M
Maxply
Guest
Respectfully, Mirdath, I’d say you’re probably on target the way people initially take things. But in the long term, it’s important that people know where other people stand, and it does, for most people, affect their behavior.
The number 1 factor in preventing teens from smoking, for instance, is their knowledge that parents disapprove. Deep down, there’s an impact.
This subject—showing moral disapprobation–is a very difficult and context-specific one. Very, very tough to generalize. Some homosexuals may well respect someone firm in their beliefs, while others might laugh or trivialize a person and his values.
Hollywood and TV have made us all super-sensitive to moral criticism of any sort, to the extent that any discussion or show of values is considered on a par with the holocaust. This has a good effect, if you want to promote the notion that any and all behaviors are okay to do ("What!!! You don’t like me killing puppies!! How dare you judge!!). But overall, humans have a moral dimension, and I fear for the erosion of our public appreciation of this.
The number 1 factor in preventing teens from smoking, for instance, is their knowledge that parents disapprove. Deep down, there’s an impact.
This subject—showing moral disapprobation–is a very difficult and context-specific one. Very, very tough to generalize. Some homosexuals may well respect someone firm in their beliefs, while others might laugh or trivialize a person and his values.
Hollywood and TV have made us all super-sensitive to moral criticism of any sort, to the extent that any discussion or show of values is considered on a par with the holocaust. This has a good effect, if you want to promote the notion that any and all behaviors are okay to do ("What!!! You don’t like me killing puppies!! How dare you judge!!). But overall, humans have a moral dimension, and I fear for the erosion of our public appreciation of this.
