LuckyR wrote: ↑November 12th, 2023, 8:54 pm I call it (where we are now) the Post Truth era.There have always been liars - those happy to utter deliberate untruths to serve their purposes.
And there have always been ignorant people who do not know the truth.
What seems new about the current "era" is
A) that so many people have access to internet as a broadcast medium, there's no filter, no quality control. Nobody has to think your ideas worthy or valuable in order for them to be broadcast. There are no gatekeepers, no prerequisite.
Arguably that's a good thing, in so much as those filters which were only the prejudices or groupthink of a certain class of people aren't there in this medium. A democratisation, if you like. But those filters did serve to filter out a certain amount of falsehood which now gets broadcast.
B) there's more shamelessness about lying (or anything else).
Partly because of the anonymity of the medium.
And partly because shame requires some common or accepted code of behaviour to have been violated. Whereas so many seem to think that a new medium (or rapid cultural change brought about by new technology) automatically invalidates or makes obsolete older standards of behaviour. Like honesty.
Pattern-chaser wrote: ↑November 12th, 2023, 7:48 am Regardless of its misuse, political correctness has, or had, earlier in its 'existence', a positive element too. It asks us to treat others with fairness and consideration, maybe even care. What is the term for this positive sentiment, if we (I!) must accept that Political Correctness has the negative meaning discussed and explained here in this topic?You seem to be really not grasping the difference here.
Politeness or good manners treats everybody with fairness and consideration based on the speaker's own view.
Being PC is restricting speech about certain groups of people to what some elite third party has decided is acceptable terminology.
If I think you deserve to be insulted, I reserve the right to do so. Most of the time you don't, and so no insult is warranted or intended. Given that we're talking about that majority of the time when there is no intent to insult or offend:
If I deliberately don't use some word to you because - based on my understanding of who you are, defaulting to the norms of my subculture - I think you might feel insulted or offended thereby, that is politeness or good manners. No other term is needed for this positive sentiment.
If I deliberately don't use some word to you because
- some unaccountable They have decided that you and not others are worthy of special consideration and have deemed the word in question to be offensive
- I fear the social censure I'm likely to get by dissenting from Their dictates in this matter
then that's political correctness.
It's not really a particularly fine or difficult distinction.
"They" may be motivated by fairness or consideration. Or something else entirely. It doesn't matter. The difference is in the process.