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What has happend to the continuation of Ethnic groups?

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jhfurnish jhfurnish's picture
What has happend to the continuation of Ethnic groups?
How does national or ethnic identity carry at all anymore, since anyone can don a morph that looks however they like, and all that people may have left is a name? Particularly in the case of so many, many infomorphs. What happens with aspects of human life such as this? It seems to be that ethnicity effectively disappears, and that the only identifiers that truly remain are Morph/Class, Alliegance, perhaps gender.
King Shere King Shere's picture
To be a bit overly simplistic
To be a bit overly simplistic, the Ethnic groups are as always in a constant change, the living patterns of the community adapts to its "own" local lingo, clothing, patterns & customs. It can be a identy of a group of people that share a city block inside a virtual world on a game server, fans of a specific style of music or artist. In EP Obviously the main (eqvivilant to nation) are the reputation communities / factions, but local flair will never vanish. In EP almost anything is custimizable. Perfect for whims of groups that seek to be able to be recognized as such or to those that dont wont to be recognized or outed by "outsiders/uninformed"
jhfurnish jhfurnish's picture
Reinvention
This stands to say that the place in human (or transhuman) life occupied by 'ethnicity/nationality/identity' is now filled by a plethora of wholly new things. In not too many generations - whatever a 'generation' may mean, by the time of EP - nationalities will mean absolutely nothing and be consigned to the same historical dustbin as nations/states.
NewtonPulsifer NewtonPulsifer's picture
http://eclipse-phase
http://eclipse-phase.wikispaces.com/Noctis-Qianjiao Start reading at "Cultural Forces and Clades" and "Authentics"
"I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve."- Isoroku Yamamoto
jhfurnish jhfurnish's picture
Excellent Insights
"Interestingly, most authentics don’t really care whether you have a bona fide background with their clade (be that through ethnicity, family history, or the like). If you’re running their memes, and you’re running them right, you’re accepted, because it’s the stabilizing cultural familiarity that they’re after. One can’t pose, though; an authentic walks the walk twenty-four-and-a-half by seven." This is increasingly true already, for many people: a case in point, Americans. Americans can often be said to be a people without a true culture, but rather saddled with artificial pop culture that doesn't fulfill them (fast food, malls, Hollywood). To further develop one vector of this example, some Americans become very interested in Native American heritage, philosophy and culture and may even claim some genetic heritage (which may or may not be present). Initially, Native Americans greatly resented this, as a kind of final theft of what little they truly had left to them after the taking of everything else. However, many Native people see the potential for creating a great connectivity by welcoming people into their paradigm as the only remaining way to compete with the negative forces that threaten to consume the world. Thus, as people latch on to Native ways as a way to create a paradigm for themselves that gives direction and substance to their lives, they help others to preserve and to expand. They in fact find themselves joining a very ancient clade that delivers the goods in terms of spiritual fulfillment, healthy living, connection to the Earth, and to other people. The same is achieved by people who seriously delve into old Celtic practices and others. This points to the tremendous power of this roleplaying game to be a great educator, bringing people some sociology, anthropology and philosophy while they learn and play this game. Eclipse Phase has the potential to become one of the greatest educating influences of a generation.
NewtonPulsifer NewtonPulsifer's picture
For Native Americans, you
For Native Americans, you forget about collecting scalps, including of children.
"I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve."- Isoroku Yamamoto
Re-Laborat Re-Laborat's picture
NewtonPulsifer wrote:For
NewtonPulsifer wrote:
For Native Americans, you forget about collecting scalps, including of children.
That was unnecessary. There is, of course, some reality to it, depending on the tribe or nation (some did, same didn't) and how much [i]the White Man[/i] was paying for scalps at that time. Shall we make similarly outrageous embarrassing generalizations about Europeans based on German conduct of the 1940s? Let's not, hm? Generally speaking, people adapt and romanticize the more positive aspects of cultures which they see as having insight into things their own culture does not satisfactorily fulfill.
NewtonPulsifer NewtonPulsifer's picture
Re-Laborat wrote:
Re-Laborat wrote:
Shall we make similarly outrageous embarrassing generalizations about Europeans based on German conduct of the 1940s? Let's not, hm?
Thank you for making my point.
Re-Laborat wrote:
Generally speaking, people adapt and romanticize the more positive aspects of cultures which they see as having insight into things their own culture does not satisfactorily fulfill.
Which are outrageous embarrassing generalizations, and provide a suitably sanitized half-truth, an "American fast food" version for consumption for those who complain about the same. "Half the Truth is often a great Lie." - Benjamin Franklin "That a lie which is half a truth is ever the blackest of lies, That a lie which is all a lie may be met and fought with outright, But a lie which is part a truth is a harder matter to fight." - Tennyson
Re-Laborat wrote:
There is, of course, some reality to it, depending on the tribe or nation (some did, same didn't) and how much [i]the White Man[/i] was paying for scalps at that time.
How much [i]the White Man[/i] was paying for scalps wasn't always a factor. "Probably the most dramatic skeletal example of prehistoric violence in North America comes from the Crow Creek site in central South Dakota. Archaeological excavations revealed about 486 skeletons within a fortification ditch on the periphery of the habitation area. The site represents the Initial Coalescent period and dates to about 1325. P. Willey's analysis revealed that 90% of the individuals had cut marks characteristic of scalping." - Hall Steckel, Richard; R. Haines, Michael (2000). A population history of North America
"I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve."- Isoroku Yamamoto
jhfurnish jhfurnish's picture
Newton Pulsifer
What's your thing with Native people? Why are you drawing out one detail about them that has plenty of analogues in just about every community on this planet? My father was Native, btw. My wife's Dominican. Got an anecdote about those folks too? How about the Irish (my mother's people)? Got anything to say about them? So what _is_ your point, exactly?
NewtonPulsifer NewtonPulsifer's picture
You don't see the irony of
You don't see the irony of riffing about how "it can be said Americans don't really have a culture" and then referring to some generic "Native American" concept which covers such a huge group of cultures (across two continents) to render statements like "Native ways" so vague as to be meaningless? You wrote "They in fact find themselves joining a very ancient clade that delivers the goods in terms of spiritual fulfillment, healthy living, connection to the Earth, and to other people. The same is achieved by people who seriously delve into old Celtic practices and others." The above may well be true in all parts except being "ancient" or "old". It's based on a modern myth invented by the likes of Henry Thoreau, the Theosophical Society, and the modern environmental movement. Statements like that show much of a ghost Celtic and Native American culture really is now. They've been turned into benign Tolkien elves that magically barely touched their environment, despite extensively using geography altering slash and burn agriculture. My point is Native Americans and Celts are just like everybody else. Rewriting history to turn them into magical elves is creepy. It's "benign" chauvinism that I find to be malignant because it's a lie, or worse, a half truth.
"I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve."- Isoroku Yamamoto
jhfurnish jhfurnish's picture
Are you certain...
...that I was endeavoring to say they were flawless? I'll confess one thing: I didn't use the word 'comparatively' or 'in the context of this society'. Also, those cultures - which weren't ghosts - were nowhere near as destructive as this one, nor as spiritually numb.
Erenthia Erenthia's picture
Every group of a certain size
Every group of a certain size and a certain age is probably guilty of crimes against humanity of some kind. Religions, ethnic groups, large corporations...there's (sadly) nothing special about atrocities. I don't believe we should ignore those atrocities, but making false equivalencies between the commission of atrocities and a particular group that committed them is the express train to Othering and all the nasty left-over tribal instincts that go along with it. What we need is to recognize is that no group and no individual is incapable of committing heinous acts, then do everything we can prevent situations that make such things easier. On the flip side, if we're going to be forgiving of past cultures, why not this one? I don't think it's entirely true to say that America has no true culture. In fact quite the opposite. We've exported so much of our culture to the rest of the world that the core of American culture is practically invisible for its ubiquity. I don't lament this. In fact certain aspects of American culture (even ones I feel we could tone down) are desperately needed in other parts of the world, such as the distrust of authority (a vital part of science) and a sharp divide between national identity and the government (I'm looking at you, China). Even when congress has an approval rating approximately equal to your average pedophile and people let themselves get fooled into believing that the wrong choice for president will end the entire fucking world - we can still be proud to be Americans. And we should be. Yes we've entered a period where we're spiritually unfulfilled. Yes, we're seeking meaning all over the fucking everywhere. But we're still Americans. Our newfound obsession with paganism is just the shiny trinket of the week. Not that I have a problem with people finding meaning in whatever way they choose. Studying the positive and negative aspects of past cultures, taking the good and letting the bad be a warning is pretty much the American way. Like Shakespeare, we're pretty good and ripping shit off, passing it off as our own, and occasionally doing it better than it was done originally. We're cool like that. PS In the spirit of my post, I did my level best to swear as much as fucking possible ;-)
The end really is coming. What comes after that is anyone's guess.
Extrasolar Angel Extrasolar Angel's picture
Ethnic groups and national
Ethnic groups and national identity will remain. It is a strong meme, and attractive In Eclipse Phase it is still existing on Luna and Earth Orbit. I suppose some of the Reclaimers could be emotionally attached to their home countries. The further you go from Earth the less people you have that are attached to concept of nationality. However there are probably exceptions-small isolated groups who deliberately focused on their nationality, for example the Jewish survivors. And groups that transcend the concept of nationality be being more of a cultural groups-for example Jovian Republic and legacy of pan-American identity and I suppose people like Chinese...Despite Consortium efforts to create a new post-Man, old allegiances and cultural prejudice probably still stalks some Martian corporate corridors.
[I]Raise your hands to the sky and break the chains. With transhumanism we can smash the matriarchy together.[/i]
Decivre Decivre's picture
Erenthia wrote:On the flip
Erenthia wrote:
On the flip side, if we're going to be forgiving of past cultures, why not this one? I don't think it's entirely true to say that America has no true culture. In fact quite the opposite. We've exported so much of our culture to the rest of the world that the core of American culture is practically invisible for its ubiquity. I don't lament this. In fact certain aspects of American culture (even ones I feel we could tone down) are desperately needed in other parts of the world, such as the distrust of authority (a vital part of science) and a sharp divide between national identity and the government (I'm looking at you, China).
On the contrary, I would say that we have a fairly rich culture in the United States. A multitude of faiths that have spawned here, a plethora of musical genres, as well as numerous lingos and accents that dot our social landscape. To say that America has no culture is inaccurate; it would be more apt to say that the U.S. has a multitude of cultures, many of which are admixtures of other cultures, both without and within.
Erenthia wrote:
Even when congress has an approval rating approximately equal to your average pedophile and people let themselves get fooled into believing that the wrong choice for president will end the entire fucking world - we can still be proud to be Americans. And we should be. Yes we've entered a period where we're spiritually unfulfilled. Yes, we're seeking meaning all over the fucking everywhere. But we're still Americans. Our newfound obsession with paganism is just the shiny trinket of the week. Not that I have a problem with people finding meaning in whatever way they choose. Studying the positive and negative aspects of past cultures, taking the good and letting the bad be a warning is pretty much the American way. Like Shakespeare, we're pretty good and ripping shit off, passing it off as our own, and occasionally doing it better than it was done originally. We're cool like that. PS In the spirit of my post, I did my level best to swear as much as fucking possible ;-)
I disagree with the sentiment that we are a "spiritually unfulfilled" people. It makes spirituality sound like something that people always want, like food. I, and many like me, have no need for "spiritual fulfillment", and can do fine with a cultural fulfillment and social fulfillment that is very similar. And it does make sense with the United States' history; we were one of the bastions of Enlightenment Deism, and are one of the biggest homes for secular society in the world. Besides, religions and faiths have come and gone throughout our 236-year chronicle. It's not a surprise to me [i]at all[/i] that this continues into this day. How is a bunch of people in the modern day creating a neo-pagan faith any different from Joseph Smith hybridizing pop-culture Egyptology with Evangelical Christianity to create the Church of Latter-day Saints some 183 years ago?
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
NewtonPulsifer NewtonPulsifer's picture
An apt comparison
Decivre wrote:
Besides, religions and faiths have come and gone throughout our 236-year chronicle. It's not a surprise to me [i]at all[/i] that this continues into this day. How is a bunch of people in the modern day creating a neo-pagan faith any different from Joseph Smith hybridizing pop-culture Egyptology with Evangelical Christianity to create the Church of Latter-day Saints some 183 years ago?
This is an apt comparison. Neither the Mormon religion nor neo-paganism have much support in the archaeological record. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeology_and_the_Book_of_Mormon http://www.aeonmagazine.com/nature-and-cosmos/hugh-thomson-britain-fores... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_use_of_fire http://news.discovery.com/animals/mammoth-mastodon-extinction-climate.html
"I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve."- Isoroku Yamamoto
Decivre Decivre's picture
NewtonPulsifer wrote:This is
NewtonPulsifer wrote:
This is an apt comparison. Neither the Mormon religion nor neo-paganism have much support in the archaeological record. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaeology_and_the_Book_of_Mormon http://www.aeonmagazine.com/nature-and-cosmos/hugh-thomson-britain-fores... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_American_use_of_fire http://news.discovery.com/animals/mammoth-mastodon-extinction-climate.html
My point was that it doesn't matter whether they have evidence. They are faiths. If faiths were based on evidence, they'd be sciences. Or something; they'd definitely not be faiths.
Transhumans will one day be the Luddites of the posthuman age. [url=http://bit.ly/2p3wk7c]Help me get my gaming fix, if you want.[/url]
NewtonPulsifer NewtonPulsifer's picture
Decivre wrote:
Decivre wrote:
My point was that it doesn't matter whether they have evidence. They are faiths. If faiths were based on evidence, they'd be sciences. Or something; they'd definitely not be faiths.
Well, getting into the nature of faith is probably way into the weeds for this thread, but I disagree. Evidence sometimes does matter for faiths. I always felt there is a distinction between the type of faith which is a firm belief in something in which there is no proof/evidence for or against.....as compared to a firm belief in something in which there is clear proof/evidence [i]against[/i] that belief and no proof/evidence for. So addressing evidence in questions of faith is I feel valuable in this latter case. As well there's situations where faith based beliefs are presented as evidence based or factual when they're not if you examine it. So I feel counter-examples and rebuttal evidence are valuable here too.
"I fear all we have done is to awaken a sleeping giant and fill him with a terrible resolve."- Isoroku Yamamoto
jhfurnish jhfurnish's picture
Faiths and Evidence
There are of course systems of apologetics, or supportive debate if you will, for many major religions. Christian apologetics is the first one that comes to mind, and I must assume that Islam has a system of apologetics; both of these would be rooted in scripture for the beginnings of proofs, then go from there to documentation from people who lived in those times, finally to other supportive philosophical standards. In Christianity, philosophical supports include Logos, ala Aristotle, for example. Faith technically does not or should not require proof when it comes down to the wire - which could mean live rounds whizzing past your head someplace like Afghanistan. However, in the arena of debate we do find those who demand proof and for them there are systems of apologetics.
Arenamontanus Arenamontanus's picture
When I visited the old part
When I visited the old part of the St. John college library here in Oxford (bookshelves marked with Greek letters, leather-bound volumes chained to shelves, some books that actually have sanity deduction stats in Call of Cthulhu) one of the big sections was indeed apologetics. Scholars - being high in need of cognition - have spent a lot of effort to convince everybody about the truth of their faith (hmm, maybe the main target was always themselves). More amusingly, an even larger section was polemics - this is the books where the churches slug it out. But this is the high-falutin academic side of things. Most of these deep arguments don't matter in the Realpolitik of religion and culture. People are swayed just as much by vivid emotions, traditions, consistent senses of community and economic benefits. Very disappointing for us truth-obsessed scholars, except for the sociologists who get to study it all.
Extropian
OneTrikPony OneTrikPony's picture
I'd like to voice my
I'd like to voice my objection to the notion, implied in comments above, that there is any equivalence between; Spirituality, Faith, and Religious Dogma. One may lead to the next in the specific order of; Spirituality -> Faith -> Dogma, but each is further than the next from the "spiritual fulfillment" questioned in the earlier posts.

Mea Culpa: My mode of speech can make others feel uninvited to argue or participate. This is the EXACT opposite of what I intend when I post.

Thampsan Thampsan's picture
As it doesn't seem to have
As it doesn't seem to have been addressed, while I think culturally identity is essentially flexible as hell, I suspect that on many colonies that physical appearance may be determined by new cultural ideals of beauty. I strongly suspect that aside from the strong North European influence on Titan, the American trend of the Jovians and so on, that we should be assuming that 'white' is definitely not in the majority here. I suspect that Luna is very multicultural with a good mix of skin and body types, just like Titan may tend toward more Nordic body types. I always got the feeling that Mars would be a good mix of ethnicity from the Asiatic to the Middle Eastern and Indian. Of course the fact that people do get reinstantiated means that they might prefer to get a body that looks like their old one, but what about off the rack bodies, the ones marketed to people. I suspect that companies would look toward cultural trends and historical preference and push certain appearances onto the public as the new ideal of beauty.
rfmcdonald rfmcdonald's picture
Quote:I strongly suspect that
Quote:
I strongly suspect that aside from the strong North European influence on Titan, the American trend of the Jovians and so on, that we should be assuming that 'white' is definitely not in the majority here.
Culture /= race. The name of the author of a goodly part of the Titan chapter, a graduate of school in Oslo and veteran of the first NAC settlement is Marcus [i]Ming[/i]. Going back to the question of ethnicity in Eclipse Phase, different settlements and even entire worlds have their own cultural inheritances--Venus is heavily influenced by the European Union's style of government, at least, Titan is likewise shaped by the Nordic Europeans and Canadians who collaborated in their world's settlement, this settlement is an enclave of Chinese Taoists while that settlement is Russian Orthodox and this habitat on a spur of Locus is populated by neo-corvids, et cetera. Ethnicity is a real thing in Eclipse Phase.
Erenthia Erenthia's picture
Decivre wrote:Erenthia wrote
Decivre wrote:
Erenthia wrote:
I don't think it's entirely true to say that America has no true culture. In fact quite the opposite.
On the contrary, I would say that we have a fairly rich culture in the United States.
sorry I'm a little confused. What are you disagreeing with? The softness with which I said we are not lacking culture?
Deciver wrote:
I disagree with the sentiment that we are a "spiritually unfulfilled" people. It makes spirituality sound like something that people always want, like food. I, and many like me, have no need for "spiritual fulfillment", and can do fine with a cultural fulfillment and social fulfillment that is very similar. And it does make sense with the United States' history; we were one of the bastions of Enlightenment Deism, and are one of the biggest homes for secular society in the world.
"The same spiritual fulfillment that people find in religion can be found in science - by coming to know, if you will, the mind of God." - Carolyn Porco To be more explicit, spirituality means different things to different people. It does not require, to my thinking, anything religious or supernatural. It deals entirely with existential issues like personal meaning and connectedness, to others, to the Universe at large, and to oneself. Science and Rationalism are perfectly capable of providing spiritual fulfillment, though they seem to do so at a slower pace than they unseat the authority of religion which leaves a lot of people in a nihilistic place. Sad because it's unnecessary.
The end really is coming. What comes after that is anyone's guess.