by sandy82 » July 26th, 2005, 4:29 pm
Everybody's got it right--or, more precisely, everybody's got a piece of the rightness.
It's a good time to throw the elephant into the mix. :) I'm sure everybody's familiar with that story. Two parts here.
First, the story itself. A group of blind people are asked to describe an elephant. One feels the leg and says an elephant is shaped like a tree. Another feels his trunk and says an elephant is like a firehose. A third feels a tusk and says an elephant is a curved and pointed weapon. And on and on.
I was told that story when I was five years old. I listened attentively, made a mental picture of it, understood why the blind people would come away with different opinions. And thus, a five-year-old understood how different people can have different points of view...none necessarily right or wrong (although the possibility for near perfect accuracy existed). A first step toward mental agility, arguing pro and con, empathy.
Second, the contrast. Fast forward 2/\[url=(https?:\/\/[^\s\[]+):$uid\](.*?)\[\/url:$uid\]/i years or so. The erstwhile five-year-old says to a highly educated member of a different culture from a different place--after hearing how a minority is treated in that culture: "Yes, but picture yourself in their position."
--"I'm sorry. I can't do that."
------"Why not?"
--"Because [said in all seriousness] I'm not in their position."
- - - - - - - - - - -
The entire picture is very complicated. What makes us, as individuals, who we are? What makes us, as groups, who we are? Genetics, environment, superego programming. Human interaction learned nonverbally through body language, that human interaction and other factors weaving together to form a culture. The impact of the culture on the environment, on group behavior. Higher or lower values for certain inherited features or, possibly, traits--which, in turn, may lead to variations in sociocultural levels. Add a dash of serendipity with a touch of timing and and a sprinkle of coincidence.
"Sheer force of will and concentration." Excellent examples of human behavior. Where do they come from? Inheritance, culture, environment, seemingly unrelated incidents in life?
The last idea may seem not to fit. But it can fit exceedingly well. A trauma in early childhood, repressed by focusing on something else, an obsession channeled into concentration, memorization, problem-solving. A mathematician or physicist born of a childhood trauma, totally unremembered.
Where do cultures come from? Do individuals make cultures, or vice-versa? How can people live so close and be so different? Back-slapping Bavarians and dour Brandenburgers. Swiss trains that run on the minute, and, across the fall line, Italian trains that mosey by the day.
How to account for it all?
A quick addition. Morrcomm mentioned changing views. So do I. I think that there's much more to BobbyS's views on determinism than I would have believed in years past. I picture free will and predestination as two railroad tracks. They look separate from close-up, but as one gazes away from the here and now, they seem to fade together until, in the distance, they become indistinguishable.