Quote:
Originally Posted by Undertoad
Jonathan Haidt TED Talk
I just found this today, I'm so glad!
To anyone who enjoyed the guy's essay, here he takes 19 minutes to beautifully lay out his thinking on moral psychology and how it relates to liberal vs. conservative.
If you watch this 19 minutes you will never ask "What is wrong with you people" again. You'll know what's wrong -- and you'll be amazed to find that you are wrong, too, and that every culture in earth's history is proof of it.
Try it, you'll like it!
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Ha! I just saw this post! I followed a TED link to the same talk the day before yesterday. It was alink on the OffTopic section of a gaming site I frequent. I was intending to post a link here, but you've already done it.
Any dwellars who haven't seen this yet, I thoroughly recommend doing so. It's brilliant, truly brilliant. That whole idea of preset proclivities to a particular political mindset is something I find very intriguing. Our Kid* passed me a Stephen Pinker book that dealt with these ideas and I was fascinated. This was about 2 or 3 years go I think. I'd say it fundamentally altered my perceptions about politics and people and made me a lot less hostile towards people who have a different political stance to mine.
* cultural note: Our Kid is northern slang for sibling, used both as a description and as a form of address. I am on a mission to spread this particularly bit of dialect cause I like it :P
I think the part of this TED talk that really struck home with me was the final distinction drawn between the liberals who seek to increase fairness and freedoms even at the risk of chaos, and conservatives who seek to preserve order, even at the risk of unfairness or a loss of freedoms.
The reason that struck home with me relates somewhat to that Churchill quote about being a liberal at 20 and a conservative at 30 (or whatever it was). Despite the fact that, in terms of my political beliefs and my attitudes towards issues like immigration, crime and punishment, taxation and benefits, and so forth, I am pretty left wing, revolution no longer looks fun to me *smiles* the preservation of order means more to me now, than it once did. At 18 I would have welcomed the chaos and disruption of revolution with open arms and a ready fist. Nor, now, do I seek out new experiences. I have my cave, and I stay in it *smiles* unless forced out.
That said...despite my conservatism in this regard, my younger self came gleefully forward when watching the news reports of the financial chaos of the last few weeks. Obviously, I don;t actually want the fincnial system to collapse...I feel greatly saddened knowing how many people are affected (possibly myself, if my landlord's troubles do not improve), but there was something exhilirating in watching Capitalism rock on its heels.
[/threaddrift] anyway, watch that talk, it's wonderful. Speaking from experience, the other side look a lot less other, when you know why we follow the political paths we do.
[eta] trying to put classic and Lookout into the same spectrum as UG is very difficult :P The neo-cons have changed all the rules, they have their own little spectrum going on. I don't think if you took classic's views or Lookout's views and moved rightwards that you'd ever encounter UG on your travels.
I think if you place Lookout and Classic next to UG you'd have a textbook example of the difference between conservative and neo-conservative. I, as a leftwinger can have a conversation with Lookout and Classic in which we disagree totally, but in which we are speaking in some kind of common tongue. There are, and you'll not hear me admit this very often *grins*, more values shared than not between the left and the right of mainstream politics.