I accept your right to your conclusions. But I don’t
necessarily accept the PROCESS by which you reach them. That is the
guiding belief that undergirds my discussions with other people. In this blog
post I offer only a few of the many reasons for the PROCESS by which I came to
my belief.
First and foremost, if we each inform the other of our
process, We can more objectively decide the specifics of what we do and do not
agree with. And that knowledge of process can enable us to adjust our
opinions of the issue, and/or of each other. That is, we can understand
our extant messages and our extant dyadic relationship variables in ways that
increase the chances for rational objective discussions and of mutually
satisfying resolutions in the here and now.
Second, we both do well to be aware of and sensitive to the
personal identity factors that influence our capacity for rational
discourse. Some of the factors are relatively easy to infer. For
instance, given the USA hyperattention and hypersensitivity to all things
racial, in black-white discourse even the most well-intention, innocuous
comment can be deliberately or inadvertently interpreted as a microaggression
and used as an offensive or defensive weapon.
Third, in contemporary discourse, traditional definitions
of personal identity are swamped [connotations deliberately implied] by what
some social psychologists call "mega-identity," meaning potential
features of your identity grafted onto you when you succumb to rules dictated
by so-called influencers, such as politicians, actors, sports figures,
relatives, or friends. Accordingly, in conversations, interlocutors never
can be sure what social identity forces might complicate and distort the
presumed neutral message they had intended to convey.
The final reason for this truncated explanation of the
process by which I came to my blog post beliefs is related to the third
reason. To wit, “mimesis” describes my belief that too often individuals
reach conclusions primarily due to their conscious or unconscious propensity to
imitate other people rather than to their own independent analysis. This
imitative tendency is one more explanation for an interlocutor’s disinclination
to engage in objective questioning and answering that can facilitate rational
conversation and resolve disputes, since the imitator might have insufficient objective
information and/or sense of agency to support what they say and what they
refuse to hear from their interlocutor. Those unaware of or unwilling to accept
that their statements were not adequately rational and/or agentic, might be too
ashamed to recognize and/or admit that their comments were mostly due to
mindlessly parroting influencer pronouncements.
Hopefully, my having raised the issue of the processes that underlie your beliefs and communications will prompt you to consider your own personal idiosyncratic belief processes and difficult conversations more carefully and to strive to maximize your rationality and communication agency. That advice presumes that you have sufficient interest, willingness, and personal identity investment to expend the effort to understand your thought processes and to converse adaptively. Since that attitude often demands courage and effort, you might consciously or unconsciously conclude that it is not worthwhile. In that case, be prepared to accept the natural consequences of your choice.
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