Re: Paris Attack
A lot of people refuse to listen to reason. That is hardly unique in any culture.
But societal pressure can, given time, cause even their thinking to evolve. And under the right circumstances, without any time at all. Because those that who least listen to reason are the ones who have most outsourced that to their communities.
Communities of human beings are funny things. The human being is a social animal, in a very core and fundamental way. We would not exist as a dominant species if we were not. It is arguably our most highly-developed trait.
And that means something very important. To at least some extent, we literally outsource portions of our minds.
I know that sounds a bit crazy, but think about the old married couple. After not too many years, most develop very simple divisions of labor, that allow each member of the couple to have additional focus, additional energy, for the part that they are responsible for thinking about. One might handle the finances, the other the gardening. One might do the cooking, the other the shopping. Often one tends to remember one type of fact (e.g. social network information) and the other data (phone numbers, etc.) And so on. It comes naturally to us, and it makes our lives so much easier that the mechanism by which it happens has evolved to be an almost defining part of being human.
It is known that when one half of a married couple dies, the other is far more likely to die in the first year afterward. After a divorce, at least part of the emotional trauma is due to readjusting one's life to deal with the things you didn't previously have to worry about. It is analogous to the way a portion of our sense of self is in our whole body, due to the central nervous system not being contained entirely in the skull. And that's why it's pretty clear that people can have a very strong influence, not only on each others' moods and thoughts, but even on their sense of self.
Solitary confinement is considered a harsh punishment not just because it is a small box, but because being alone with oneself for long periods of time literally deprives you of that part of your mind, and sense of self, and feeling of belonging, that resides not in you, but in the community. Even a portion of our identity is external to our bodies in the form of in-groups. People who cheer for the same sports team, or go to the same church. These things are more than pastimes, they are fractions of one's identity.
And the consensus mind of this extended identity of a community can change with the conscious decision of a few, followed by the subconscious decision of the many (those who for one reason or another are inclined to follow, rather than lead).
So the art is in getting the right few to speak up, to counter the wrong ones. It's not really a game of numbers at all. It's a game of appealing to the minds of individuals who possess the credibility to have influence, and the courage to use it. Malcolm Gladwell's book "The Tipping Point" covered this concept.
Imagine an internet forum exactly like this one in every way, but mirrored into the muslim world.
When I think of it, I imagine one or two fundamentalists, and a whole range of other opinions. When none of the majority speak up, the tone of the conversation can be set by the extremists. But how many of the majority, speaking clearly and strongly, does it really take to change the tone of the whole discussion?
The fundamentalists may indeed have the ears of many. But what they don't have is a case that is logical. It relies entirely on getting people to set aside logic by using emotional appeals.
I maintain that if we can inspire even just one or two of the right moderates in each pool of thought to speak up, and present a logical case, the tone CAN be changed, even very quickly. In the muslim world the action requires far more courage than in ours, of course. Here, there is virtually no risk in speaking up, and there the penalty can rise as high as death.
But that doesn't mean I can't imagine it happening, even quite suddenly, given the right circumstance.
Our job, in the west, is to do what we can to provide that circumstance.
That doesn't require us to speak the same language at all. They won't be listening to our words in any case (it is easy to lie, and the ones we need to speak for us won't be the dumb ones).
They'll be looking at our actions.
Originally posted by lektrode
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But societal pressure can, given time, cause even their thinking to evolve. And under the right circumstances, without any time at all. Because those that who least listen to reason are the ones who have most outsourced that to their communities.
Communities of human beings are funny things. The human being is a social animal, in a very core and fundamental way. We would not exist as a dominant species if we were not. It is arguably our most highly-developed trait.
And that means something very important. To at least some extent, we literally outsource portions of our minds.
I know that sounds a bit crazy, but think about the old married couple. After not too many years, most develop very simple divisions of labor, that allow each member of the couple to have additional focus, additional energy, for the part that they are responsible for thinking about. One might handle the finances, the other the gardening. One might do the cooking, the other the shopping. Often one tends to remember one type of fact (e.g. social network information) and the other data (phone numbers, etc.) And so on. It comes naturally to us, and it makes our lives so much easier that the mechanism by which it happens has evolved to be an almost defining part of being human.
It is known that when one half of a married couple dies, the other is far more likely to die in the first year afterward. After a divorce, at least part of the emotional trauma is due to readjusting one's life to deal with the things you didn't previously have to worry about. It is analogous to the way a portion of our sense of self is in our whole body, due to the central nervous system not being contained entirely in the skull. And that's why it's pretty clear that people can have a very strong influence, not only on each others' moods and thoughts, but even on their sense of self.
Solitary confinement is considered a harsh punishment not just because it is a small box, but because being alone with oneself for long periods of time literally deprives you of that part of your mind, and sense of self, and feeling of belonging, that resides not in you, but in the community. Even a portion of our identity is external to our bodies in the form of in-groups. People who cheer for the same sports team, or go to the same church. These things are more than pastimes, they are fractions of one's identity.
And the consensus mind of this extended identity of a community can change with the conscious decision of a few, followed by the subconscious decision of the many (those who for one reason or another are inclined to follow, rather than lead).
So the art is in getting the right few to speak up, to counter the wrong ones. It's not really a game of numbers at all. It's a game of appealing to the minds of individuals who possess the credibility to have influence, and the courage to use it. Malcolm Gladwell's book "The Tipping Point" covered this concept.
Imagine an internet forum exactly like this one in every way, but mirrored into the muslim world.
When I think of it, I imagine one or two fundamentalists, and a whole range of other opinions. When none of the majority speak up, the tone of the conversation can be set by the extremists. But how many of the majority, speaking clearly and strongly, does it really take to change the tone of the whole discussion?
The fundamentalists may indeed have the ears of many. But what they don't have is a case that is logical. It relies entirely on getting people to set aside logic by using emotional appeals.
I maintain that if we can inspire even just one or two of the right moderates in each pool of thought to speak up, and present a logical case, the tone CAN be changed, even very quickly. In the muslim world the action requires far more courage than in ours, of course. Here, there is virtually no risk in speaking up, and there the penalty can rise as high as death.
But that doesn't mean I can't imagine it happening, even quite suddenly, given the right circumstance.
Our job, in the west, is to do what we can to provide that circumstance.
That doesn't require us to speak the same language at all. They won't be listening to our words in any case (it is easy to lie, and the ones we need to speak for us won't be the dumb ones).
They'll be looking at our actions.
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