In a different thread, Glen wrote:

*"what many of us purport to ****want**** ... common ground with which to have 
a discussion with the right wing wackos in our lives."*

Although I have heard people express a desire for such conversations and 
questions about finding a common ground upon which to base them — I do not 
believe a single one of them was honest or sincere.

There is only one circumstance in which a 'conversation' with a wacko has any 
point: a professional psychiatrist seeking to mitigate the mental condition of 
a patient.

Perhaps "right wing wackos" is simply a label (RWW) for a group and not an 
assertion of their sanity. 

If RWW are an alien species, ala Martians, then conversation/dialog/exchange 
might be quite useful and even beneficial — the SciFi trope of "look how much 
we could learn from someone with such a different perspective." An alternative 
SciFi trope: "we can never understand each other so we must be implacable 
enemies and seek to annihilate each other;" is also possible. (Unfortunately, I 
think the second trope is far more descriptive of the majority of left-vs-right 
rhetoric these days.)

If RWW are simply an exotic human culture; conversation, dialogue, exchange; 
all are eminently desirable.

However, there are preconditions — maybe just one — the ethical principle of 
cultural anthropology: relativism. There are no objective criteria by which you 
can judge the 'correctness' the 'rightness' the 'fitness' (there is no cultural 
evolution theory analogous to Darwin with species) or the 'morality' among 
cultures. To think otherwise is ethnocentrism.

Ethnocentrism is perfect if your goal is to be a cultural imperialist or a 
missionary, but is not a foundation for constructive dialog or conversation.

I love and respect you all, but you seem to me to be one of the most 
ethnocentric (Liberal-Scientism, for want of a better label) cultures around.

A common saying about the role of an anthropologist: *"to make the strange 
familiar and the familiar strange."* An ethnography of the RWW would be, in my 
opinion, quite valuable; and, along with dropping the ethnocentrism, 
prerequisite to any conversation with them. You run the risk, however, that 
your study of the mote in the other's eye will craft a lens or a mirror that 
will reflect the beam in your own.

davew


- .... . -..-. . -. -.. -..-. .. ... -..-. .... . .-. .
FRIAM Applied Complexity Group listserv
Zoom Fridays 9:30a-12p Mtn GMT-6  bit.ly/virtualfriam
un/subscribe http://redfish.com/mailman/listinfo/friam_redfish.com
archives: http://friam.471366.n2.nabble.com/
FRIAM-COMIC http://friam-comic.blogspot.com/ 

Reply via email to