Everyone laughs.ANTI-WATER CHARACTERS: Oh no, we've ran into [UNREALISTIC SITUATION] and we don't know how to fix it.
FISH CHARACTER : [INSERT FISH CHARACTERISTIC HERE]
ANTI-WATER CHARACTERS: Wow, that's so insightful, [FISH CHARACTER]. You've made us look at [UNREALISTIC SITUATION] in a totally new way.
FISH CHARACTER : Will you like me now?
ANTI-WATER CHARACTERS : As if!
You're so cute when you get cynical. Coochi-coo.The_root_of_all_evil said:*Snip*
joethekoeller said:The reason I picked intelligence to be my example is because, well, us Escapists proud ourselves for being intelligent and so I thought it to be a good example.
Frankly it doesn't change things. Intelligence is far more fluid than a simple set of characteristics shared but is related to your ability to adapt to situations that you've not come across before.The question I'd like to discuss exactly how this system works though, but how it changes things.
Yes, it does bother me. You may be able to tell.Whether you believe this skewed portrayal has negative effects and should be changed or whether it doesn't bother you at all.
Very true. Because it does make them inferior -- but being inferior isn't necessarily a bad thing. Some people are taller than others, some more athletic, some better dancers, some are smarter. No matter what you're like, someone is almost assuredly better than you in some way. If people were more comfortable in their own skins, more confident in their own worth, they wouldn't care if someone was smarter than they were.joethekoeller said:I am ready to recognise the skill and ability of anyone who can hear what's wrong with my car just by hearing it. That's a form of intelligence. So far however, while all the intelligent (dang I said it again. What I meant was what you called the people who have "book learning") people I've met are willing to give people credit for being able in a different field, most "avarage" people (who all have their talents and quirks and all that) don't like admitting that "intelligent" people are intelligent, as if it would make them inferior.Susan Arendt said:Unfortunately, people don't tend to appreciate the wide variety of kinds of intelligence. The bloke sitting next to you may not be able to find Tibet on a map, but he can tell you what's wrong with your engine just by listening to it. Don't tell me he's not smart. The traditional "book learning" model of intelligence is the one that most people hold up as being a hallmark of "brains" and therein lies much of the problem. The vast majority of the population is of average intelligence. They're not geniuses, they're not dumb, they're just ordinary, but they're at least bright enough to recognize when someone is "smarter" than they are (or at least has more book learning). And they tend not to like it, it makes them feel inferior, and so they tend to react negatively to it. (These are, of course, broad generalizations.) So let's all make fun of the brainiacs together so we feel good about being ordinary. Ha ha ha.
But let's be honest about something -- the stereotype of the superbrainbox who can't function in society didn't just come out of thin air.
On the better educated subject I do think its appaling that people who have such potential can see it squandered because they cant afford the thousands of dollars it would cost to give them the formal education they require. Unfortunately in my country while education is free until third level, that is you can go all they way to a Bsc Honors degree and the most you pay is a registration fee of 1500 euro a year because we had a housing bubble burst at the same time as the global economy hit recession our government finaces are doing so bad they are looking at reintroducing fees. Which of course with rising unemployment become doubley hard to pay and we risk a generation of talent squandered.Susan Arendt said:Very true. Because it does make them inferior -- but being inferior isn't necessarily a bad thing. Some people are taller than others, some more athletic, some better dancers, some are smarter. No matter what you're like, someone is almost assuredly better than you in some way. If people were more comfortable in their own skins, more confident in their own worth, they wouldn't care if someone was smarter than they were.
(Also, it's perhaps worth pointing out that "smarter" in practice usually means "better educated," which makes it all even more silly. Some folks get the benefit of an excellent education and some don't. Though I do find fault with those without even a desire to learn, I can't possibly knock someone for not having the advantage of a superior education. That stuff's damned expensive.)
Whoa mule whoa. You're using something as an example that you haven't even seen???joethekoeller said:Actually, since I don't live in America nor have access to recent american tv-shows i was just mentioning the L-word since I heard of it.
But they're one of the foremost promoters of it. Ned Flanders used to be just a nice guy, now he's the Bibley-Dibbly-Ibleyist. That's not social commentary, that's exaggeration for lulz.As for the rest, i gotta say you're moving on thin ice when mentioning The Simpsons since the show does not only feature comedy but also a fair dose of social criticism, so this portrayal could mean that they'd like to see it otherwise.
*twitch*I know. And if you check you'll notice I said I picked intelligence as an example because we proud ourselves
Who says we're not? I just said that everyone thinks they are.with being intelligent not because we are intelligent.
What would have been a good idea? The media portayal of N where N is a sub-group? That's a topic for a forum, not really a post.I picked it because since we believe to be intelligent people would rather notice this than a thread about the portrayal of homosexuality or religion or video games or whatever (actually video games might have been a good idea too).
You're confused. I don't even say where I said that?I'm a bit confused about how you say it doesn't change things when you claim it would reinforce the boundary againt "their sort".
Ok.Maybe it's my fault for not being exactly clear, but I wanted to know how the system changes the way we see intelligent people, not so much how we see intelligence