• Home
  • About
  • Concepts, Coins, and Terms
    • Anthropolitical Psychology
      • Civilizational Narcissism
      • Conflict – Language Uptake – Social Programming and Scripting – A Suggestion
        • Language Uptake – Programming – On Learning to Listen
        • Mouth –> Ear –> Mind –> Heart System
        • Social Grammar
      • Facsimile Bipolar Political Sociopathy
      • Malignant Narcissism
      • Narcissistic Scripting
      • Normative Remirroring
      • Paranoid Delusional Narcissistic Reflection of Motivation
    • FTAC – “From The Awesome Conversation”
    • God Mob
    • Intellectual Battlespace
    • Islamic Small Wars
    • New Old Now Old Far Out and Lost Left
    • Political Spychology
    • Shimmer
  • Library
    • About Language
    • Russian Section
  • Comments and Contact

BackChannels

~ Conflict, Culture, Language, Psychology

BackChannels

Tag Archives: language

FTAC – From Correspondence – A Way of Looking at Language

01 Tuesday Jan 2013

Posted by commart in FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Philology

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

cultural technology, language, social technology

It’s still holiday season here, S. — well, it is everywhere — and I’m going to indulge in some reading, but in response to your note, I would suggest language invention is wild.

God gave man a mouth, ear, and mind system tied to improvements in survival.

Language is, in essence, a social technology.

At the other end of the spectrum with languages that are adaptable, have bodies of lore (oral tradition) and literature (written tradition), one may work with the machinery — grammar, social grammar, cultural memory, lexicon — toward any number of purposes, practical and technical, poetic and dream forming.

It is within the power of language to both reflect and create perception about the nature of reality.

Few, if any, constituencies on the planet experience both the plasticity of language in many voices and mixed languages and the absolutely dismal consequences of language possessed and exploited by minds both venal and atrocious with ambitions.

It’s impossible to separate cause from effect — a predisposition toward a convenient voice; a voice encouraging a certain disposition — but if it’s in the mind, it’s in the language of the mind, specifically in fragments, phrases, sentences, and in favored chains of thought — or “habits of mind” — or in helpful or damnable invention.

There are many things that separate man from other nature, but of all of them, I would count our language ability, signal to an extraordinary intelligence, imagination, and memory (with many levels, from sound-making to symbol-stabilizing to culture-creating ideas), as our most divine and most destructive technology.

–By the Author, December 30, 2012

FTAC: Empathy is not a Given – A Note on Conscience and Language

07 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

conscience, consciousness, language, power

It took me a long time to realize that “empathy is not a given in human affairs” — not even between brothers. The development of a quality — empathy’s an interesting one — requires motivation (for me: wanting to be a writer). Moving sideways but down the same line: “conscience” is also a quality developed in language out of perceived personal and social necessity. Essentially, it’s a code of behavior. The kicker, imho, involves a simple two-part argument about language itself: language behavior clinically observed may be predictable — it will have nouns and will be rule-based; however (!), language invention may be wild (it is, I assure you and will provide reference if necessary) and it’s that invention in language in which each culture suspends itself.

A friend who had cared for a senile and dying parent for some time said to me about her experience, “Can you imagine what it must have been like to be in the presence of an elder suffering from senility without the concept of senility?”

You may see where this may go with regard to excesses, cruelties, and sadism on the part of cultures that have invested heavily in the legitimacy of absolute power or who haven’t registered as problems bipolar mania, for example, or messianic delusion (we could build a long list of concepts not shared across cultures and therefore invisible from one to the other).

Remember this event? http://www.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/africa/08/28/libya.gadhafi.nanny/index.html

How could somebody do that? How could an entire family hide it (or, sadly, do similar things)?

Somebody had convinced themselves they had the privilege and right, and that was their consciousness and conscience.

Yesterday, another “malignant narcissist” had his military prepare nerve gas for use, probably, in his own state — estimated impact if released in an urban area: 100,000 dead within minutes. In that monster’s head, he may have the privilege and right and cause to drop those weapons in relation to his own (going colloquial here) “head trip”. Assad’s cloak has been Soviet Era Ba’ath Party ideology and encouragement, and — the same as with Saddam — it has helped him endorse his own grandiose delusions.

I’ve wandered long here and apologize if it’s too much. Nonetheless, if “language has a power” it’s this power to produce our story and suspend us — person and culture — in it, and the content of it, whether it defines a strong leader, a good man, greatness in some way, perfidy in another may determine what will matter to us and how conscience will work or seem to be absent altogether.

FTAC: Conflict, Language, and Pricks

07 Friday Dec 2012

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Philology, Psychology

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

conflict, cultural evolution, global, language, psychology

A Facebooker said, “Conscience does not work in vacuum. Impact of incidents do occur over our reasoning and may even our truthfulness get shattered.” [STET].

+++

We may be more organized and programmed by the possession of language than we know.

The behavior itself is transparent (unless deliberately observed); the arrangement of associations between symbols may be taken for granted (“Everyone knows that . . . .”) until interrupted by a work of art, poetry, or war; the social grammar — what is good to say, what is not, and when or under what circumstances — of a language (language culture) has also a transparency to it as the earliest embedded thoughts, positions (attitudes), and behaviors (from how to greet to when to lie) have a “low level” or essentially subconscious life in the mind.

Those who study or work with acknowledged or well accepted as existing psychopathology (DSM present and approved, one might say) frequently apply a term to whether a person afflicted (e.g., by bipolar disorder; schizophrenia; narcissistic personality disorder, and so on) recognizes the presence of his problem. If he does, we say he “exhibits insight” and that’s helpful; if not, “he hasn’t a clue” — and others may be invited or obligated to intervene for the health of (now) the patient and for the defense of everyone in his path.

As psychology takes an interest in the life of the mind of the person, the field enjoys a convenient restriction: the concern is with the person. However, the person may turn out a leader of others, one well enough to charm and seduce, and then demonic, wicked, or wild enough to make a mess. The smaller figures — e.g., Charles Manson — are easily the subject of conversation; the larger ones — e.g., Constantine — become a little less touchable.

We have to find our way.

I feel the species will tend toward health and survival on a cooperative basis elicited by, no better word than this one, pricks.

+++

A smaller world with more potent weapons bodes ill, but the challenges may be met by a rapidly globalizing consciousness — in large numbers, we’re working with one another across innumerable barriers and miles, and that’s going to have an effect on normative behaviors and on the invention (through language) of a global culture sufficient to rein in or shape what in earlier days would have been more isolated events with equally isolated cultural antecedents.

The linguistic genius of babies: what does it mean for grown-ups?

29 Thursday Nov 2012

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Psychology, Referral

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

cultural interface, culture, language, language uptake, learning, primary language

The linguistic genius of babies: what does it mean for grown-ups?.

via The linguistic genius of babies: what does it mean for grown-ups?.

I hope the authors at Teflresearch produce more pieces on primary language uptake.  Were I to channel and narrow this blog toward greater and more rigorous academic publishing, I would want to arrange around the interest in learning the culture-driven development of metonymy, social grammar, attitudes, and behaviors — all of that to help lift ourselves out of some trouble with one another.

FTAC – Culture and Language – On the Power of a Fairy Tale

27 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, Philology

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

ears, fairy tales, hearing, language, linguistics, literature, mind, mouth, psychology, sound, templates, uptake, voice

I had mentioned the fairy tale “The Emperor’s New Clothes”* as a favorite template in talking about conflict and power, and the person responding wondered about how quickly young minds were manipulated even by the design of children’s literature.  One might call that a power-centered view, i.e., that adult authors have set out to subjugate the next generation of children (God willing), albeit perhaps to best suit the dictates, whims, and sadism of an autocrat (God forbid it).

🙂

I don’t think that’s how language works through our species — my inclination is to view language universally as a natural and naturally evolving behavior fit to essential ecological and larger environmental conditions.

In regard to that, I cannot say it emphatically enough: read Dan Everett!

Here’s the post from The Awesome Conversation:

+++

I would dismiss “manipulation” out of hand as regards language uptake. In the way of words, or what I refer to as “language metonymy” (I feel awfully alone Out Here, lol), it calls up unnecessary associations, e.g., paranoia, victimization, dominance. Basically, the term may collide with a more instinctual tendency toward autonomy and confidence in human’s sense of “locus of control”. 

In that one may regard, and should, human language as part of the natural expression of the species, I happen to believe that “uptake” — the learning of a system of sounds — starts when the ears become active in the womb. We’re that smart! 🙂:) Sounds in that experience may not have association with objects, much less complex ideas, but the important repeated ones may be remembered (eh, mama? papa?) and further associated with their emotional affect. I’m suggesting, not telling, I don’t think anyone knows how it feels to be minus three months old. Nonetheless, it seems reasonable that our common, species-wide, language experience starts with the onset of hearing.

Let’s skip a lot of ground and go to those first legends. In that every culture is first and foremost a language culture (there’s something to argue right there, but stay with me a moment), each has a way of composing its existence and in both practical and teleological realms and through its language, by which I refer to all human symbolic expression, the culture passes itself through to its children. I believe that’s as simple as it gets and partially sustained in “uncontacted peoples” and the most isolated of the world’s remote tribal peoples (who have used their mouths and ears to make themselves more comfortable — or to survive — in their own world invented partially in mind in the carving out of their own way compatible with their environment and pleasing or sensible to themselves).

About “The Emperor’s New Clothes”: “Andersen’s tale is based on a story from the Libro de los ejemplos (or El Conde Lucanor, 1335),[2] a medieval Spanish collection of fifty-one cautionary tales with various sources such as Aesop and other classical writers and Persian folktales, by Juan Manuel, Prince of Villena (1282–1348). Andersen did not know the Spanish original but read the tale in a German translation titled “So ist der Lauf der Welt”.[3] In the source tale, a king is hoodwinked by weavers who claim to make a suit of clothes invisible to any man not the son of his presumed father; whereas Andersen altered the source tale to direct the focus on courtly pride and intellectual vanity rather than adulterous paternity.”

(Reference: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Emperor’s_New_Clothes)

1335!

A European writer, probably familiar, doubtlessly, with Aristotle’s dictum to “educate, entertain, and delight” pulls from an older Spanish tale some components to create a little entertainment, so says the author of the Wikipedia piece, about “courtly pride and intellectual vanity”, which is not far from themes involving narcissism and “malignant narcissism” associated with autocracy and conflict. I would chance that the magical element — invisible clothes — goes farther back in the Spanish experience and may have an interface with the “Golden Age”, but I would need more library, lol, and possibly Spanish to get that trace.

Long answer: it’s not “manipulation” with fairy tales, so much as the practical demands of extant realities and related aesthetic and intellectual conclusions and preferences. Working within Hans Christian Anderson’s talent and love was some transmuting process accessing, in essence, a literary base larger than the one with which he was born. By way of his experience and inspiration, we have a long-loved, long-lived story about power and vanity, and it has wide and continuing and natural resonance in those it reaches.

+++

How may conversations about language affect language?

Heisenberg’s principle has been well acknowledged.  With language in particular and its relationship to three fundamental elements of mind in conflict psychology — consciousness, self-consciousness, and conscience — it has special significance: observations about language and language behavior, much including criticisms as well as the most clinical, objective, and theoretical ideas, needs must be entertained in language by minds engaged in conflict and processing what they hear through their own arrangements of symbols.

An illness that starts with a microbe at least recapitulates itself for a while, generally long enough for research to tackle with fair predictability the behavior and pathways taken on the way toward weakening and destroying in whole or part a living system.

By contrast, a conflict planted and generated within the mind and both nourished and sustained by language culture through its arrangement of nouns, legends, tales, stories, reports, poems, plays, songs, dances, paintings, etc. — package it up and call it “language metonymy” — stays a moving target with many ways of responding to challenges posted by new information.  In perhaps an evolutionary way, some changes may be entertained and embraced while others remain  favored and either functioning or pleasing by way of the symbolic arrangements and constructs so maintained.

Perhaps language is the music of the mind, founded on repeated sounds memorized, parroted, reinvented, and endlessly expressed.

We employ language functionally, of course, but perhaps we enjoy it most, I think, for how it works on the heart, colors our lives, and lends or shares with each a little bit of what is great and legendary within and within potential.

Related Internal Reference

*“FTAC – A Great Mission”.  Conflict Backchannels, November 26, 2012: “The fairy tale I’ve played up in relation to contemporary conflict has been “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” which gets at the essential components involving corruption, power, and speech. http://deoxy.org/emperors.htm Those who follow my themes will recognize in it the “malignant narcissist” and the related and fearful pandering and toadying involved as well as the innocent bravery of the child who says what is plain.”

FTAC – A Great Mission

26 Monday Nov 2012

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Philology

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

cultivation, cultural, cultural transmission, culture, development, geospatial, language

The fairy tale I’ve played up in relation to contemporary conflict has been “The Emperor’s New Clothes,” which gets at the essential components involving corruption, power, and speech. http://deoxy.org/emperors.htm Those who follow my themes will recognize in it the “malignant narcissist” and the related and fearful pandering and toadying involves as well as the innocent bravery of the child who says what is plain.

I’ve remarked this to “M” with reference to development: with age (plus Facebook and blogging), I’ve become both more aware of geospatial variables in improving qualities of living anywhere as well as culture-wide variables that either abet or impede the creation of more survivable societies.

In tactics, that comes down to looking over a neighborhood, town, or region plus population, assessing its suffering and asking what can be ameliorated, improved, or introduced toward a greater and benign general good.

In the values components, integrity counts as may a benign will to include more people in more good things, and then added emphasis on apportioned responsibility, so that neglect or willful blindness are not allowed to remain contributors to greater sorrows.

Regarding the life of the mind in literature: the discussion is more important than the illustration that promotes it, but it’s the illustration in the head — play, poem, story, legend, myth, instruction, song, painting, dance — that transmits cultures across generations.

Uncontacted peoples and those “contacted” but remaining within state protection essentially live with less challenged (uncontacted) or softly defended (because they are welcome to leave when they are ready) language.

A primitive Amazonian tribe of fewer than 150 souls (reference: linguist Daniel Everett) may go many generations — even for something like forever — left alone in the modern world. Nations involving millions or tens of millions or hundreds of millions haven’t so cozy an option — and there we are back with a geospatial or area-wide approach to change (in the direction of a higher level of integration of many systems, both by way of physical infrastructure and of the underlying structure of the mind that finds expression through art and language).

FTAC – A Note on the Dark Mirror in Language

20 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

agitprop, conquest, dark mirror, defense, delusion, delusional, dominance, grandiose, Hamas, ideation, Israel, language, leaving, magical thinking, Moses, Pharaoh, propaganda, rhetoric, sophistry, submission

Language contains a dark mirror.

It allows or even tricks Hutu into accusing Tutsi of planning the genocide of the Hutu, but when this happens, it is actually the Hutu who have in mind the slaughter of the Tutsi in their entirety.

The dark mirror in language has a poisonous base: all it takes, it seems, is a small suggestion that God favors . . . blue eyes, for example, not green, and an elaborating process takes over . . . blue eyes and blonde, pure of heart and race, superior to all the rest of mankind, and ready to prove it out of factories melting ore and transforming it into cold steel.

The dark mirror in language confuses the mind: it convinces the Ayatollah dressed in white that he is God’s emissary today even while he runs Evin Prison and doles out patronage to thugs who then keep suppressed the more true revolutionary forces of Iran; it convinces Hamas who agreeing to truce in 2009 that it may continue launching rockets at Israeli residential space — more than 1,000 of such attacks in 2012 alone — because it believes it has a divine right and cause, one that allows it to exceed limits not only as regards its ambitions for the Jews (articulated: genocide right to the last Jew hiding behind a rock or tree) but in regard to the minds and bodies of its own children and women whom it keeps placed around its weapons and materiel stores and before itself in battle.

The Jewish story begins not with conquest but with fleeing an ugly condition — enslavement in Egypt under Pharaoh.  With the direct intercession of God and with the company of a great mixed multitude. Canaan and the Canaanites were in the future and for 40 years the hard scrabble of desert was to be the reward for leaving Egypt.

In the archaeology, Canaanite and Hebrew artifacts have been found in proximity, but, not yet, evidence of a battle royal, suggesting perhaps that the story is an idealization, a template, an illustration of an historic change in ways of life. Again, for reading, The Peace and Violence of Judaism (Oxford University Press) provides a straightforward compilation, neither always pretty nor ugly, of the defense and military doctrine of the Israelite.

For the record, about 20 percent of the population of modern Israel is Muslim and Muslims at their own discretion may elect to serve in the Israeli Defense Forces, and some do.

Reference

Beno, Goel.  “Muslim woman: Arabs must enlist in IDF.”  YNet News, June 28, 2012.

Hoffman, Jordan.  “His deep, dark secret: He’s Arab, Muslim and serves in the IDF.” The Times of Israel, November 10, 2012.

Jewish Virtual Library.  “Biblical Jerusalem: From Canaanite City to Israelite Capital”.

Oppenheim, James S.  “Jews, Muslims, and the Halls of Dark Mirrors.”  Oppenheim Arts & Letters, July 7, 2009.  Excerpt:

“Muslims who determine the worth of women as half that of men . . . Jews who would determine that their study of the All may require (lesser) others to support them: these may be the first distorted mirrors in the hall of dark mirrors that would make Hamas and the haredi liberating forces–and all others “kafir”–such are the opposite mirrors that ascribe to the other one’s own worst and most distorted contemplations.

Those mirrors are there because the writers of the monotheist foundation texts found a way to elevate their audiences into an atmosphere engineered around divine right.  Jews and the gentiles, Believers and the “kafir”, the righteous and holy and the sinners–how deep those divides that for their existence rely on not much more than stubborn ideation or “habits of mind” and the political power that comes of wielding intellectual levers and wedges that divide some humans from others in accord with their literary endowments.”

My perception of conditions have change but not my comprehension of the natural basis for the pursuit of health, individuation, and freedom.

Ruda, Bennett.  “Muslims in the IDF–It’s Not Just the Druse.”  Daled Amos, July 29, 2011.

Science News.  “Earliest Known Hebrew Text in Proto-Canaanite Script Discovered in Area Where “David Slew Goliath.”  Science Daily, November 3, 2008.  Related update: Boyle, Alan.  “3,000-year-old artifacts reveal history behind biblical David and Goliath.”  Cosmic Log on NBC News, May 8, 2012.

Smith, Peter.  “Christian Arab youth come under fire over desire to enlist in IDF.”  The Right Context, November 3, 2012.

Wikipedia.  “Israel Defense Forces”.  Subsection: “Minorities in the IDF”.

Wikipedia.  “Merneptah Stele“.

Wikipedia.  “Muslim supporters of Israel”.

Yitzhaki, Michal Yaakov.  “An Officer and a Muslim Zionist.”  Israel Hayom, September 7, 2012.

Yossi, Yehoshua.  “First female Arab soldier joints elite unit 669.”  YNet News, April 4, 2008.

YouTube.  “Muslims soldiers serving in the Israeli Army – Audio (1/2)”.  Posted September 11, 2009.

“I’m joining the army in order to make a change, to make peace between the nations.” From the film Ameer Got His Gun.  

FTAC – Point & Counterpoint – With Guest Writer Waseem M. Altaf

20 Tuesday Nov 2012

Posted by commart in Conflict - Culture - Language - Psychology, FTAC - From The Awesome Conversation, Islamic Small Wars

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

consciousness, cultural transmission, education, evolution, Israel, language, Pakistan, Torah, values

I’ve edited Waseem Altaf’s piece lightly, some for style by turning “%” into the written “percent” and spelling numbers when they’re used to start a sentence, and some for online readability (“Paragraph frequently” would be my advice).  The gist is simple, a familiar “tale of two states born in 1948” — one produces a mighty ultra-modern democracy, and the other suffers along with military dictatorships and a grievous record of political corruption and violence.

In general, I argue the comparison only partially valid and otherwise deeply unfair.

* * *

Country of Interest: Pakistan

Knowledge as a National Priority

By

Waseem Altaf

We were extremely poor yet we had books at home, said Ada Yonath, the 2009 Nobel laureate in chemistry from Israel.  Six million Israelis buy twelve million books every year, being the highest consumers of books in the world.

Knowledge comes through education and Israel has the highest school life expectancy in South West Asia with the highest literacy rate.

In Israel, education is compulsory for children between the ages of three and eighteen.

Israel also spends $110 on scientific research per year per person. Six of the best universities in the world are in Israel. For every 10,000 Israelis there are 145 engineers or scientists. On the other hand there is zero percent chance that Pakistan will achieve the millennium development goals on education by 2015.  India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka are well on their way to achieving the same goals.

One in ten “out of school children” in the world is a Pakistani.

What is required is an additional spending of rupees 100 billion, a fifty percent increase over current spending.

Israel, the most threatened country in the world was spending 24 percent of its GDP on defense in 1984. Today it is spending only 7.3 percent.  The budgetary allocations have since been diverted towards productive sectors of the economy.  We on the other hand are spending around 50 percent of the net revenue receipts on defense. As a major chunk of foreign arms purchases is made through loans, there is no account of the amount of loans taken and the interest paid thereon.  As much as 50 percent  of the net revenue receipts go to debt servicing.

As a result of “love for knowledge”, deeply ingrained in the Jewish mindset, three  out of the four most influential people in the last century were Jews.  Except Charles Darwin, the others namely, Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud and Albert Einstein were all Jews.  Forty-five Jews have won the Nobel prize in Physics so far.  Twenty-eight received the Nobel prize for original contribution in the field of chemistry.  Fifty-two of the Nobel laureates in the field of physiology and medicine were Jewish by birth.  Twelve recipients of the Nobel prize in literature and 21 in economics were also Jews.  Nine got the same prize for peace. In other words, 0.3 percent of world population received 24 percent of the Nobel prizes.

A Jewish mother would like her son to be a scientist than to be the Head of a State. Albert Einstein was offered the Presidency of Israel which he politely refused.

So it all originates in the family values.

The love for knowledge is learned as it is valued in the family.  Anything rewarded in the form of praise or other incentives within the family and for that matter in the larger social setting is reinforcing and ultimately becomes part of the national character.  A state and society which honors the knowledgeable becomes a formidable force to reckon with, as technology is based on scientific knowledge and whoever has the technology has the power.

The six day war which Israel fought against the combined armies of Egypt, Syria, Jordan and Iraq resulted in the total capitulation of the Arab Armies.  Israel captured the Gaza strip and Sinai Peninsula from Egypt, the Golan Heights from Syria and the West bank and East Jerusalem from Jordan.  Some 779 Jews were killed against 21,000 Muslims.

While 24 percent of Nobel prizes went to the Jews 22 percent of humanity is Muslim. What has been their contribution in the last 800 years in the fields of Physics, Chemistry, Medicine, Literature and Economics?  Approximately 1.4 billion Muslims have produced almost nothing yet 14 million Jews have given so much to humanity. We simply cannot repay what we owe to Jonas Salk who invented the polio vaccine in 1955, preventing billions of Muslims, Christians, Hindus and Jews from the effects of the deadly virus.

The Nobel Foundation is awarding the prize for more than 100 years, yet during this period the 1.4 billion Muslims have produced only six individuals who won the prestigious award: Abdus Salam considered a persona non grata in his own country, because of his religious beliefs; Ahmad Zawail with an American citizenship pursued his work in the U.S.; Naguib Mehfooz, an Egyptian was stabbed in the back by a fanatic Muslim; Shirin Ebadi, an Iranian human rights activist is in exile in Canada due to threats to her life in her own country; Orhan Pamuk, a Turkish novelist was criminally charged after he made statements alleging mass killings of Armenians and Kurds during the Ottoman period; and Muhammad Yunas, an economist from Bangladesh and the founder of Grameen Bank who has also been subjected to an audit by the government for alleged wrongdoings. A number of petty cases have also been instituted against him.

At present only one percent scientists in the world are Muslims.

Today a large part of the Muslim world is taken over by forces preaching nothing but hatred and contempt for all others belonging to the out-group. Anyone can be held guilty of blasphemy if his or her views do not match with the official dogmas. The total emphasis is on the revealed truth and not on empirical knowledge. We hate to find the truth. For us truth lies in all kinds of conspiracy theories. From 9/11 to the crash of Air Blue Airliner to cricket match fixing to floods every phenomenon was the result of some kind of conspiracy against us.

In a recent survey conducted by “Newsline”, 57 percent of Pakistani youth was in favor of a non-secular state. You visit any educational institution and would find more than half the students with obscurantist views. This ideologically motivated lot is conditioned to see the world in a context which suits their strongly held beliefs reinforced by the forces of dark.

No place for empirical knowledge on the national priority list, indoctrination of hatred, intolerance, revenge, death and destruction is what leads to the collapse of civil order, civil society and finally the state.

Quest for empirical knowledge, tolerance, respect for mutual coexistence, love for all human beings regardless of their faith, are attributes of a progressive, peaceful and prosperous society and a stable state.

* * * 

Response by this blog’s author

I have seen this argument before and have to this point provided caution in relation to several assumptions and variables.

For one thing, not all Israelis (or Jews) are successful or otherwise shielded from the vicissitudes of life. About 20 percent of Israelis live in poverty; a significant number of Israelis emigrate for both economic and educational opportunity plus personal reasons, a mixed picture but one suggesting too that all is not magical in the Jewish State.

The “family values” mentioned, including their being deeply integrated into a now ancient and global ethnic and religious commune, has its own intellectual roots and evolution that starts with the Torah and its mix of origin myths, legends, illustrative stories, and admonitory rules that INVITE argument, criticism, discussion, and exegesis.  Despite the investment or expenditure of great energy in determining a good way to live (with God and with others), the Jewish experience includes horrific episodes of destruction and suffering.  Such historic tragedies tend to cleave away what  one may call “things that didn’t work” — like priests and animal sacrifice and burnt offerings.

Thirteen million contemporary Jews, fewer than half gathered in modern Israel, the rest scattered in Diaspora and sharing a common heritage in each heart comes to not even 1/100 of the Ummah’s breadth and reach involving the conquest / conversion / reversion of thousands of otherwise formerly separated peoples. 

A certain kind of social engineering story comes out in the numbers cited in relation to state-based investments split between, say, defense ware and human capital. However, another part engages with self-concept and the detection and definition of ideals and values as they may be envisioned and suspended in language and transmitted in language behavior.  The Jewish heritage has not only to do with “investments in human capital” but with the transmission across generations of the core monotheism, i.e., faith in one God,  a concomitant investment in the guidance inspired by the study of the Torah, and, finally, the integration of that conversation into Jewish customs, laws, and traditions that have radiated outward into larger global societies, making, for example, the Romans who once destroyed Jewish life in Jerusalem, Christians, millions of whom promote the Jewish return to Jerusalem and the Land of Israel.

As seen in the last century, neither customs nor ethics served to defend mine from German barbarism, but both having informed a greater surrounding civilization — having more of humanity with it, literally — prevailed in that round. 

It doesn’t take much light reading in, say, linguistics to realize how wild a species we are — just as we are biological and have to wrestle with all implied by that — and I’ve inclined to think that civilizational efforts are essentially minority affairs, i.e., with many contributing “moral entrepreneurs” everywhere (from many walks) working with language across time and through the species but slowly and with time to be slow to effect adaptive, global, and positive change, but not monolithic change. 

In essence, I believe an evolving, modernizing humanity will strive to improve its felt qualities of living, but it may do so while experiencing and grinding against other tendencies.

At about this point, I generally note that Moses led not only Jews but a “mixed multitude” out of Egypt, and as parable the story repeats itself but perhaps in widening circles. 

One more observation: the “compared to the Jews” message also includes as message, “Compete with the Jews!”

It’s coaches a competition where one must win (something, I guess) at the expense of the other.

However, the structure I foresee is more integrating, more binding together, more engaged with an evolving way in thought that need not belong particularly to anyone but may be more a natural expression of an evolving human consciousness.

Again, within that cosmological view, God and a small part of the world work on that emergence together and across myriad cultures and languages, while the larger part of the world passing its ages in darkness becomes with every generation itself a little smaller.

# # #

← Older posts
Newer posts →
  • Compassion
  • Empathy
  • Justice
  • Humility
  • Inclusion
  • Integrity
____________

Caution: The possession of anti-Semitic / anti-Zionist thought may be the measure of the owner's own enslavement to criminal and medieval absolute power.
___________

Recent Posts

  • On X: American State of Affairs: Notes to Anders Aslund.
  • On X: Cowards and Criminals Negotiate Russia v. Ukraine
  • The Destructive Power of Lies: Active Measures and Destabilization and Influence Operations
  • East-West Rivalry: Trump-Putin Divide the World
  • AI: Russia Increases Sale of Gold Reserves
  • America: No Kings

Categories

  • 21st Century Feudal
  • 21st Century Modern
  • A Little Wisdom
  • Also in Media
  • American Domestic Affairs
  • Anti-Semitism
  • Asides
  • BCND – BackChannels News Day
  • Books
  • Conflict – Culture – Language – Psychology
  • COVID-19
  • Epistemology
  • Events and Other PSA's
  • Extreme Brown vs Red-Green
  • Fast News Share
  • foreign aid
  • Free Speech
  • FTAC
  • FTAC – From The Awesome Conversation
  • International Development
  • IRT Images Research Tropes
  • Islamic Small Wars
    • Gaza Suzerain
  • Journal
    • Library
  • Journalism
  • Links
  • Notes On Reading BackChannels
  • OnX
  • Philology
  • Philosophy
  • Poetry
  • Political Psychology
  • Political Spychology
  • Politics
  • Psychology
    • Facsimile Bipolar Political Sociopathy
  • Qualities of Living (QOL)
  • Referral
  • Regions
    • Africa
      • Central African Republic
      • Guinea
      • Kenya
      • Libya
      • Mali
      • Morocco
      • Nigeria
      • South Africa
      • Sudan
      • Tunisia
      • Zimbabwe
    • Asia
      • Afghanistan
      • Burma
      • China
      • India
      • Myanmar
      • North Korea
      • Pakistan
      • Turkey
    • Caribbean Basin
      • Cuba
    • Central America
      • El Salvador
      • Guatemala
      • Honduras
      • Mexico
    • Eastern Europe
      • Serbia
    • Eurasia
      • Armenia
      • Azerbaijan
      • Russia
      • Ukrain
      • Ukraine
    • Europe
      • France
      • Germany
      • Hungary
      • Poland
    • Great Britain and United Kingdom
    • Iberian Peninsula
    • Middle East
      • Egypt
      • Gaza
      • Iran
      • Iraq
      • Israel
        • Palestinia
      • Jordan
      • Kurdistan
      • Lebanon
      • Palestinian Territories
      • Qatar
      • Saudi Arabia
      • Syria
      • United Arab Emirates
      • Yemen
    • North America
      • Canada
      • United States of America
    • Norther Europe
    • Northern Europe
      • Sweden
    • South America
      • Argentina
      • Brazil
      • Columbia
      • Ecuador
      • Venezuela
    • South Pacific
      • Australia
      • New Zealand
      • Papua New Guinea
      • West Papua
  • Religion
  • Spain
  • Syndicate Red Brown Green
  • transnational crime
  • Uncategorized
  • Visual Data

Europe

  • Defending History
  • Hungarian Spectrum
  • Yanukovych Leaks

Great Britain

  • Stand for Peace

Israeli and Jewish Affairs

  • Chloe Simone Valdary

Journals

  • Amil Imani
  • New Age Islam

Middle East

  • Human Rights & Democracy for Iran
  • Middle East Research and Information Project

Organizations

  • Anti-Slavery
  • Atlantic Council
  • Fight Hatred
  • Human Rights First Society
  • International Network Against Cyberhate
  • The Center for Victims of Torture

Meta

  • Create account
  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.com

Epigram

Hillel the Elder

"That which is distasteful to thee do not do to another. That is the whole of Torah. The rest is commentary. Now go and study."

"If I am not for myself, who will be for me? If I am not for others, what am I? If not now, when?"

"Whosoever destroys a soul, it is considered as if he destroyed an entire world. And whosoever that saves a life, it is considered as if he saved an entire world."

Oriana Fallaci
"Whether it comes from a despotic sovereign or an elected president, from a murderous general or a beloved leader, I see power as an inhuman and hateful phenomenon...I have always looked on disobedience toward the oppressive as the only way to use the miracle of having been born."

Talmud 7:16 as Quoted by Rishon Rishon in 2004
Qohelet Raba, 7:16

אכזרי סוף שנעשה אכזרי במקום רחמן

Kol mi shena`asa rahaman bimqom akhzari Sof shena`asa akhzari bimqom rahaman

All who are made to be compassionate in the place of the cruel In the end are made to be cruel in the place of the compassionate.

More colloquially translated: "Those who are kind to the cruel, in the end will be cruel to the kind."

Online Source: http://www.rishon-rishon.com/archives/044412.php

Abraham Isaac Kook

"The purely righteous do not complain about evil, rather they add justice.They do not complain about heresy, rather they add faith.They do not complain about ignorance, rather they add wisdom." From the pages of Arpilei Tohar.

Heinrich Heine
"Where books are burned, in the end people will be burned." -- From Almansor: A Tragedy (1823).

Simon Wiesenthal
Remark Made in the Ballroom of the Imperial Hotel, Vienna, Austria on the occasion of His 90th Birthday: "The Nazis are no more, but we are still here, singing and dancing."

Maimonides
"Truth does not become more true if the whole world were to accept it; nor does it become less true if the whole world were to reject it."

"The risk of a wrong decision is preferable to the terror of indecision."

Douglas Adams
"Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful without having to believe that there are fairies at the bottom of it too?" Epigram appearing in the dedication of Richard Dawkins' The GOD Delusion.

Thucydides
"The Nation that makes a great distinction between its scholars and its warriors will have its thinking done by cowards and its fighting done by fools."

Milan Kundera
"The struggle of man against power is the struggle of memory against forgetting."

Malala Yousafzai
“The terrorists thought that they would change our aims and stop our ambitions but nothing changed in my life except this: weakness, fear and hopelessness died. Strength, power and courage was born.”

Tanit Nima Tinat
"Who could die of love?"

What I Have Said About the Jews

My people, not that I speak for them, I nonetheless describe as a "global ethnic commune with its heart in Jerusalem and soul in the Land of Israel."

We have never given up on God, nor have we ever given up on one another.

Many things we have given up, but no one misses, say, animal sacrifice, and as many things we have kept, so we have still to welcome our Sabbath on Friday at sunset and to rest all of Saturday until three stars appear in the sky.

Most of all, through 5,773 years, wherever life has taken us, through the greatest triumphs and the most awful tragedies, we have preserved our tribal identity and soul, and so shall we continue eternally.

Anti-Semitism / Anti-Zionism = Signal of Fascism

I may suggest that anti-Zionism / anti-Semitism are signal (a little bit) of fascist urges, and the Left -- I'm an old liberal: I know my heart -- has been vulnerable to manipulation by what appears to me as a "Red Brown Green Alliance" driven by a handful of powerful autocrats intent on sustaining a medieval worldview in service to their own glorification. (And there I will stop).
One hopes for knowledge to allay fear; one hopes for love to overmatch hate.

Too often, the security found in the parroting of a loyal lie outweighs the integrity to be earned in confronting and voicing an uncomfortable truth.

Those who make their followers believe absurdities may also make them commit atrocities.

Positively Orwellian: Comment Responding to Claim that the Arab Assault on Israel in 1948 Had Not Intended Annihilation

“Revisionism” is the most contemptible path that power takes to abet theft and hide shame by attempting to alter public perception of past events.

On Press Freedom, Commentary, and Journalism

In the free world, talent -- editors, graphic artists, researchers, writers -- gravitate toward the organizations that suit their interests and values. The result: high integrity and highly reliable reportage and both responsible and thoughtful reasoning.

This is not to suggest that partisan presses don't exist or that propaganda doesn't exist in the west, but any reader possessed of critical thinking ability and genuine independence -- not bought, not programmed -- is certainly free to evaluate the works of earnest reporters and scholars.

Archives

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • BackChannels
    • Join 356 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • BackChannels
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar