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“There are three things extremely hard: steel, a diamond, and to know one’s self.”
– Benjamin Franklin
...and in the meantime, your "identity" may have moved on.Yeah, but hard doesn't mean impossible. And if you're wrong, who's gonna know? And if you decide your first attempt was wrong, I'll not fault you for amending it.
...and in the meantime, your "identity" may have moved on.
Yeah, identity as a process rather than a thing makes a lot more sense.Maybe. For me identity doesn't have to be a static thing, and continuing self-reflection is worth it.
Neither of the two extremes of 'tabla rasa' and 'What I am is completely of my own making', will bear the weight of knowing that two very different personalities can 'emerge' from very similar formative experiences and environments.
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Ah, OK. I see moral responsibility as a different (though not unrelated) problem, more to do with the finer points of freewill & determinism/indeterminism; a subject for a different thread, perhaps.
Of course, some questions may not make much sense under this premise.
OK, now I see what you're saying. That kind of attitude sounds like a sort of fatalism, but whether the motive is laziness or abrogation of responsibility, it clearly helps no-oneIt's not about morality actually, it's about empowerment.
I've known parents who swore their kids were simply 'not smart enough' to do well at school. They chose to believe that intelligence was innate, not made, thus absolving themselves of responsibility. Same kids, with good tuition and focused attention, went to the top. Same applies to ourselves. If we put down our foibles to innate character, we give ourselves permission to be powerless.
I've known parents who swore their kids were simply 'not smart enough' to do well at school. They chose to believe that intelligence was innate, not made, thus absolving themselves of responsibility. Same kids, with good tuition and focused attention, went to the top. Same applies to ourselves. If we put down our foibles to innate character, we give ourselves permission to be powerless.
Maybe some parents use that as a way to escape responsibility. But I've been on the other side, where the flip-side argument is used to escape responsibility - the teacher who says, "Kids can do anything if they want to. So, the reason your kid appears to be struggling is that he's not trying hard enough." Therefore, not the teacher's fault, right?
Funny thing is, a different teacher from the same school said, "I've never seen anyone try harder than your kid. It takes him longer than the other kids, but he works so hard that he can get it done if you're patient with him."
Hmm.
The latter strategy seems to have worked the best as he moved through school - to acknowledge that he's different than the average kid and to teach him how to use those differences when it's to his advantage and how to work through the differences when they're to his disadvantage.
I'm absolutely convinced my 2 kids came with pre-programmed differences that had nothing to do with any "nurturing". They've been impacted by their environment to be sure, but they were not blank slates. It would be stupid to try to write on an iPAD with a piece of chalk because of an assumption that all slates start the same.
My favorite bit of parenting advice is Dobson's statement that "Yes, parents are important. Just remember you're not that important."
I don't know you well enough to make any assertions, so it's just a suggestion for you to consider. I idolized my dad when I was young. I still do, but I think I'm a more balanced person now. In my youth I nearly copied his every step. I thought my mom had zero impact on me. Then, as I got older, I started to realize all the subtle ways I was like my mom. The older I get the more I realize her influence on me was equally large.
The point is, there can be influences on your life that you are unaware of, and sometimes it takes an outside nudge to get you thinking about them. I'm just trying to give that little nudge. If, in the end, you disagree with me, then it is what it is. You are the expert on you - not me.
But think about this comment. Why is taking your place in the adult world linked to a profession? Not all cultures make that link. It's even a relatively recent one in Western society.
Yeah, notice how many of those are connected to something material? Food, sports, money, etc.
Too often people get hooked on the abstract side of ritual and start to think, "Only Americans value freedom." Huh? Not at all true. But grilling hamburgers on the 4th of July ... I GUARANTEE you nothing in the world tastes like corn-fed beef grilled over mesquite coals. Globalization has (sadly) done a good job of pushing uniculture, but that taste originated here. And the unique association of hearing the Franklin/Jefferson narrative along with that physical experience is (for me) what makes culture. Meaning was learned through a contextual combination of words and things - not from an abstract lesson in school.
Other cultures can teach the same abstract lesson through different combinations of words and things, but the way I learned it becomes valuable to me. And it becomes a way I can teach that same lesson to my kids with passion. Trying to teach it using a different culture is largely a fake.
Well, when it comes to processes (as opposed to objects) I often find the analogy "river" quite illustrative and helpful.Yeah, sometimes people assume restrictions the OP did not impose. It happens. I've learned to go with it.
How much of your identity would you say comes from the external (culture, community, family, profession) vs. what comes from within you?
a blank slate doesn't mean we 'start the same' (at birth). by then we're already shaped by our experiences in utero.
and I dispute that parents are 'not that important'. even if it had a grain of truth to it, to embrace the idea would be irresponsible.
Even if parts of my identity are taken from externally learned ideas and values, the particular confluence of those traits within me -- the complex ways in which they combine organically within my dynamic, growing self -- are entirely due to myself.
So, yes, I did build that.
eudaimonia,
Mark
Well, I have many other rituals that aren't connected to material things. I'm as unmaterialistic as they come, but those rituals aren't really connected to a culture.
Like, my family always rally around the kitchen. Mum and I always spend time together in there.
I don't think it's a western one, just that I don't really fit in with most because I don't drink, party or crazy stuff like the kids I grew up with.
I understand what you're saying about influences we don't realise, and I had some of those, but went through it all and deleted them. There were people in my life who were very negative and even though the negativity was focused on others, I did see how it affected me inadvertently.
I don't know, is globalisation always a bad thing? In some ways, yes, but I wonder if it has limited racism and narrow-mindedness a good deal with the Internet. Think about it. If it wasn't for online communities, you'd never have met a female from Australia to compare these notes with.
For a final example of identity and how unique it makes us, let's compare our differences
You have children, I have a dog I treat like a child
You live in the northern hemisphere, and I'm down here upside down!
You love the taste of an organic-bred meat; I like desserts better.
You have snow; I've never been in the snow.
Like this. Why the kitchen? Why can't you get that same feeling of connection outside in the yard? Because there is a special, material content to a kitchen. A kitchen is about food ... and food plays a HUGE role in ritual.
My favourite Australian movie is the Castle, because it's a good depiction of the family values I was bought up with and the fighting spirit. Plus, Michael Caton is funny without ever offending anyone. His characters have charisma in endearing, warming ways. I'm enclosing the trailer and intro which are just funny. That pool table . . .
Nor do we start the same in utero.
Then you missed the point since he said parents are important. Are you not familiar with dialectical methods? The point is that some parents make it all about them. They act as if the child is just a puppet and the community has no role. IMO it's the outcome of an extreme individualism ... I have to do it all myself. The point is - no, though parents are important you don't have to do it all yourself - you can't do it all yourself; things will happen that are outside of your control.
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