. Bob is under the influence of the cultural norm, and it influences his actions. Joe, on the other hand, while being under the influence of the cultural norm, also perceives that it is a moral norm, which he then freely assents to in a rational manner. Bob and Joe are different. Bob holds the norm in a merely cultural manner, whereas Joe also holds it in a moral manner. Joe is therefore rationally and intentionally invested in the norm in a way that Bob is not. We could argue whether Bob is virtuous for following the cultural norm, but it is certainly true that Joe is more virtuous than Bob.
(We could of course consider a third person who intentionally rejects the cultural norm.) — Leontiskos
When I was a 3-year-old, in a middle-class English suburb, I played out in the street till late-ish. That culture was more trusting than modern middle--class culture. To my mind the biggest danger to such a child is the growth of car ownership; cars and 3-year-olds don't mix unless the car drivers are super careful. To me this sort of issue is the crux of debates about 'culture'. Increased car use and diminished public transport use are associated with greater individualism and distrust of others, fear of the stranger. But much cultural argument wants to blame / scapegoat 'others': gangs of youths, dangerous individuals. Car-lovers don't want to blame cars. Car-loving gets invisibly embedded in 'culture', so even now, we find it easier to imagine, to deal with the climate crisis, electric cars, instead of *less* cars. — mcdoodle
One reason why these cultural moral teachings are so important, is because they become so deeply ingrained into people and the society they live in, that many will not be able to question these teachings at any point in their life. They become so normalized that the majority of people will be unaware they even exist and affect their lives on a daily basis.
To make a long story short: some moral values are simply worse than others, and by their fruits you will know them. — Tzeentch
Just about everything held within a single religion is contested by others within that religion. I struggle to see exactly where the demarcation is between culture and religion, whether it matters and how any distinction can clearly be understood. Who do we blame for what? — Tom Storm
Violent resistance against oppression is historically quite common across all regions of the world. — Tzeentch
is terrorism, that is to say, purposeful targeting of civilians to strike terror/fear/provoke response, and using one's population for fodder, a cultural trait of some countries, or is that simply situational.. ANY culture would act EXACTLY like this under X circumstance? — schopenhauer1
if let's say a culture simply had built-in (extremely) violent responses to injustices, and then someone was not from that culture but promoted (extremely) violent responses to injustices, but advocated it out of philosophical regard, if we determined the extreme violence was "bad", would the philosophical regard agent be worse than the cultural agent? — schopenhauer1
I think it's a human tendency to prefer peaceful solutions over costly violent conflicts, but when there are no peaceful paths available its equally human to resist violently. — Tzeentch
One cannot be against a culture or blame it for blameworthy acts because only individuals can perform blameworthy acts. One has to avoid holistic methods for determining blame or guilt or innocence and use individualistic methods, or else one will always be wrong and therefor unjust. — NOS4A2
But surely culture influences individuals, no? Conservatives love this point. So do liberals, but in their own way (exaggerated "Wokeness" and "religious fundamentalism").
Are there cultures that are more insulated from these violent tendences towards perceived oppression? — schopenhauer1
But surely culture influences individuals, no? — schopenhauer1
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