eftychia: Me in kilt and poofy shirt, facing away, playing acoustic guitar behind head (cyhmn)
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Argh -- gorgeous weather today, the most comfortable we've had here in Baltimore for a while, and I'm feeling too headachy and run-down to go take advantage of it. :-( Going to see whether I can manage a nap and feel well enough to accomplish anything this evening (dunno whether I'll get to HCB rehearsal or not; need to try to get out to nail salon as well).

Something that has irked me for ages is the human tendency to create false dichotomies, and to try to interpret the world in dichotomies in general. Many things that I consider overlapping, unrelated, or subsets of a larger spectrum, get sorted into two lists presented as "opposites" and then tied to other things that are really unrelated just to have two neat columns. So, for example, myriad traits get classified as "masculine" and "feminine" just for the sake of list-making and interpreting the world as binary, when many of those traits have nothing to do with gender.

So this quote from a comment by [info] velvetpage on [info] xtian_trackback (2006-10-27) caught my attention:

The mysogyny can be traced in part to medieval theologians such as Thomas Aquinas. They brought into the church the works of certain Greek philosophers like Aristotle, who philosophized extensively about dualisms and opposites - man/woman, light/dark, good/evil, etc, etc. It was a parlour game in learned circles to come up with as many of these opposites as possible.

I can't help wondering how some of our socially-ingrained ways of thinking about classifications would be different, if that medieval parlour game had been organized in threes instead of twos, as a few similar modern (and snarky) ones are. Or in fives.

There are 2 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] syntonic-comma.livejournal.com at 10:49pm on 2007-06-20
Father Matthew Remedy for Intemperance, trade card, c. 1890Why should some of these things even be though of as opposites? If humans and chimpanzees share 99+% of their DNA, how can women and men be opposites?
 
posted by [identity profile] writerjanice.livejournal.com at 08:55am on 2007-06-23
It's just a socially-ingrained way of thinking. The human brain really is wired to sort things into binary systems. It was a mark of our future promise as a thinking species when that unsung genius realized that you could count in other ways than "1", "2", "Many"...

In some sense, we still interpret the world in dichotomies based on our lingering survival skills. I either have food or I don't. I kill the beast and eat it or it kills and eats me.

One of the things that I learned in a management skills class many years ago, is how rare it is for anyone to be able to deal with deciding between more than 2 choices. And they had all sorts of studies and papers (with circles and lines and arrows on them...:)) showing this.

So, I suppose you could say that the human brain is wired to deal with an analog world by viewing it in binary, eg "either-or"...

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