Human Psychology Debating Thread
Anyone else is welcome to post, provided it stays on topic.
So, where were we?
*ahem*
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This is where you can discuss your homework, family, just about anything, make strange sounds and otherwise discuss things which are really not related to the Lancer-series. Yes that means you can discuss other games.
Give it up, your game is over!
By our standards, not theirs.
Exactly. And the punishment is unnecessarily bloody.
Oh, I've heard of her. Crazy biatch.
And once again, enforced the law in an unnecessarily bloody fashion.
Thank you for proving my point
Well, argue against it. Prove to me why I am wrong!
But you just said you disagreed totally. You strange strange child.
Ok. Humans have always a dual impulse towards the Absolute. We are drawn to it, for its transcendence of the ego, and pushed away from it, for our innability to comprehend it through the caging mental frame. When confronted with it, we choose one instinct or the other. In a situation where we give in to terror, we lash out at the source; it one where we overcome terror, we deify it.
For example: Homosexuality in Christian society (post-doctrinization) is considered an evil, a work of satan, bestial, depraved, to be condemned. Most other societies worldwide have not given it at all the same amount of attention; in Mesopotamian society it was a non-issue (there are even some homosexual references in the Epic of Gilgamesh); similarly it was barely considered in most of Asia; in Greek society, of course, it was celebrated. But very often in shamanistic and native cultures (most notably here in north america), homosexuality is not only viewed as that which should be celebrated, but as holy. Homosexuals were, in a sense, deified.
In Christian and native societies, homosexuality is looked at as liminal and therefore powerful. The response is vastly different, of course.
Ok, let's backtrack.
We are terrified at the unknowable, apprehensive of the unknown.
When we recognize a thing as being unknowable, we feel automatically terror and awe, the former being the instinct we tend to proceed with.
That which is liminal, falling between the boundaries of the mental frame, violating the purity code, is recognized as unknowable.
--ergo, we feel terror at the liminal, and attack it.
See? The conversion of man and beast, again. The animal thinks by its instincts, without compassion, pulling humans into the water and devouring them. But the monster, or so I saw when I did an image search, is very often portrayed not as a mere beast but as a humanoid. Its bowing portrays the anthropomorphism.
Let's try a more common monster: the werewolf. Wolves are fierce, bestial, strong, but knowable, and for this reason by themselves do not truly inspire terror in the manner of a monster that is both great beast and sentient man does. One cannot comprehend such a monster through the frame complex, for it transcends such a thing.
No. Show me why I'm wrong.
Yes, but why are they scary to small children? Why are they even scary to adults? The monsters are liminal.
So murder is not a basic instinct
And once again, prove my original premise wrong. Misogeny, murder , bloodthirst, and greed are NOT the basest instincts of humanity?
So, the scale is this, going backwards:
Murder --> hatred --> response to terror --> terror and awe --> stimulus (Unknowable)
So murder is not a basic instinct, but it still is a direct branch of a basic instinct.
And it still is base . I don't think that you disagree with that, considering you spent considerable time denouncing historical murderers and showing that their atrocities were not representative of humanity on the whole.
I did say "qualitative difference".
Misogyny will be a minority. But there will always be a half-man.
By our standards, not theirs
I'm not going to repeat myself.
we are terrified of the unknown. We are certainly suspicious
The horror of the werewolf comes from the idea of something feral and lethal possessing the intelligence of humans
You said this in your last post.
Yeah... I'm not quite clear what you mean by half-man, though.
Edit: So nu?? No response?
And I awoke...they were bouncing 'round the room, the echo of whomever spoke...
Don't ask.
Exactly my point. We are suspicious of the unknown; we are terrified of the unknowable. One can be known: it is possible to comprehend within the mindframe. The other cannot be known without the removal/fluidity of the frame. Humans are most stubborn about this, however, as the world saw with Cold War: both sides were absolutely inable to step away from their cultural worldviews, to look through the eyes of the other, and to view their own frame with objectivity.
If we refuse to
As per terror and awe, once again I am talking about that which isn't known and can't be, not that which isn't known and can be.
Have you ever had a dream (pardon me, I'm under the influence of C.G. Jung and Joseph Cambell) where you are confronted suddenly by a shapeless void, that slowly grows and creeps till it engulfs everything you see, and there is nothing but its depths? Or one where you are swimming in an ocean, and suddenly sucked down into the blackness, or the sun and surface dissapear and there is nothing but cold water everywhere you look? Or one when you are running, being chased by something terrible but you cannot comprehend exactly what the thing is--you only know its awesome power?
If not, I'll give you more rational and empirical examples, but the most effective method of proving one's point is calling on another's direct experience.
Oy vey. I didn't mean basest as in "basic" I meant basest as in "of a contemptible or selfish lack of human decency!"
So let's drop that point, shall we? Consider I'd assume we both agree on the...immorality of murder, bloodlust, misogyny, and selfishness.
A human or group of humans that for its liminality is despised and used as an object--a scapegoat, if you will--for all our lower instincts to be projected upon, the bestial parts of ourselves, and those that we hate most. This all is in an attempt to deify ourselves by comparison, showing how God and humanity is on our side, not that of the thing less than human.
I'd love to write more, but I's got a dog that needs to be walked. Your serve!
I assume it is irrelevant then
Unfortunately, it was arrogance that mainly resulted in the Cold War
Alright then, but then how do you define "can't be"?
No. But it sounds like it would work well in a novel.
Okay, that makes more sense.
I'll take the other examples, if you please.
Ok, let me explain myself better. Something that "can't be" understood, cannot be known is a thing that no matter which way it is looked at cannot be comprehended from within the mental frame. The stimulus cannot be categorized and interpreted within the mind, because it transcends such boundaries. To understand it, one's frame must become fluid, transmutable. Open mindedness of the highest degree.
Nine dots. Connect them all with four straight, connected lines. Make a diagram in paint, figure it out, and post it on here.
That is, however, irrelevant.
Really? Wow. Nothing along those lines?
Hah. Pwned.
Give me some time to formulate an argument, mmkay?. More chores need to be done now
Aaargh! I can't do it!
I'll take the other examples, if you please.
Firstly, from direct experience: I meditate daily, so I have somewhat of a vast quantity of experiences with the terror/awe factor (disregard, momentarily at least, the fact that meditation is now being used in North America as the replacement for happy pills). The function of this practice is--at least, so my experience has been and so I have learned--not mere relaxation. It is rather a method of plunging , in Senecan terms, by way of alleviating the conscious thought. Ego transcendence. One's mind expands and opens. If acted out properly, the experience can be supremely blissful (in a way that ignorance could never fulfill ). Having said that, the sheer envelopment of the mind, the sudden alleviation of the frame, the dissolution of the accustomed conscious thought can be severely terrifying, simultaneously coupled with the happiness derived from it. There are times when I have simply opened my eyes, stood and stopped because the total immersion is overwhelming and indeed on the verge of terror.
Krishna and Arjuna in the Bhagavad Gita. Ya and Jonah in the New Testament. In the children's movie "The Lion King", the hero covers his face in terror at hearing the thunderous voice and image of his dead father in the heavens. In the Lord of the Rings (books and movies), Pippin is strangely drawn to the mysterious Palantir...and when he gazes into its depths is overcome with terror at what he sees. In the Old Testament, Moses comes down from Mount Sinai and must wear a veil over his face because the Hebrews are terrified to look at him, shining with light (literally). Another recent thriller (I forget its name), shows a young vacationing couple who go scuba diving, and when they surface their tour boat has left, leaving them alone with nothing but endless miles of the black depth surrounding them...truly terrifying.
now onto rational argument
1. / Absolute reality must by necessity exist or by necessity not exist.
2. / Only that which is a contradiction must by necessity not exist.
3. / Absolute reality cannot be shown to be a contradiction, as that would imply nothing existed beyond the frame.
4. / Transcending the mindframe, it cannot be interpreted and categorized.
5. / Being unable to interpret, to comprehend it, one feels the dual instinct of wonder and terror--the former because it transcends the ego, the later because of its awesome power that cannot be understood.