I don't understand the thought behind it either. I don't know if it started with thinking other people were INferior, so much as people being ready and willing to believe anything that would tell them that they were somehow SUperior.
No we're not. We are more advanced, in that we have developed tools and technology far beyond any other species, but we are just as much slaved to our instincts as dogs are. Why do you think there are so many similarities between disparate human cultures? Why else do so many people insist on the truth of flawed and/or illogical beliefs?Sizzle Montyjing said:You cannot disagree, however, that we are more advanced than animals, and we are slightly less a slave to our instinicts than other creatures.
We really are, for we can overcome our instincts, we can resist these and change them.
Didn't i just say that we were more advanced?Agayek said:No we're not. We are more advanced, in that we have developed tools and technology far beyond any other species, but we are just as much slaved to our instincts as dogs are. Why do you think there are so many similarities between disparate human cultures? Why else do so many people insist on the truth of flawed and/or illogical beliefs?Sizzle Montyjing said:You cannot disagree, however, that we are more advanced than animals, and we are slightly less a slave to our instinicts than other creatures.
We really are, for we can overcome our instincts, we can resist these and change them.
We have free will, true, but so does a rat. The only real advantage we have over most every other animal is that we are able to understand cause and effect, which means we are able to plan. Aside from that, we're no better than any other mammal.
Every mammal in existence has the capacity to choose whether or not to do something.Sizzle Montyjing said:Didn't i just say that we were more advanced?
this is why i should be better with words...
but does another animal really have free will?
Really?
Do we know this? (i mean we might, i just don't know, it's an actual question)
My captcha is 'a good man is hard to find'
I feel like that's appropriate.
It's not all that far flung, actually. Originally Europe, Africa and the Middle East got on well, until the Crusades happened, and then people started being more intolerant and violent towards those with different beliefs, and then it turned to racism after that.FallenTraveler said:Back in the far flung past of europe, the white people found african people and thought "Hey, they look different, I don't like that, therefore they are lower than I" and racism was born.
Well, slavery did indeed tribute to racism (at least concerning Africans). It wasn't necessarily that they were viewed as possessions, that's arguably how one might view a servant. (you can compare indentured servants in the American colonies to slaves) In that position, they were denied education and given rags to wear. This would contribute to a perception of them being inferior, especially because they were different. They would also use forms of passive protest, such as playing dumb and breaking tools. This would unfortunately only reinforce beliefs of stupidity. These stereotypes would carry on for a while, and despite gaining freedom they would find themselves in the same positions they had before. Then following World War 2 we have what is known as the white flight- the migration of white citizens to the suburbs. Loans that were made were only available to white citizens, and suburbs would also bar minorities such as blacks and latinos from home ownership. The poor would be left in the cities, many of them minorities. As cities would start to decay in their poverty, crime would start to become more common. That only reinforces and creates more stereotypes, and contribute to racism. The Irish were in a similar situation many years before.Sizzle Montyjing said:Thanks for all the replies people.
But i thought that racism stemed from the fact that balck people were enslaved, hence becoming slaves and just simply becoming possesions and non-human things in our (thankfully, not us it would seem) eyes, and once they became 'people' so to speak a lot of that meantality was retained.
But then i realised that it doesn't apply to other nationalities.
Racism... so pointless.