< Talk:Early infanticidal childrearing
Increased mortality after weaning is common in non-Neolithic cultures as well; it's a consequence of inadequate nutrition, not of parental desire. Vicki Rosenzweig
You're wrong there. "Inadequate nutrition" isn't some random fact of reality. It's a consequence of feeding pap to children, and not having the empathy necessary to understand that crying means the baby is hungry. These are both psychological problems of the parents (since feeding pap is a response to the fear of breastfeeding).
And if you'll pay more attention to the page, the crash in child population (which is enormous among the Papua New Guinea tribes) is not a result of parental desires for the child's death, or parental sexual desire for the infant. The latter is irrelevant and the former only develops in advanced societies where parents actually take care of their children to some degree. No, the crash is due to total neglect. That makes it axiom #3 of the model, not #1 or #2.
Does it reflect facts? Every single fact I'm aware of regarding neolithic tribes! -- ark
Cites, please? You seem to be aware of facts that I haven't come across--they'd strengthen the article. And no, inadequate nutrition isn't random, but it's a common cause of death worldwide, not only in "neolithic" cultures (which I'd be happier if you specified). Nobody breastfeeds children forever, and most cultures wean children later than the contemporary US: the problem isn't that weaned children are given soft, bland food--it's that there often isn't enough of that food. Vicki Rosenzweig
That's not true. If it were true, we'd expect the weaning crash to be smaller or absent in the upper classes, when in fact it's worse. With modern medical knowledge, things may be different, or maybe not. -- ark
I was wondering where this article came from as well. If nothing else it needs more citation (i.e. who says this) and more context (i.e. do most antropologists actually believe this).
A disturbing number of anthropologists follow a radically different model called "Pedophilia is good". Or in their own words, "Pedophilia is a random and legitimate cultural variation." Let's not talk about that.
Both. And actually, they say that parents can masturbate children, and derive sexual pleasure from it, without it being incest. Which of course, is completely absurd.
I want anthropologists summarily disqualified from any matter related to childrearing or psychology. I except only the very few anthropologists who have specific psychological training or who are working in partnership with a psychologist. Without such training, they're simply not qualified to make any judgement about psychological or psychologically-driven phenomena.
Now, given this, it's clear that there is only a very small number of qualified people in the field at all. And there's only one I consider authoritative enough to make broad statements about culture. Which is why I'd prefer to discuss a long list of individual facts (widely agreed in the field) than a single name about what those facts mean. -- ark
I've done a little googling. The US state department (http://www.state.gov/www/global/human_rights/1998_hrp_report/papuanew) says that "In the past, children have been well cared for within the family and under traditional clan and village controls. However, preliminary, small-scale studies indicate that this situation has changed over the last decade, especially in areas where households have become isolated from the extended family support system and depend on the cash economy for a livelihood. According to a report prepared by the Government and the U.N. Children's Fund, sexual abuse of children is believed to have become quite prevalent. Because of the geographic isolation and remoteness of many villages, malnutrition and infant mortality rates are very high. More than 60 of every thousand children born do not survive their first year."
The International Planned Parenthood Federation states that "The maternal mortality rate is one of the highest in the world, the infant mortality rate is increasing , with considerable variation from province to province," and adds that most of the population lacks access to safe water. (http://ippfnet.ippf.org/pub/IPPF_Regions/IPPF_CountryProfile.asp?ISOCode=PG)
So PNG children were better off in the more "primitive" culture, and exposure to an "advanced" society has increased sexual abuse of children. Vicki Rosenzweig
Yeah right. The myth of the "noble savage" rears its ugly head again. Did you notice how in the State Dept's report, the past is something nebulous and unknown, and only the present is at all concrete? I trust their vision of the present, I don't trust their speculations about the past any more than I can throw them.
Let's dissect the claim that child mortality has been increasing, just from stuff that I personally know to be true.
How does this apply?
apply Modus Ponens and we have,
So far so good.
Now let's add:
That is also an obvious and non-controversial fact.
Apply #4 to #3 above and you get:
So now you know why I think those "noble savage" and "increasing child mortality, oh the horror!" is just complete bullshit.
And I got this conclusion from stuff I know to be true because it is self-evidently obvious. So what does that mean? It means both the State Dept and IPPF have their heads shoved up so far up their ass that they can't see daylight at high noon. -- ark
It does mean that unless you have superior facts or the scientific community undergoes a radical change in its understanding of culture and reproduction, that my argument will (or at least should) be accepted by an overwhelming majority of people. -- ark
The model of early neolithic childrearing developed by Lloyd deMause can be summarized into three basic ideas:
This model explains the inordinate sexual attention paid by parents of neolithic tribes to their children, such as sucking, fondling and masturbating.
It also explains the total lack of non-sexual attention paid by neolithic parents, such as mutual gazes between parent and child. Such mutual gazing is widely recognized as crucial for proper mental and emotional development. Other examples of absent non-sexual attention include keeping infants away from open fires, preventing children from playing with knives, and stopping newborns from crawling into the sea.
The model explains many other recorded facts, such as the large jump in the mortality rate of Papua New Guinean children after they reach the weaning stage.
The consequences of neolithic childrearing are many and devastating. Even among young children, there is a high rate of insanity and suicide.
Despite its successes, this model of neolithic childrearing is not accepted by many anthropologists. On the contrary, anthropologists frequently explain sexual activity as "loving" and parental neglect as "a desire to teach by experimentation".
Ark wrote: "The model of early neolithic childrearing developed by Lloyd deMause can be summarized into three basic ideas:
I meant earlier than that, the tribes which aren't civilized, the ones who don't provide any attention to children. The Neolithic is a long period after all. Perhaps it's better called 'early infanticidal childrearing'. Probably should be now that I think about it. -- ark
We have practically no certain knowledge of paleolithic childrearing practices. There is absolutely no evidence that Paleolithic peoples did not gaze into the eyes of their children or used them as dildos. None at all. I will of course take this back if someone can cite any peer-reviewed archeological study that demonstrates either of these possibilities conclusively. By the way, ark, I am truly glad that you have finally decided to "think" about it. ;) SR
It's not "the model" that characterizes anything. In physics, do we say that "General Relativity" characterizes planets as orbiting stars? No, that's simply an observation. If people refuse to look out a damned telescope, or if they want to interpret the data as the planets orbiting the Earth instead, you still cannot say that GR is responsible for that.
The only possible reason why SR and Roadrunner change the page so it says such blatantly stupid nonsense is because they want to slander it. Because alternative explanations like "they don't understand how to use English" don't apply. So stop fucking up the page.
deMause, and anyone who isn't a cultural relativist, will invariably characterize masturbation of infants as "inordinate sexual attention". That means 99% of our society will agree with deMause and COMPLETELY DISAGREE with anthropologists. If you want to say that anthropologists don't think there's anything wrong with masturbating infants then say so explicitly. Do NOT say "deMause interprets the observed data in a way that's contrary to anthropologists" because anthropologists do NOT have primacy in this, not when they are themselves interpreting things in a completely insane manner.
The same rules as on the incest page apply; what *most* people call incest is what counts. So what *most* people call "inordinate sexual attention" and "total non-sexual innatention" is what counts. Not what some fucker in academia thinks it is. Unless you want to expose anthropologists to ridicule then you're more than welcome to explain that anthropologists see nothing sexual in the masturbation of infants. Actually now that I think about it, I'm going to add it. I've had more than fucking enough with pedophilia supporters. -- Ark
Ark, what the hell are you trying to do here? SR and Roadrunner are trying to improve this article by at least making it sound neutral. Cursing, reverting their work and making inflammatory statements are very counter-productive. This is obviously a pet theory of yours and you obviously have strong feelings about this subject, but what you are doing here is very un-wiki. This is not Slashdot. Please stop this edit and flame war and try to work on a consensus on this article. You will not be able to get an article you are 100% happy with and neither will SR or Roadrunner. Accept this and lets get to work. --maveric149, Wednesday, June 5, 2002
They're NOT trying to improve the article. The way they're making it sound neutral is by saying things that are the exact equivalent of:
"Some people have accused Scientist Schmoe of being a pseudoscientist."
This is something that came up in another page somewhere. It got thrown out because even if it's true, it's not supported by facts, it's repeating vicious slander against the person. You could make that accusation against ANYONE and it would be equally relevant/important.
I'll be happy with an article I can tolerate. I don't have to be 100% happy with it, nor did I ever expect to be.
The reason why what SR is doing is intolerable is because he redefines what "inordinate sexual attention" means. No, it has a very specific meaning relative to our own culture. If SR wants to say that anthropologists reject the common sense standard of what is and what is not appropriate sexual attention, and thereby leave anthropologists wide open to ridicule by any layman, then he should point out EXACTLY what anthropologists believe. As I wrote above, I'm going to do that for him, including ridiculing anthropologists for their insane beliefs, because I'm tired of this game.
Further, when SR (and Roadrunner) write that "the model characterizes" something. That's wrong too. It makes it seem like 1) only deMause and his followers believe the observed facts (ie, put a non-culturally relativistic spin on the fact of incest and sexual abuse on primitives), and 2) like the only reason deMause and others believe the facts is because they fit the model. You tell me: how is this not slander?? How is this in any way NPOV??
There are a bunch of known facts which everyone agrees on. 99% of modern people will put a very specific interpretation on those facts. That interpretation is that primitives are pedophilic, incestuous child molesters. This isn't something which is cooked up by deMause's model. The fact that anthropologists put a different, utterly bizarre and alien, pro-pedophilia spin on the facts is not my problem.
NPOV means that the 99% view gets most of the attention, is dealt with first and most importantly, and is recognized as the overwhelming majority view. It does NOT mean that the 1% view gets as much coverage as the 99% view in order to create a doubt in people's minds about which view is the right one. Which is exactly what SR and Roadrunner have been systematically trying to do. They've been POVing the article, vandalizing and undermining it. -- Ark
First, let me quote someone who I have a fair amount of respect for:
All models characterize things, indeed, it is precisely the power of Copernicus's model that he describes the moons of Jupiter as orbiting Jupiter, and the Earth, like Jupiter, as orbiting the sun.
I do not question that deMause has a theory (the fact that I do not think it is a good theory is for the moment besides the point; let's, for the sake of argument, assume it is a good theory). Clearly a significant part of any theory or model is DESCRIPTIVE statements. The proposition that "touching this child's genitals" = "inordinate" "sexual activity" is a descriptive claim, not a prediction and not an explanation. To call it a description is uncontroversial.
Second, to say that this is a claimed description is also noncontroversial. Not everyone would say it is sexual, and othose who say it is sexual, not all would say it is inordinate.
By the way, I am unimpressed by your hysteical claim that 99% of our society would agree with this (so, Mr./Ms. Scientist, have you taken a survey? random sample? What is the margin of error?). My claim is that people in different cultures describe things differently. Even if 99% of Americans agreed that this is sexual, it would only prove my point. My point is not that it "is" sexual, only that within the categories of American culture it is considered sexual. The issue for me is, what do Marquesans, or Yolngu, or Gimi, or whomever, think it is? An article that makes claims about a particular society MUST care what members of that society claim is going on.
To be blunt, I do NOT redefine what "inordinate sexual attention means," I simply point out that it is inordinate according to deMause, which seems to be true. Maybe it does have a specific meaning "relative to our culture," (I am quoting you) but deMause is not making claims about our culture, he is making claims about another culture, so how they define "inordinate" and "sexual" is certainly important.
Third, it is not in any way slanderous to claim that deMause's model describes things in certain ways, or makes certain claims. That is a statement of fact; it is precisely what a theory does: it characterizes something in a certain way, and it makes certain claims. There is no negative implication here; to say that Copernicus characterized the Earth as orbiting the Sun does not mean that he is wrong, it only means that other people characterize it in other ways. Again, a statement of fact -- and in the fifteenth/sixteenth/seventeenth centuries, an important statement of fact. SImilarly, there are ongoing debates today about how to talk about non-Western cultures and how to talk about human sexuality; it is important to acknowledge that there are different views.
Fourth, Similalry, "deMause interprets the observed data in a way that's contrary to anthropologists" is also a simple, non-controversial statement of fact. You claim that one should not make this statement of fact "because anthropologists do NOT have primacy in this," which is a non-sequitor. To claim that two people have different views is NOT in any way to suggest that one view has primacy over the other. The reason I would put it this way (rather than "anthropologists have views contrary to deMause" is because deMause wrote AFTER anthropologists, and cites anthropologists, and is reacting to anthropologists by criticizing them and presenting an alternate view, so you could say anthropologists have chronological primacy -- but there is no necessary or implicit claim that anthropologists are right and deMause is wrong. An analogy: one should write that Copernicus and Galileo had views contrary to the Church, but this wouldn't be slandering Copernicus or Galileo or suggesting that they are wrong). You also write that anthropologists "are themselves interpreting things in a completely insane manner." which is obviously lacking in NPOV.
Finally, I never nuked your responses in the Talk section. If anyone nuked them, please do restore them -- people have a right to read them. But you have no right to nuke what I wrote just on the basis that you do not like it. slrubenstein
I never believed you did or tried to, nor intended to imply it. This talk page was completely deleted after a series of serious errors with the database, just before the RecentChanges page went kaput. It's a pretty big coincidence so it may not have been intentional. The talk page now is the result of Maveric moving the old neolithic childrearing talk page here. I'd prefer the entire talk page to be restored or not at all, that's why I deleted the comments above (which are largely irrelevant: eg, demands for cites which were fulfilled).
I'm not nuking what you wrote "just on the basis that I don't like it". I've explained my reasons extensively. The same courtesy was often denied me. -- Ark
My view is that Talk is temporary. If people nuke it then it wasn't important and I don't sweat it. I wasn't even bothered that the entire Talk page got deleted. In fact, I favour nuking Talk regularly so that discussion can start fresh, unhampered by obsolete issues and preconceptions. But that's Talk: substantial changes to the character of an article are a different thing. -- Ark
I was an anthropology major in college, so I think I can speak with at least some pretense of knowledge about this area. First, the behaviors described by deMause and others are news to me. Do they surprise me? Not exceptionally so; there are cultures in which young adolescent and pubescent males participate in oral sex with adult males. This is rationalized as enhancing the young man's virility and preparing him for sex later in life, and is not categorized as "homosexuality" in any way whatsoever.
Do I like it or agree with it? No. But I do have to ask if deMause, et alii, ever asked the adults in these cultures whether they consider their behaviors to be sexual, and why (or why not). Because if they haven't, I smell undisclosed bias, and it reeks.
The purpose of anthropology is to describe culture, not judge it. If an anthropologist judges a culture under study, the ability to describe a culture objectively and explain how it is perceived by its members is lost. It is the job of psychologists, religious leaders, and laymen to judge a culture.
One example that is actually relevant is "northern" European notions of abuse and sexuality, which are in some ways the opposite of those of the United States. For example, Americans have little trouble allowing a 12 year old to watch a movie that contains graphic violence. Europeans have great trouble with this, and consider it to verge on child abuse. Conversely, Europeans see little difficulty with nudity and displays of genuine sexual affection, whereas Americans consider it to verge on child abuse if a 12-year-old is allowed to see a man and woman having loving, gentle sex. An anthropologist would simply describe the differing attitudes, without judging them -- A professional, if unable to overcome biases, should disclose them. (Much as an experimental physicist or biologist attempts to be neutral when testing a hypothesis, but must also disclose potential sources of bias in their interpretations.)
Napoleon Chagnon's work on the Yąnomamö is also relevant here. The Yąnomamö as a culture participate in husband-wife dynamics that would be considered severely abusive by American standards, but is perfectly normal to the Yąnomamö. In Yąnomamö territory, the anthropologist cannot interfere; if a Yąnomamö couple moved to the United States and continued the same types of behavior, social norms would require that even an anthropologist interfere, explaining that "in the United States, we do not act that way, and it is illegal here. Your choices are to change your behavior or end up in jail." (Just as I would never engage in homosexual acts in a Muslim country, despite what my own values hold. Caveat viator, so to speak. *grin*)
Hope that contributes some useful thoughts to the discussion. pgdudda
The position of anthropologists (and historians) that they only describe cultures (or history) and not seek to explain them is exactly why their judgement of a practice as being abusive is irrelevant. Now, anthropologists widely report that primitives do not see their practices as abusive or sexual. I have no hesitation agreeing with that. But then, neither do typical pedophiles see their practices as abusive either.
As to whether the primitives' practices are sexual.
Ark, play nice. JHK is many things, can even be abrasive sometimes but "stupid" and an "idiot"? That's over the top. She is one of the smartest people contributing to wikipedia -- and from what I've seen of the quality of your arguments and work, she is most certainly brighter than you (hey, I admit it; she's smarter than me too). She has contributed a great deal to wikipedia, all you have done is cause controversy and anarchy (a goal of yours?). I've been trying to be nice to you per wikipedia policy but it is difficult when you are constantly insulting people who have contributed a hell of a lot to the project. --maveric149 So masturbation is sexual. So are hair fetishes. And so is rape. In any case, it's difficult for us to imagine how a man can ejaculate without feeling sexual arousal. And if they don't feel arousal then a psychologist would have an easy canned answer to give: they're repressing it. The fact that it involves the genitals provides a very strong indication that it's sexual. (And thus that it's homosexual pedophilia, regardless of the rationalization.)
deMause hasn't done any field work among contemporary primitive cultures AFAIK. He's spent most of his time on the history of Western cultures throughout the last couple millenia. His theory of childrearing spans all of history. The paleolithic part of it is primarily based on extrapolation of the theory to more primitive cultures, some salient facts about the psyches and childhoods of contemporary psychotics (not evidence anthropologists would consider), and a number of interesting facts from contemporary infanticidals. It's not his job to redo all anthropological work. Maybe some psychohistorian will do it in the future, maybe not. There are much more interesting questions in psychohistory than the infanticidal cultures; eg, our own culture.
Additionally, deMause's agenda seems to be to make psychohistory a separate academic field, independent of history, anthropology and (probably) even psychology. So the basic idea is to completely steal the psychology and childrearing of non-Western cultures (contemporary and historical) away from anthropologists. If that happens, then theories about these phenomena will be held to different standards than theories in anthropology. Obviously, I support this outright theft. :)
I have to wonder whether Australian Aborigines or Native Americans in the United States would agree with you. After all, their children were forcibly removed from their homes and placed with European families because they were "primitives incapable of raising their children properly". What you are proposing is a form of genocide: systematically destroying a culture, simply because you consider that culture to be primitive and immoral.
Besides, decisions of mental health have to be placed in cultural context, too. We have to ask if the children in question are being raised in a manner that leads to them living successful lives in their communities as an adult, not whether they would lead successful lives in the US (or wherever) - a place they likely never will visit. If lip piercing, or trauma to the brain, or walking on one's hands, leads to successful adult lives (and successful production of offspring), is that not sufficient justification for continuing the practice? (Before you say "no", answer the question: "Why do Europeans and Muslims circumcise male infants? And why is the trauma induced by this not considered morally repugnant?") But then, you sound to me as if you are a "moral absolutist". I'd hazard a guess that you believe everyone should live under the same moral code (in the US, these people are likely to be conservative Christians). [Apologies if my assumption is incorrect.] But what happens when you try to impose, say, Biblical morals on people who categorically deny the existence of the Christian God? Why should Biblical morals apply to them, if they deny the validity of the very basis for that moral code's derivation? |
Btw, I have a hard time imagining someone who's studied moral philosophy becoming a cultural relativist, so it seems to me like cultural relativism is a type of ignorance. -- Ark
Ark, pgdudda is right. Cultural relativism is an important line of current modern thought and their criticism needs to be reflected in the article. --maveric149
Pro-pedophilia is an important line of thought in modern psychology. Does that mean the views of (pro-)pedophiles get the same treatment on a child abuse entry as developmental psychologists and child psychologists?
Post-Modernism is an important line of thought in academia. Does that mean it gets the same treatment in political science entries as the work of Chomsky?
Questioning (or doubting) Realism is an important line of thought in philosophy, as well as many religious people and cranks. Does that mean we should reflect it in a physics entry?
Like I said, I think that moral relativism (and hence cultural relativism) is only prevalent among people ignorant of moral philosophy. Even if we decide to reflect morally relativistic views, and I'm not ready to concede we should, that decision doesn't dictate how we're going to reflect it. There are many possibilities. Here's one:
We could explain the anthropologists' views side by side with psychohistorians'.
This seems like the preferred option of many. It's not mine since 1) psychohistory is a new field and most laypeople don't even know it exists, let alone understand its status, 2) by right of expertise, I think the issue is best handled by psychohistorians. So there is a wide disconnect between the respect psychohistory can expect to get and the respect they should get.
There is no way to correct that though. If we gave an extensive explanation of psychohistory in the article, people would perceive it as irrelevant to the entry (and remove it), or defensive (and not believe it).
Then there's my solution, which I'm making up as I go along:
We could emphasize that anthropologists don't really try to understand their subjects' psyche, that many don't even consider it a proper avenue of study, and that they lack the psychological tools or training to do a proper job of it.
But as soon as you do that, that cuts anthropologists out of the loop, doesn't it? This seems faintly unsatisfying to me because it leaves out a lot of issues. Like the danger of counter-transferance when working with a foreign culture. Like the horror that anthropologists must feel when they're watching some of these barbaric practices, and what kinds of defenses (and I think cultural relativism is one) they've had to built up to protect themselves from it.
Either way, there's the peripheral issues which are important and should be addressed. The main one is that anthropologists concern themselves with the wide diversity of cultures, distinguished by language, practices, beliefs, et cetera, whereas psychologists concern themselves with the essential similarities in people's mental and emotional functioning. This difference in attitude is related to psychologists at least trying to create a complete theory of the human mind whereas anthropologists have given up on a complete theory of human culture. So anthropologists don't think you can extrapolate culture back in time based on contemporary examples, but psychologists do think you can extrapolate the psyche with that kind of basis. -- Ark
Yes, that's a very good assessment. -- Ark
Agreed.
What you are proposing is a form of genocide: systematically destroying a culture, simply because you consider that culture to be primitive and immoral.
That's not correct. I don't propose something so radical simply because I think it. I propose it because I can make detailed moral arguments starting from self-evident moral truths, moral truths which even the primitives acknowledge. It's not moral assumptions which differ between societies. It's the capacity for empathy and rationality. Primitives are not capable of rationality like we are. (And actually even most modern people still aren't.)
Putting the issue in terms of "you only propose this because you think that way", as if our opinions mattered at all in the matter, is predictable from a moral relativist though.
Besides, decisions of mental health have to be placed in cultural context, too. We have to ask if the children in question are being raised in a manner that leads to them living successful lives in their communities as an adult
Define "successful". Is it "successful" to kill your own children? Is it "successful" to live a mentally and emotionally stagnant life in a culturally stagnant society? Is it "successful" to not be able to withstand contact with an advanced civilization with an alien mentality? Is it "successful" to live on the brink of extinction?
O please enlighten me, just what is "successful"?
The primitive cultures are a failure. We should let them die, like the California Condor which has outlived its habitat, and not try to preserve this grotesque example of dead-end cultural evolution. And make no mistake, we are artificially helping them survive. To give just one example, we extend our legal protection to them so that foreigners can't just take away their babies.
As for your example of biblical morals. Nobody in philosophy considers religious morals to be serious moral systems. Nobody. In fact, the guy arguably responsible for setting off modern moral philosophy, Immanuel Kant, was a theologian who didn't take "divine law" as a serious moral argument.
It seems that you have severe preconceptions about moral philosophy. Let me reassure you that 'morals' in philosophy has no connection with what preachers mean by the word. Any intelligent person should reject morals, and declare themselves amoral, if their only exposure to the concept is from preachers and other religious types. Fortunately, that's not what moral philosophy is about. -- Ark
theory of conduct lays the historical groundwork of moral philosophy, but it never gets to modern theory. There doesn't seem to be anything on wikipedia about it.
I think that philosophers are heading towards an axiomatic approach to morality. They keep refining their arguments, making them more and more rigorous and at some point they're going to get an axiomatic system. They aren't there yet, nor anywhere close, and that's why Rawls wrote a several hundred page book instead of a several dozen page one. But they'll get there eventually; philosophers do a lot of work related to logic so they're very familiar with axiomatic systems. So I do believe the entire field can be completely axiomatized and a calculus defined on it and I'm certainly not alone in that belief. IIRC, Leibnitz tried to create a moral calculus in his day.
(Also, when you can show that the correct interpretation of quantum mechanics has an impact on whether you can solve a notorious problem in moral philosophy, that lends some support to the belief that there's rigorous logic hiding in the subject. And when you start thinking about whether Godel's Incompleteness Theorem applies to moral systems .... :)
It's just that current research in the field is extremely poor so you can't expect anything close to rigor. As an example of exactly how poor the research is, there aren't any rigorous definitions of morality and ethics out there. It isn't difficult to come up with them but writers seem to prefer to go on and on describing what they are, sometimes even using the words interchangeably, rather than just defining them. If I wrote a book about morality, I'd put my definition of it in the first chapter, and Rawls didn't (though I'm going by my sketchy memories here, and the fact that I had to construct my own definitions).
Rawls' theory is the first one which you can sortof pretend it's axiomatic and sortof derive conclusions from the axioms. If you analyze Kant's Categorical Imperative, you can show it's equivalent to a couple of axioms Rawls makes but it's not the same. Not least because Kant makes some weird, unjustified assumptions and his whole analysis is impenetrable.
Okay, I tried reading A Theory of Justice, honest I did, but it's unbearably tedious. So I relied on a friend who told me what I got "wrong" about Rawls' theory and gave me some relevant quotes. I then decided that Rawls had made a fundamental error in his construction. If you're interested, his concept of a "bare person" isn't a person at all so it's useless, and when he uses that concept later on, he unwittingly sneaks Utilitarianism back into the discussion (Rawls' theory is supposed to be an alternative to Utilitarianism).
I'm obviously not satisfied with Rawls. As for Utilitarianism, it was completely disproved by Amartya Sen a couple decades ago as far as I'm concerned. Sen's proof shows that Utilitarianism can't prove any conclusions so that's why I don't consider it an axiomatic moral theory (even if it preceded Rawls' theory). I don't know of any alternatives out there, though I'm not up on the subject.
So what's my personal moral theory? It's a variation on Rawls' that starts with the same axioms but follows a slightly different analysis in order to get 99% of the same results he did (it would get the exact same results if he hadn't made yet another error at a higher level). But it's not likely to see the light of publication anytime soon so I can't point you to any literature. So probably the best place to start would be with A Theory of Justice. -- Ark
I'd like to see some hard references for the following:
Without at least some of the above, this article and the incest and incest taboo articles will never get anywhere at this rate. Ed Poor
I got lucky this time and google got the page. As it happens, it's just in his The Universality of Incest (http://www.psychohistory.com/htm/06a1_incest) essay, in the section Childhood sexual abuse in contemporary western societies. (Hmmm, the replacement of human memory by google ... something to bear in mind.)
Tell me what you find out, or publish it somewhere, ok? -- Ark
Psychohistorians may be the best-qualified to talk about what psychohistory is or says. They aren't inherently best-qualified to discuss child-rearing. It's a new theory: it may be as important as electromagnetism. Or it may be as important as phrenology.
One question that occurs to me: does washing children's genitals count as "Manipulatio
Also, you're welcome to have little interest in anthropology--but that lack of interest doesn't leave you well-qualified to generalize about anthropologists. Vicki Rosenzweig, Friday, June 7, 2002
I'm sorry but childrearing throughout history is inherently psychological. Saying that parents raise their children one way because of "culture" begs the question of why the parents don't deviate from culture in the first place (we know some parents do, otherwise cultural evolution would be impossible). Psychohistory answers that.
Washing children's genitals counts as fondling if you spend any more time on the genitals than any other part of the child's body. If you do it 20 times a day and otherwise leave the infant to stew in her own feces .... -- Ark
What kind of explanation and interpretation are we talking about? Is this the kind where incest and child abuse get redefined, reinterpreted, apologized for and explained away? Because we already know they're not interested in any serious theory of cultural evolution, so I doubt you're referring to that. -- Ark
There is no "explanation" needed. I specifically rejected, and do so again here, any interpretation of child sexual abuse other than my own. And since child abuse can't have any explanation outside of a psychological basis, the anthropologists are distinctly unqualified, unprepared and unlikely, to ever provide an adequate explanation.
"Explaining" one piece of culture in terms of another piece of culture is nonsense. It is as if a chemist explained one chemical fact in terms of another chemical fact (and chemistry had no relation to physics, nor had ever developed any universal chemical laws). It's complete bullshit. -- Ark
There also seems to be little evidence here -- just assertions that present-day pre-industrial cultures belong to this group. And yes, some things ARE relative, Ark. I'm not saying they are right or good, but that one has to take things in context. If this article is true, then I expect there should be an article here on adolescent and post-adolescent childrearing in the US -- after all, we as a society put our children and their development last when it comes to taxes, making sure that families can afford for children to have a family member as primary caregiver, etc. Moreover, we expect that children will be exposed to huge amounts of violence in the media (and often reality), have access to firearms (not those that should be locked up, but in the form of hunting and target shooting as a family activity), and that they learn to fear their sexuality. Huge numbers of children are substance-addicted, others are criminals who are incarcerated in dangerous reform schools and sometimes prisons.
all I'm saying here, Ark, is that you seem to have a "sexual abuse is the worst thing possible" scenario here, when sexuality and sexual mores vary hugely from culture to culture, even within western society. I should think that this kind of study would need a through examination of those mores in order to judge whether harmful intent exists. We are often horrified by, for example, ancient marriage practices that allowed 12 or 13 year olds to marry -- even when we learn that many of those "women" were not expected to bear children and may no have been sexually active until they were more mature. This is somewhat predicated on our views of marriage as a legitimization of a sexual relationship, rather than seeing it as a business or political alliance between families.
Again, I am not saying this is right or good -- any more than I think that peoples who practice female circumcision should be allowed to continue for tradition's sake. But one has to accept (and reflect to the reader) that this practice was not likely to have been devised as a form of abuse.
Oh -- and by the way, rape (except for the statutory kind) is very seldom about sex. It's about power, degredation, and humiliation. Your view on this one subject and ability to reduce something so complex to "it's a sexual thing" makes me truly wonder about your ability to judge any such subject impartially. JHK, Tuesday, June 11, 2002
(I've chosen to take extreme offense at what you've said, eg. "psychohistory has nothing to do with history", and to treat you like a hostile.)
I already explained that rape wasn't just about sex. I also explained exactly why it was still sexual. If you accuse me of reductionism, when I have explicitly warned against that, then it's only because you're deliberately being stupid.
I really wish I didn't have to deal with people who say stupid things. For example, things that amount to "every human being is rational and since it's not rational to kill children, this negates the overwhelming evidence that infanticide occurs". Never mind such truly stupid statements like "preliterate hunter-gatherer tribes are those most concerned with basic survival". Oh really, I guess that explains why they never developed any technology in order to guarantee their survival. They were too busy being "concerned about their survival" in order to do anything that would ensure it! (Never mind such annoying facts like beliefs in reincarnation, animism and ancestor-worship.)
There isn't going to be an article on US childrearing because I know it will be butchered by small-minded Americans. If anyone could give me the freedom to rant about American childrearing practices, there would have been an article long ago. So you can take your cultural relativism and shove it.
Regarding child-brides. I guess that's why girls before the modern era didn't have hymens. Because they weren't sexually active. That makes perfect sense. And obviously, the widely practiced rape of child-brides that occured in India within living memory (and still occurs today) well, that's irrelevant too. And the stated reason for the child bride practice (that if pre-adolescent girls aren't married off, they'll be raped by male relatives) that's obviously irrelevant too. And obviously, case studies such as India are completely irrelevant to any other culture because there's no such thing as universal laws of culture or a theory of culture.
And no, sexual abuse is not the worst possible scenario. The worst possible scenario is being forced to kill and eat your brothers and sisters as a young child. Following that is just killing your brothers and sisters. Then there's watching your brothers and sisters be killed by your parents. And so on. But when people make such a fuss about sexual abuse, I don't even want to bother with cannibalistic rituals. (And of course, we know that cannibalism never existed because ancient myths involving cannibalism are all fiction and "just culture".) -- Ark
Intelligence doesn't count if you're unwilling to consider outré arguments and points of view. That's because you can't understand the world if you stay within the bounds of conventional thought. And the myth of the noble savage is about as conventional as it gets. So is trusting established authorities even when they've been remarkably unproductive (historians, most psychologists, et cetera).
Few people seem willing to touch the issues I explore, think about the viewpoints I advocate, or even consider the arguments I construct. That's why my arguments seem so primitive, because I construct mine, where others regurgitate theirs. (In this light, this page has been a singular failure for me since, except for cultural relativism, most of the arguments I present are not original to me. Geez, no wonder I'm so pissed; I loathe arguing third-party views.)
Plus, I feel no need to convince people so long as I can get them thinking. Casting doubt on the enemy's position is usually just as good as winning the argument outright (cardinal rule of public relations). By not exerting myself fully, I remain in harmony with my inner nature; laziness. -- Ark
Newton once said that he could see so far because he stands on the shoulders of giants. This is also the cornerstone of modern thought and education. Everyone here, except for you on cultural relativism, seem to be following this maxim -- even when they don't personally agree with the work previously done. This is an encyclopedia, not a soap box for new ideas. Sorry, but regurgitation of the canon of human knowledge is what we do here. --maveric149
I disagree, maveric. One of the things that makes wikipedia different from a standard encyclopedia is our ability to reflect new thinking, and it would be a shame not to take advantage of that. Certainly, we have not hesitated to do so in many scientific matter, like M-theory. We only have the catch that ideas should be reflected in a 'fair' way.
Now, the whole that deMause put together and Ark is advertising here is striking, but I think that you will find most of the individual points are not nearly as radical or contrary to current understanding as you seem to present. To begin with, there are many people who would reject cultural relativism. The first example that comes to mind are the women's historians which have become increasingly common, but a proper search shouldn't have trouble coming up with others. Further, the idea of the noble savage is very controversial, and one should hardly consider it some sort of canon.
With regards to infanticide per se. I personally have very little knowledge about the Paleolithic, but that deliberate murder or abandonment of infants was common among ancient civilizations like Carthage, Greece, and Rome is well-known, and I can remember a mainstream text mentioning Mohammed's prohibitions against the then-widespread killing of children without any implication that might be controversial. In absence of further data, a backwards trendline would be all it takes to suggest that Paleolithic infanticide was very common indeed. And I can recall articles suggesting that tribal cannabilism, to take the most headline-grabbing example, was far more common than previously thought.
With regard to sexuality, I think the page as admitting that social mores very widely, and claiming that those of earlier cultures tended to allow practices now considered quite harmful. As for whether or not young wives were sexually active, it would be interesting to see any source on that, one way or another. I know that one of the highest rates of mortality was for women in their teens, attributed to childbirth, and that mythical Achilles had a son at age 15 or so without contemporary comment, but anything more direct than that would be surprising.
In short, I think this position is not nearly outlandish enough to deserve such curt rejection. An informative and lasting page on this would be valuable enough, with controversy, criticisms and any evidence against you can dig up, as well as evidence for, explained but not focused on to the point of putting parentheticals at the end of every paragraph. Beyond that, what are we worrying about?
And by that reasoning, most pre-modern girls should have hymens, unless they have been raped or molested.
So let's consider the evidence:
Conclusion:
-- Ark
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