Waterstone in the UK have the epub version available to buy on their website, bought it yesterday and absolutely loved it!
Woo, dear. Sorry Deks, and anyone annoyed by thread derailment. I got off on one again.
By my standards that wasn't a very bad one, though, so I'll just take a breath and carry on.
I need to work these things through my system sometimes.
Woo, dear. Sorry Deks, and anyone annoyed by thread derailment. I got off on one again.
By my standards that wasn't a very bad one, though, so I'll just take a breath and carry on.
I need to work these things through my system sometimes.
And maybe not write them at three in the morning after a few beers.
That's culture, which is entirely different. Of course they're not going to automatically acquire culture and language - but they are all wired for its acquisition. You keep responding as though the differences are paramount and ignoring the underlying similarities. The human body, and the human mind, works to a particular plan. The actual acquisition of language, or a language, is environmental: the underlying capacity for language, and tendency to respond to that stimuli in certain ways, is innate to the human animal as it has evolved.
I can break a baby's arm in three places and it will grow up with a deformed arm. That doesn't change the fact that all human DNA encodes for the growth of healthy arms. The fact that humans growing up away from contact with other humans utilizing language will never acquire language skills, or at least have great difficulty doing so, doesn't mean that the human brain is not innately structured in such a way that language will emerge with the right stimulus.
You implied it very strongly, particularly as I never challenged or disagreed with what you say here, yet you keep stressing environmental factors and epigenetics to the point that you flat out deny there is any such thing as human nature. How is what you say supposed to read other than as a defence of the blank slate?
But my underlying nature has not changed - I have worn these different clothes over time, but my body remains my body. My body itself has grown and changed over time, but it remains my body. You keep insisting that change can override that, that people can essentially cease being what they are. A human is a human and not another animal, and carries with it certain capacities and possibilities while not carrying certain others.
Do you think I of all people need to be told how environment helps make you what you are? I've frequently banged my head against peoples' refusal to understand that experiences in early life, whether remembered or not, have very real and substantial effects on people as they grow; on their developing physiologies and so on their developing psychologies, developing personalities. My entire problem here is that no-one is doing anything to change the environment, but instead exposing the young to, and reinforcing and promoting, the exact same social environment that I was exposed to. While insisting and believing that they represent change. While they defend the idea that people can change wildly while never actually showing any indication of it. Because they will not act against their social, political and sexual instincts, and all other concerns are secondary to these, which means that reason and ethics and ideals don't mean a thing, because they last only so long as they don't conflict with those needs. People act and think on the basis of what feels right to them, and what feels right is that which satisfies the impulses and drives that feed that animal's particular needs.
One particularly cannot work to change their behaviours and parameters when they refuse to acknowledge that those behaviours and parameters exist to begin with.
Except there is a consistency in that behaviour that makes human reactions mostly predictable, across cultures and across environments. There are also obvious trends, customs and patterns within any given society. To claim that human behaviour is not restrictive or confined by limits is to ignore the social dynamics around one. That is my central point here - that the vast majority of humans exist within a social dynamic that was evolutionarily advantageous for the species and thus which is rarely questioned or challenged.
In general, whether a change or a distinction is a meaningful one is mostly a matter of perspective. If a Christian, a Muslim and a Jew sit down and discuss theology, they may, from their perspective, be massively different and contradictory, with yawning gulfs between them. But from the perspective of one who is not religious, say, there is little difference, and that apparent gulf is no division at all. It's too easy to focus on the differences and the malleable aspects and so ignore the fundamental similarities.
Humans are, when you get down to it, all essentially the same and all working to the same innate plan; variety and environmental influence and plasticity aside. Like all species, they have the capacity and the imperative to adapt, and to experiment. But if there exist consistent behavioural tendencies across environments and across cultures - and there do - then these tendencies stem, in some measure, from what we might call human nature. This, in turn, is the consequence of the shared genetics and similar physiologies of all humans; we are all products of the same environmental pressures and thus are encoded for similar behaviours that have proven beneficial.
Of course people change; like everything, they exist in motion and are never consistent; they develop from one moment to the next. Again, I am not disagreeing with any of this. But they hold the same general shape, and no amount of change can be realistically expected to make people into something they're not.
The vast majority of humans will never challenge or discard the tribalist mentality, and thus will never acknowledge that they are reinforcing an abusive system that destroys lives and other beings. They apologise for and defend the system, and talk change while obstructing it at every turn. One cannot solve a problem by reinforcing the cause of the problem.
The only possible explanation is that they are naturally hardwired for this. There's no point in being angry about it, it's who and what they are. If you disagree - if you think that people in general can be something other than that - then show it. I want to be proven wrong here. But the years have instead just piled on ever more instances of people prioritizing their status in the social group over the very reason and ethics they otherwise defend and exhibit so eloquently. You say people can choose to change - indeed, yes, but it would never occur to them to change or to want to, it likely wouldn't register with them that they were working within a certain system anyway, because they are given to certain behaviours that satisfy the instinctual needs and drives of the human animal, statistically insignificant outliers aside.
Constantly, for me growing up, there was the binary - in history, in politics, in academia, in science, there were the behaviours and attitudes that were identical to those that left me in the state I was in, and the values and virtues I aspired to. It used to confuse and demoralise me to see the two so closely intertwined, but I still assumed that you could separate one from the other. But eventually I realized that the civilization I was a part of emerged entirely from the social instincts of tribalists - the same instincts that caused them to relate to me the way that they did. The entire thing was a sham. You can't separate them, you can't tell yourself it's all a big misunderstanding, that people can turn around and demonstrate those worthy qualities without marinating it in the same assumptions and behaviours that led to me losing my grip on life. I've been waiting for years to be proven wrong, but always there is the same implicit message - that you can't have civilization without kowtowing to social, political and sexual dynamics, and those dynamics render all virtues, in practice, meaningless.
What does objectivity and reason and compassion matter when you'll exhibit them with such admirable commitment only to turn your back on them whenever they threaten to challenge tribalist instinct?
Again, these distinctions are irrelevant. To swear or not to swear is on a level far removed from the basic nature I'm talking about. Pointing to different clothing styles or hair styles doesn't make the underlying similarity in body plan go away.
Obviously. Because people change. That is not in dispute. What is in dispute is the idea that these superficial changes mean that there is no innate human nature that governs behaviour and perception, and more specifically the idea that people will question the assumptions their nature gives them.
The issue is: it is not a "radical" change. You keep making these changes out to be more important than they are. Moreover, you can only become "informed" if you want to be. If stimuli go against your instinctive preferences or threaten to challenge your social and political status, you would likely ignore them - indeed, when presented with information that conflicts with the beliefs that bring them security, people will usually double down on those original beliefs and aggressively reject the new input.
Again, these are superficial differences and changes that say nothing regarding the capacity to actually change one's nature. Flexibility in diet in response to perceived needs is hardly some daring challenge to innate human behaviour - it is innate human behaviour.
Exactly. And when one's instinctual nature will not permit them to break ranks or question certain understandings, they will not look for that information, or will not accept it when presented it, and will not make the decision to change - though they'll probably wrap their general conservatism in the rhetoric of change and insist that they're altering the way they function, that they're "progressing". That because they've painted it a different colour it's now a different object entirely.
Slow change, over millions of years. An individual can change much of the superficial detail, but a change to the underlying humanity requires widespread environmental shift and most likely generations. Yes, I am aware that certain changes can happen in what many would have called surprisingly short periods. But can you demonstrate that all these gradual changes in behaviour were not made in accordance with certain universal human requirements and attributes?
Has the Christian converted to Islam, or has he actually rejected monotheism or organized religion? These are very different degrees of change.
My problem is this: why speak of change if you're not going to change? If you're going to constantly replay the same perspectives and biases and social dynamics? If you're going to be reasonable and responsive to objective realities and new revelations in one breath and then slam the door on them the next? This is exactly what I mean about people here - you're a cruel trap that promises so much, but when we get right down to it there's no escaping the tribalist system: the same system that is the cause of the things you're ostensibly trying to change, and the same system that unapologetically destroys lives, that neglects and abuses and exploits. That is mired in blind hypocrisy.
Show me the capacity for change. Show me that ideology that strokes and conforms to innate assumptions won't be embraced, that instinct can be successfully overturned in favour of something better. Show me allegiance to ideals and not to status. Show me the understanding of what innate qualities you need to be aware of so you can challenge them, rather than refusing to acknowledge their existence. Show me that you can think outside of the tribal system.
Show me that I can join and learn from you, and not have every lesson rendered meaningless.
...shifting away from the current garbage socio-economic system is possible via exposure of the general population to relevant general education, critical thinking and problem solving. as well as actively shifting towards a new way of thinking.
Then perhaps I should have been more specific to state 'the concept of Human nature as currently perceived by others that it means Humans are born greedy, selfish, violent, etc.'.
We have the capacity to become selfish, violent, greedy, etc. if exposed to environment where these traits are dominant.
In Capitalism, they are, ergo why a large group of Humans exhibit them.
Even ones who do not behave like this all the time exhibit these notions in a diminished way because they are surrounded by a large majority who do.
I was stating that environment can and does change ones behaviour.
So they try to do the best they can... they expose their children to different ideas and patterns of behaviour
The social dynamic was at one time necessary due to living in scarcity-like conditions for most of our existence.
However, since development of science and technology and abundant production of goods and services, most people aren't aware of the realities.
How many know that we are producing enough food every year to feed between 10 and 17 billion people?
How many know that over 40% of the grown food in question is actively wasted?
How many know that we had the ability to tap into geothermal as a main power source since 1911, or that an MIT study in 2006 showed we can tap into 200 Zettajoules of geothermal power with technology we had at our disposal back then, and that 2000 Zettajoules will be extractable with improved technologies?
Very few.
Furthermore, most people live in a cycle of cyclical consumption, and were never exposed to relevant general education, critical thinking and problem solving - resulting in people prone to manipulation and being used (smart enough to operate the machinery but dumb enough not to question the system).
Simply speaking, our problems are systemic.
Here is a fundamental similarity that most Humans seem to ignore: 'we are all humans, period'.
I try not to see people through their little societal distinctions of artificial concepts like religion, nationality, etc., because I observed long ago that these things only serve to divide people - create social stratification - and, incidentally, the less people are exposed to, the more they seem to focus on these small divisions that provide a false sense of stability.
Science and the scientific method have no use of 'belief' or 'truth' (neither are mentioned in the definition) and instead focus on what is more probable to occur.
However, there is a bit of a flaw here in your reasoning.
On social networks, there is a growing amount of Humans who discard the current system and question the tribalist mentality.
...People also have access to varied sourced of information they read so they can see which sources are more or less credible.
I am not angry - there is nothing to be angry about.
I certainly encountered my share of people who did exactly what you describe, but even then I realized that not all Humans are like this - merely that the Humans who did that were simply uneducated in relevant matters - and upon initial conversations with them, they demonstrated a really big lack of exposure to many relevant subjects - repeating only what the politicians, the news, and culture keep telling them.
But they also demonstrated a potential to go beyond that... and once you show this to them on their terms, usually they will go along with it.
In the end, those who are hardcore proponents of the existing system and ways of doing things probably will not change their stance until the system itself collapses and threatens their livelihood (at which point, people are usually far more open to change).
External forces impacting Human sensory inputs and creating certain responses. Since we all have a different biochemical makeup, each person will experience these stimuli in a different way (perhaps not markedly different, but enough to differentiate between the two people in question), and not everyone will be exposed to identical stimulus in the same environment.
I see... so you don't see concepts such as fundamental respect for all life, sharing personal resources and knowledge, actively helping others and not asking for rewards in return (let alone money) as 'radical change' from behaviours such as: stomping over others as well as actively cheating and lying to get what a person wants, consume in an excess fashion as the culture we live in dictates, go into debt, and contribute to murder and torture of animals (just to name a few)?
But let me ask you a question... what would you personally see as a 'radical change' in that case?
I would disagree. Mainly because most people were never encouraged to question themselves and what they were told.
Hence, when they are presented with notions that seemingly 'attack' their personal values, they get 'defensive'.
Science has no such hangups, and neither do actual scientists. They change their perceptions and stances (usually) when new (and more accurate) evidence is presented - but they also do not necessarily think that previous ones were 'true' to begin with.
How many Humans were taught not to incorporate 'belief' into their life?
I hadn't met such people in my life yet (though that doesn't mean much), but I can tell you that I had to work my rear end off to eliminate this ridiculous notion from my way of thinking - a deprogramming if you will.
Science has no such hangups, and neither do actual scientists. They change their perceptions and stances (usually) when new (and more accurate) evidence is presented - but they also do not necessarily think that previous ones were 'true' to begin with.
Namely, they followed the evidence on where it lead them and they presented it as such, but they usually wouldn't claim the results in an 'absolute' way.
As can most, if not all, "progressive", ostensibly self-questioning people with admirable values and ideals, which was my entire point to begin with.But individual scientists can be very much attached to their preconceptions regardless of evidence to the contrary.
I'm mostly on your side, Deks.
Debate side, Nasat; in terms of the areas in which you two disagree, I find myself agreeing more with Deks's positions than yours, no slight to you intended.
It's great to see the Voth again, and I would be pleased if their development from Distant Shores: "Brief Candle and Myriad Universes: Places of Exile is picked up. Is it too late for Voyager to instigate the Delta Coalition (from PoE) or the Delta Alliance (from STO) in this timeline?
The only real issue I have, and it's a pet peeve I have with all of Kirsten's Voyager novels.... Everyone seems to suffer from some form of guilt or angst over something. I suppose we all have our crosses to bear, I know I do.
The only real issue I have, and it's a pet peeve I have with all of Kirsten's Voyager novels.... Everyone seems to suffer from some form of guilt or angst over something. I suppose we all have our crosses to bear, I know I do.
I suppose being only a year or so post-Destiny there's going to be a general solemnity and sobriety. A product of the times, perhaps?
Question for the native speakers (I'm referring to the paperback version, but I guess the ebook text is the same)
on page 40, at the bottom, one sentence contains ........"proscribed penalty".....
It hast to be prescribed, anything else would be illogical. I guess I struggled with those words in the last Voyager novel. Only now I ran into it again.
proscribed = prohibited
prescribed = required
Did I miss something? Am I wrong? Is it a mistake? I'm confused.
Question for the native speakers (I'm referring to the paperback version, but I guess the ebook text is the same)
on page 40, at the bottom, one sentence contains ........"proscribed penalty".....
It hast to be prescribed, anything else would be illogical. I guess I struggled with those words in the last Voyager novel. Only now I ran into it again.
proscribed = prohibited
prescribed = required
Did I miss something? Am I wrong? Is it a mistake? I'm confused.
I'm pretty sure you're right that that's an error, but it doesn't seem to be an uncommon one in general; doing a Google, I see a few other people make the same one. So that's not on your English, no.
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