Phoenix, AZ Forecast

Analysis with Political and Social Commentary
About AB
Columnists CL
Donate DO
Editor Page ED
Front Page FP
Letters LT Links LK
RSS
Search SR
Submit ST
 
Article Page Phoenix, AZ  Wednesday Feb 22, 2012 By and for we the real people Copyright ©2005-2011 MoveOff, LLC
Fat Loss 4 Idiots  Top Secret Fat Loss Secret  Truth About Six-Pack Abs  Burn The Fat Feed The Muscle
No. 1 Dog Training And Behavior Product  Dog Food Secrets  RegCure - Registry Cleaner
.
...It's time for Americans to moveoff their duffs and demand better government...sm

Get off the couch! America needs you

Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and the gospel of envy, its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery. - Winston Churchill

Democratic Socialists of America Video Channel

Islam was born in the deserts of Arabia in the early seventh century. Islam is a revolutionary, totalizing political ideology masquerading as a religion. - Ellis Washington, 2010

Disclaimer: This site(others) and you are being monitored by Big-Brother. You may well have just been marked as a subversive.








The American "education" machine is broken!

Saturday, October 1, 2011

“Why do Women always….?”: Generalizations and the Building Blocks of Reality
  Society piece by Selwyn Duke

Recently I wrote an article(1) about women’s tendency to support statist candidates.  As my emails attest, it was met with quite a positive response.  Yet, not surprisingly, there was also a very predictable one: complaints about generalizations.  For instance, one respondent wrote that she was tired of the “all men are this and all women are that” tripe.

Of course, people only complain about generalizations when they hear one they don’t like and, perhaps, are unable to refute.  But you can rest assured that they generalize just like anyone else; in fact, generalizations are woven so seamlessly into our thinking and discourse that we often utter them unthinkingly as a matter of course.  Just consider how often people say things such as “Why do men never ask directions?!” or “It drives me crazy when guys flip from one TV channel to another rapid-fire!” But do all men do these things?  I always ask directions and hate the habit of using a remote control like a musical keyboard.  Nevertheless, I’ll be the first to admit that those generalizations are clearly valid.

The problem with blanket condemnations of generalizations is that they shut down debate.  They are, in a way, akin to responding to someone who substantively criticizes Barack Obama or rap artists by accusing him of being a “racist.” It doesn’t address the particulars of the criticism, which may or may not be correct; it avoids them with the implication that, in principle, criticizing a black person is wrong because it reflects prejudice.  Likewise, to respond to a group analysis by condemning generalization in principle allows one to avoid having to address it in the particular.  Note that while this can be a very conscious ploy, it often isn’t.  Sometimes it’s just an emotional reaction to an unpleasant truth and reflects sloppy thinking.

Absent reason-clouding emotion, however, intelligent people will easily grasp the nature of generalizations.  If I say “Men are taller than women,” it doesn’t mean to relate the idea that all men are taller than all women; it means that as a group men are taller than women.  Of course, one could try to become Mr. Spock and descend into insufferable literalism.  But I don’t expect anytime soon to see people parading about saying things such as, “According to a 2007 American Automobile Association study, 86 percent of men ask directions only 7 percent of the time, 8 percent of men ask directions 41 percent of the time, and 6 percent of men have wives who don’t let them drive.”

Generalizations are necessary to understand the world and promote the common good.  If we didn’t acknowledge that breast cancer is a “women’s” disease (although it occasionally does afflict men), we wouldn’t know where to focus resources when combating it.  And what would be the consequence if we didn’t acknowledge that blacks don’t perform as well academically as whites?  A problem must be recognized before it can be remedied.

To condemn generalization in principle is to descend into radicalism.  For painting every group with the same brush is to deny reality just as doing so with individuals does.  And the rule here is simple: Just as we must judge every individual as an individual, we must judge every individual group as an individual group.

Moreover, except insofar as certain groups can be defined by association (e.g., the NRA) – and, even here, the members generally have something in common – it is only generalizations that enable us to recognize and speak of “groups” in the first place.  It’s as with individuals.  If all people were identical in every respect, the only way we would be able to know they are different beings is that they are unable to occupy the same space at the same time.  Yet we would not be able to pick a person we saw earlier in the day out of a line-up.  Likewise, we could divide identical people into two groups – as if drawing up sides for a basketball game – and differentiate between them based on location.  But this wouldn’t be a meaningful difference, and the fact is that we will speak of “groups” even though their members are generally dispersed and intermingled.

This is only possible because we differentiate among them through the recognition of general collective differences – otherwise known as generalizations.  And here we should take note of some very fashionable advice.  We’re often told that to understand people better, we must understand their differences; in fact, in this context we’re told to celebrate differences.  But when the matter is any but the most inconsequential group differences – and especially when the unfavorable variety are exhibited by a politically favored group – we’re warned of even acknowledging them.  Yet the same thing applies: If we want to understand a group better, we must understand its differences.

And what can we say about an effort to deny differences?  Well, there is no shortage of dystopian novels and films about despotic governments that seek to eliminate individual differences as they transform each person into an interchangeable part in the machinery of the state.  We call this frightening scenario the stamping out of individuality

But what of the obscuration of group character?  For sure, the statists among us often claim to be very concerned about it when defending an indigenous people whose culture is threatened; then they will tout “diversity.” Yet they get it wrong all the way around.  Differences aren’t good by nature.  They aren’t bad by nature.  Nor are they neutral by nature, because Truth isn’t relative and not all differences are a matter of taste.  Differences are only different by nature. 

Thus, whether the matter is individuals or groups, the truth is the same.  Some differences, such as a tendency toward criminality or excessive drink, should be stamped out; others, such as a proclivity for science, math or the arts, should be applauded.  Yet others, such as a liking for a different healthful food, are idiosyncrasies only to be noted.  But whether they be of an individual or a group, of the good or the bad, of the funny or the sad, they all have one thing in common: They are realities.  And Reality can either be an ever-faithful ally or a most fearsome foe.  The more you deny him, the more vicious his bite.  And the closer you hold him, the more he opens your eyes, mind and heart.

Selwyn Duke

1) http://www.americanthinker.com/2011/09/the_security_sex.html


Posted by Selwyn Duke on 10/1/11 at 08:01 AM
Email Author  [Email Article To Someone.]  (PermalinkPrint This Page

StumbleUpon Toolbar

UPSSA

United Progressive Socialist States of America




UPSSA

United Progressive Socialist States of America

  Howard Was Right!


RTPX Search indexes
"new media" sites.





Namo WebEditor Forums

Windows File Manager revived
How to run it under Vista, Windows 7



Ultimate Windows Tweaker
Windows 7 & Vista - Free


Over61.Info

NOTE: Books linked as public service, not adverts!





Full Civic Literacy Exam



America's News Journal

America's News Daily

The Obama Regime






Gizmos4Sale.Com
- Computers & MORE!


Book links are a public service, not adverts.





"...a search of the Nexis database for "Bush regime" yields 6,769 examples from January 20, 2001 to the present." Link


The 85-15 Rule To Destroy
Private Health Insurance

http://85-15.info/








Like our site?

Why not Tip us?



Grammatica Spelling & Grammar Checker

    Windows - Mac


















Most recent entries
‘Is Mitt Minding The Store?’
Correctly Framing the 2012 Elections
Evidence, finally, of Democrat naivete
The Correct Answer
Topeka, Kansas, Unified School District 501 Places Sexual Deviancy on Its Curriculum




Joe Was Right On Target

The Internet Traffic Report monitors the flow of data around the world. It then displays a value between zero and 100. Higher values indicate faster and more reliable connections.


HowardWasRight

  



Cure Anxiety And Panic Attacks



Get Your Breath Back

A Breakthrough In The Treatment Of Asthma, Allergies, Bronchitis, Eczema, Hay Fever And Disorders Of The Upper Respiratory Tract.


Vista Used Here!







Click For Details!
One of them
recently spotted: shields down.



Search

Advanced Search

Categories
Abortion
Africa
Agenda21/Sustainability
Big Brother
Bird-Brain Flu
BrainWashing
Civil Unrest
Climate Change
ClimateGate
Computers
Congress
Crime
Culture Wars
Deflation/Inflation
Demercrats
Depression/Recession
Disaster
Disorder
Dollar
Domestic Abuse
DoubleSpeak
Economics
Edukshun
Election 2010
Election 2011
Election 2012
Elections
Elitists
Employment/Jobs
Energy
Entertainment
EPA
Euro
Europe
Fascism
Femi-Nazis
Food
Food Police
Foreign Policy
Freedom/Liberty
General
Global Cooling
Global Warming
Government
GreeenIsm
Guns/Self-Defense
Health
Health Care
History
House
Humor/Satire
Immigration
Inflation
Information
Information Police
Internet
Investments
Islam
Judicial Activism
JunkScience
Law
Letters
Life
Medical BS!
Medicine
Middle East
Military
Misc.
Mobs/Riots
Money
MSM
Multiculturalism
MustRead
Nanny State
National Debt
National Security
National Sovereignty
NAU-SPP
NewWorldOrder
ObamaCare
ObamaNation
Offsite
Peaceniks
Police State
Political Correctness
Political Debates
Politics
Presidents
Progressivism
Racism
Religion
Republicrats
Science
Senate
Shadow Government
Social Engineering
Social Security
Socialism
Society
State Of The Onion
States Rights
Stuff
Subversion
Supreme Court
Surveillance State
Taxes
TEA Parties
Terrorism
The Executive
The Republic
Transportation
Unions
United Nations
US Economy
Useful Idiots
War
Wealth
Weather
Welfare State

Monthly Archives
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
Complete Archives
Category Archives

AllAccessMusicRow



Walhello Search

Powered by




 Archive  The View From The Left more... Archive  Letters to the Editormore...