That's not mutually exclusive from what coffeesp00ns has said, though. You're arguing that anti-intellectualism exists at a fundamental level in human societies, and all sp00ns is doing is showing a specific cultural context that these attitudes, which you argue are inherent, appear in.
What I'm trying to argue is that anti-otherism exists at a fundamental level in human societies, and that anti-intellectualism is just one of many shapes it takes. I don't think anti-intellectualism is necessarily more approachable than anti-piety, for example.
I thought you started off by talking about anti-intellectualism (quoting John Cotton), and then used some examples from early 19th century history. What I'm trying to understand is why you disagreed with him in the first place, when it seemed like you were taking the same view. It seems like you further elaborated, so that your advocacy was about otherization in general, but I'm not sure if this is the same view as your first comment. I get that you're making appeals to populism being a driving factor of anti-intellectualism (or at least that anti-intellectualism is a form of populism), but what I don't understand is why this makes it so significantly different from sp00n's original comment, and why this became a point of contention. Sorry if this comes off as argumentative, by the way! You seem very knowledgeable, and I don't want it to look like I'm questioning you too much!
No, not at all. I just want to be clear. Sp00ns, from my point of view, was coming from the position of "culture" being responsible for anti-intellectualism. It's this thing that happens naturally, that is just a factor in being human and living with other people. Mr. Art of Manliness never uses a proper noun in his descriptions - anti-intellectualism is this thing that happens to people, as opposed to something that is done to them. Which, from my point of view, is incorrect: there's nothing inherent in human society that says "intelligence is bad." My reading and my experience bear out the notion that most people think intelligence is good until someone convinces them otherwise. The act of convincing them otherwise, as far as that's concerned, is just one of many acts perpetrated by people who wish to influence others and convincing people that intellectualism is bad is no more prevalent than convincing people that success is bad, that beauty is bad, that wealth is bad, that any other generally-accepted virtue can be painted as a vice by people looking to benefit. Does that make sense? Spoons' argument was that anti-intellectualism just sorta happens; mine is that it's one of many methods of slander employed by demagogues.
Yes, perfect! Thank you, sorry for making you cover for my own misunderstanding like that. I would tend to agree with you. There are plenty of examples in history (many of which you've already drawn upon) of a political leader using a given group as a scapegoat to unify a population--which is why I think the mechanism we're talking about (which I don't have a word for) must extend beyond generally-accepted virtues. It seems easier to manipulate people to hate something they already dislike, which is why I think it'd be easier to pull from already existing cultural opinions. To that extent, I think that you're both right, partially. Anti-intellectualism, when institutionalized, is something inflicted on people, but it can't come from nowhere.
Even in your examples, Mao was leading a political party that relied on guerrilla warfare and the proliferation of soviets among the poor agricultural classes, many of which resented upper classes. Franco was coming out of the Second Republic and a civil war, and wanted to get rid of political dissidents; the Leftist/Rightist governments and the Popular Front had left plenty of people disillusioned with intellectuals, as far as I remember. Nevertheless, we both know that the simple act of a charismatic and trusted leader assigning blame to a given out-group is effective at this unification. Not sure if you agree with my breakdown, but c'est la vie. Anyways, this was interesting discussion, thanks! Again, sorry if I was frustrating at any point.
Shit, dude, I moderate a default subreddit. We ban people for hate speech and unban them for haikus. Any guesses what percentage of hate speech-employing redditors are incapable of correctly executing a haiku the first time? Any guesses as to how they generally respond for being told they're not allowed to call people faggots just 'cuz their no-homo internet bros think it's cool? So don't worry 'bout frustration; my tolerance is pretty high. Anyways. That's another tab in the browser. To the point: The mechanism you're talking about is tribalism. This is how we can form a visceral hatred of NE Patriots fans, or suddenly revile that nice couple you've been hanging out with when it's revealed that they're Republicans. Simply put, our identity is tied up in our allegiances and the stronger those allegiances, the greater our identity. More than that, once someone has been coerced into doing something they wouldn't do if it weren't for the tribalism, they're driven further into the tribe. This is the mechanism employed in hazing - one of us, one of us, one of us, etc. Works great for Kony et. al. It gets to the point where someone who has nothing against, say, smart people will happily shout for intellectuals to be shot because whoever is telling the dogs how to bark has dictated that intellectuals should be shot. In the end, the tribe matters more than other social allegiances, and if it's useful for the tribe leader to wipe out the intellectuals, the intellectuals will be wiped out.Go moderate the rest of those fucking subs and watch your life slowly slip away underneath your fedora. You think me saying faggot is hateful? You are a moderator of a sub that literally calls out a redditor and hates on him. Fucking hypocrite cunt
Ah, damn. Reddit feels like a necessary evil at times--I hate a lot of people who use it, I'm neutral towards the majority, and the top 15% (on my own completely objective and fair scale) are pretty cool. If Hubski were bigger, I could see myself spending all my time here. (Also, any theories on why we're so small?) You might be interested in reading about social identiy theory, though I assume you probably know something about it already (I'm forming theories of omniscience around you). I'd encourage you to follow the links in the introduction section if they interest you, particularly the ones concerning self-categorization theory. I can get out some actual authors and my own analysis if you'd like, but it'd require shuffling through some notes, so wikipedia will have to suffice for now. It's a psychological view of the anthropological phenomenon of tribalism, I think it might appeal to you. Also, I'd like to realize my parenthesis to paragraph ratio is pretty high.
The trick is to only opine on subjects you understand, and to ask polite questions about subjects you don't. At least, that's what I try to remind myself. I like finding out new things so I try not to be an asshole when I'm on shaky ground. Well, wait. I try not to be an asshole anyway (believe it or not) but I try harder when I don't know what I'm talking about. Often that involves shutting the hell up. I've heard of social identity theory, but only in passing amongst the pop psychology I tend to devour. I do far better with books than with Wikipedia so if you have recommendations, I'm all ears. Literally. I can do two or three audiobooks a month but printed matter I'm around 2 a year.