Human brain still evolving!
Moderator: Alyrium Denryle
- RedImperator
- Roosevelt Republican
- Posts: 16465
- Joined: 2002-07-11 07:59pm
- Location: Delaware
- Contact:
It's from political science. People tend to personify states and assign human behavior and motives to them, unconsciously if nothing else, while in fact states do no such thing.Zero132132 wrote:Yes, I suppose with intelligence being as ill-defined as it is, it would be quite impossible to correlate any social trends to it. Although I don't know where you pull the bit about nations having emotions like people from... I've never seen or heard of that.
Any city gets what it admires, will pay for, and, ultimately, deserves…We want and deserve tin-can architecture in a tinhorn culture. And we will probably be judged not by the monuments we build but by those we have destroyed.--Ada Louise Huxtable, "Farewell to Penn Station", New York Times editorial, 30 October 1963
X-Ray Blues
X-Ray Blues
- General Zod
- Never Shuts Up
- Posts: 29211
- Joined: 2003-11-18 03:08pm
- Location: The Clearance Rack
- Contact:
Isn't that basically another way of saying people assign stereotypes to nations? At least that's how it sounds anyways.RedImperator wrote:It's from political science. People tend to personify states and assign human behavior and motives to them, unconsciously if nothing else, while in fact states do no such thing.Zero132132 wrote:Yes, I suppose with intelligence being as ill-defined as it is, it would be quite impossible to correlate any social trends to it. Although I don't know where you pull the bit about nations having emotions like people from... I've never seen or heard of that.
"It's you Americans. There's something about nipples you hate. If this were Germany, we'd be romping around naked on the stage here."
- RedImperator
- Roosevelt Republican
- Posts: 16465
- Joined: 2002-07-11 07:59pm
- Location: Delaware
- Contact:
No, that's not the same thing at all. People assign states human motivations and emotions ("The United States is angry" "Zimbabwe is grateful"), and then get blindsided when states don't act in accordance with those assigned emotions, because states are NOT people and will act in their percieved self-interest in situations where a human would act differently (if you must personify nations, personify them as rational sociopaths who will never take any action if they do not percieve it to be in their self interest).General Zod wrote:Isn't that basically another way of saying people assign stereotypes to nations? At least that's how it sounds anyways.RedImperator wrote:It's from political science. People tend to personify states and assign human behavior and motives to them, unconsciously if nothing else, while in fact states do no such thing.Zero132132 wrote:Yes, I suppose with intelligence being as ill-defined as it is, it would be quite impossible to correlate any social trends to it. Although I don't know where you pull the bit about nations having emotions like people from... I've never seen or heard of that.
Any city gets what it admires, will pay for, and, ultimately, deserves…We want and deserve tin-can architecture in a tinhorn culture. And we will probably be judged not by the monuments we build but by those we have destroyed.--Ada Louise Huxtable, "Farewell to Penn Station", New York Times editorial, 30 October 1963
X-Ray Blues
X-Ray Blues