I argued with Jon about whether such complementarity can be flattened to an 
enlarged universe using the Necker Cube. We (some of us) clearly have the 
ability to push ourselves into others shoes ... to pretend like we're them, 
swimming through the *same* milieu [⛧]. And we (some of us) clearly have the 
ability to pop ourselves out of others -- and perhaps our own -- shoes ... to 
pretend we're an objective/behaviorist Demon watching our subject swim through 
the milieu. I argued, like with the Necker cube, you can't do both at the same 
time. Jon questioned that ... implying disagreement.

But that's not my point, here. I think this setup might help us understand gate 
keeping like liberal vs woke. How much *easier* is it to put yourself in 
another's shoes if that other is within scope? I mean, let's face it, it's WAY 
easier for me to disagree with, say, Jon or SteveS than it is for me to 
disagree with Chimamanda or perhaps some hypothetical and nameless individual 
in Mexico. You can't disagree (or agree) with someone with whom you're not 
_familiar_. (a-gree -- adhere to the pleasing or ... adhere to the similarity) 
Any disagreement I might claim to have with, say, an anti-vaxxer Trumpist *must 
be* evidence that I've strawmanned the other, right?


[⛧] Chimamanda's story also allows distinctions between different milieus (?). 
I'm trying to keep it simple for this setup.

On 11/9/21 9:16 AM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
> Kind of explains how the left is prone to being wedged apart.  The liberal 
> and the woke are relatively close, but the distances that matter are the ones 
> within that type.   
> 
> Corollary is that familiarity breeds contempt. 

> On 11/9/21 8:56 AM, Steve Smith wrote:
>> The fact that such distance (euclidean as well as non-euclidean as well as 
>> network) is a heuristic for "otherness" seems very much implicit in life 
>> itself, most familiarly among visual creatures, less so for audio, and even 
>> less so for chemical (smell/taste) and least for tactile (if I am not 
>> touching it, it doesn't exist?).
>> 
>> Implicit in Chimamanda's single story about not-single-stories is that there 
>> are other dimensions to distance than the physical/kinshipLinguisticNetworks 
>> that "distance" us from one another (people, animals, geography and other 
>> life-forms).   I don't know what to do with this awareness exactly, but it 
>> seems to leaven or balance the *judgement* against those who appear myopic 
>> in their apprehension of the world.  It is somewhat about priorities.
>> 
>> In my rant/rave about emergent collective consciousness, the ability to 
>> apprehend "Other" at a "Distance" more better is an adaptive trait, yet we 
>> also cannot afford to let that overwhelm circumstances like "relevance" for 
>> which proximity is a mild proxy.   It is about dynamic (re)prioritization I 
>> suppose.
>> 



-- 
"Better to be slapped with the truth than kissed with a lie."
☤>$ uǝlƃ


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