Society, especially a close society like that which I live in here in NYC doesn't moderate anyone, it simply forces them to conform. You have an overwhelming desire to conform. Thus, the city appeals to you. I do not and hate it.Turquoise wrote:
I'm not disputing human nature. Yes, the average person is a sheep, but I find it very hard to believe that the average person who lives in the middle of nowhere is going to be better informed than the average person living in a large city.JohnG@lt wrote:
I live in the largest city in America and your view is just plain wrong. The people that surround me are even more likely to put their head down and grasp simple pleasures in life rather than take the time out of their day to educate themselves. No, if anything, what you get in cities is a firmer grasp of mob mentality. People are more likely to attach themselves to a group and mindlessly follow the groupthink than think for themselves. They're misguided and not to be admired in the slightest.From what I've observed, isolation just tends to make a person more extremist. People generally hold more moderate views when they interact with a variety of viewpoints.JohnG@lt wrote:
The man I admire is one who lives away from society and can form his own opinions on a topic without becoming a sheep. From isolation comes real thought, not from immersion.
When someone has mostly experienced the same views all of his life or has only introspectively viewed the world around him rather than having actually discussed things with others on a regular basis, that tends to make a man much more dogmatic.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat