Good_Egg wrote: ↑December 11th, 2023, 5:27 am
Stoppelmann wrote: ↑December 11th, 2023, 1:55 am
If a child isn’t socialised by the age of four, education can be difficult. Reinforcing certain behaviours through repetition, rewards, or consequences is often the only method parents have.
Fair enough - conditioning may be necessary to bring the developing human to the point where they can be educated.
Maybe nothing wrong with conditioning, done with that intent and motivation. ? Can we wish that every parent will succeed in that ?
It seems to have worked with many people, but in Germany has been breaking down in specific areas. The rise in the number of children that are difficult to educate with the present system has various factors. First, there is a lack of maturity in the pupil’s parents, who themselves have had an inadequate upbringing or come from other cultural backgrounds. Second, there are those children whose socialisation hasn’t worked out and who tend to build either power structures or minority groups within schools. Third, there is a lack of immediate relevance of subjects for pupils, which leaves them asking why they must learn something.
Good_Egg wrote: ↑December 11th, 2023, 5:27 am
The question I'd ask you is whether there are, in your view of the world, political issues on which people may legitimately differ.
Maybe recognition of such issues is what separates the "moderates" in any movement from the extremists & fundamentalists ?
For me, the prime question is whether people want to coexist. Only if the answer is yes can we discuss how we’ll achieve this and have differing opinions, and there we have the moderates. If the answer is no, then that in itself prevents all further discussion and limits possibilities to a binary choice. Whether it is political, religious, or cultural differences, it is down to the first question, whether we want to coexist. If we do not want others to coexist with us, then we have a militant and extremist position.
Good_Egg wrote: ↑December 11th, 2023, 5:27 am
If you think making political choices is part of (adult) human life, then trying to deny people genuine choice by conditioning them early on to favour, automatically without thought, whatever political option you favour, is a form of abuse.
It's one of the temptations of power.
Assuming that early conditioning is abuse is one of the failures of left ideology, which assumes that without guidance, children will be better off. It is also the reason for societal breakdown into narcissism. Extreme individualism means I am the only one that matters, which will be our downfall because such a position will soon find opposition, and if it comes from people with the same attitude, it is a fight for survival. Once again, there is no coexistence, which can only flourish in an ordered society in which all who know what they are talking about have a voice. We care for children or those who have cognitive deficits, but we don’t let them rule the world, even if they stamp their feet.
Good_Egg wrote: ↑December 11th, 2023, 5:27 am
On the more general point, I'm thinking that the thread started off on the wrong foot by treating co-existence as an unqualified good. The question should be which errors and evils we should aim to peacefully co-exist with, and which we should aim to eradicate.
And if you put all opposing political views into the category of errors we should try to eradicate, maybe that's a definition of extremism ?
I have often been in debates where the group agrees on a desired outcome, and someone then questions that, painting the devil on the wall and coming up with extreme terminology, such as “extremism,” which is defined by that one person referring to the group. It is the tail wagging the dog and the downfall of all enterprises. We’ve seen it in many situations recently, such as everybody agreeing to provide women with safe spaces, sports competitions, and room for their specific and often biological needs. And then some guy who “feels” he’s a woman calls out, what about me! The needs of minorities must be addressed individually without disturbing the agreed-upon outcome for women.
If we agree to coexist, we start discussing coexistence requirements. One of the requirements would be to gain a consensus on what could disturb such a coexistence, just as others would ask what promotes coexistence. The only thing that is predefined is the meaning of the word coexistence, but the resulting path to that goal grows out of a process. But if a minority wanted a clause that allowed a certain behaviour that the group had agreed would disturb coexistence, then that person is trying to harm the whole process to benefit a minority position that has already been defined as a disturbance. Coexistence must be the outcome, and the group must work for that.
What is required is the ongoing effort to find the best solution, not a dogmatically adhered-to ideology, and consequently, structures that assist this discussion. It may mean a lack of integration, which was often the goal of all political blocs in the past, but the goal is coexistence, not assimilation.