JDBowden wrote: ↑August 6th, 2022, 3:02 pm
This is what losers say when they lose, while winners take home the trophy. This goes along with "beauty is on the inside." It can be argued this is what only ugly people say (pulled reference from the movie Liar Liar lolol).
Dangerous ideas such as this has led to "participation trophies" for kids when they lose. They are rewarded for literally, nothing. They are conditioned for reward with minimal/zero effort soooo why even try if I still get the cookies?
Several things. First, while ugly people find solace in the idea of internal beauty, this fact doesn't lower the value of the initial comment for folks of all types of external beauty. I have a different view about the rewarding participation. No one, least of all the non winners, confuse a first place trophy with a participant reward, so I don't observe entitlement issues in that scenario. The winner feels exactly the same whether he has the only reward or if everyone gets something. Thus the only difference is to the non winners. What's the effect of running a race of 100 and handing out one reward? To the winner it's great, but to 99% it's not great. Doesn't sound like a very good way to grow the sport.
As to the OP, when evaluating acts of "courage" or "bravery" or "heroism" one must take into account what the alternative to performing the act in question is. And if the alternative is ridiculous, the original act is ordinary, not heroic.
"As usual... it depends."