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coberst
10-11-2009, 03:37 PM
What is the American frame of mind?

I would say that a culture consists of the complex of ideas that a group of people hold dear. One can speak of the culture of a small group or of a very large group.

In the United States our culture is determined to a large extent by how we hold "these truths to be self-evident"; we are held together by ideas perhaps more than other societies. Next, religion plays a great role, and in our case it is the mixture of Protestantism, Judaism, and Catholicism. Following this is our infatuation with capitalism; following that is our narcissistic view of our uniqueness and greatness.

Our culture is a general attitude toward our self and toward the world based upon these four ideologies.

To what powers have wo/men given allegiance in order to solve the paradoxes of life? To what or to whom have each of us given our uncritical allegiance? “Into what hero-system do I fit the expression of my talent”? What or whom has become my fetish-god?

It is possible for the adult to choose which power s/he will serve; however, to do so, when the choice is contrary to one that has resulted from the family and community clan, is an extremely unusual and heroic act. “The great tragedy of our lives is that the major question of our existence is never put by us--it is put by personal and social impulses for us.”

Very few of us discover our authentic talent—if it is ever found it is generally found accidentally through plain fate by us in our social milieu as we tap...tap...tap our blind way through life.

From a personal point of view our principal task is to somehow find our way out of the fate that we stumbled into and to grow out of our idol worship and fetishism and to expand our horizons, allegiances, and to drop our mere preoccupations. We need to free our self from the opinions of others.

“Since aggression is a reaction to frustration, by remaining tightly bound to the success of our social world we increase our aggressiveness, life invariable frustrates us.”

Disinterested knowledge is the energy bunny. It generates the energy for exploration and for overcoming some of the inhibitions conscious reason places on the unconscious.

Studying disinterested knowledge is like taking off a month every year to visit a strange new land. Curiosity is reinvigorated and new meaning is created.[/b

Knowledge is like a jigsaw puzzle. We have created many puzzles in coping with reality and when we received a new piece (knowledge) that does not fit our present puzzles we forgetaboutit. However, if through disinterested knowledge we have created new puzzles we might find a place for this new fragment of knowledge to fit; thereby this fragment becomes our new knowledge.

Our mind is constantly working for us and when we do not give it a worthwhile project, i.e. a new puzzle, it will just waste away in boredom or worry.

[b]In America one might best see this attitude manifested by this frame of mind “I’ve Upped My Income; Now Up Yours”; a manifestation of this attitude may be seen in concrete form by the fact that 45 million citizens are without proper health care.

Do you think that the attitude “I’ve Upped My Income, Now Up Yours” is an American frame of mind?

Quotes from The Birth and Death of Meaning: An Interdisciplinary Perspective on the Problem of Man by Ernest Becker

soundofmusic
10-13-2009, 02:47 PM
:confused: I think it all depends on where you are sitting while viewing America.
If people allow themselves to be swept up in the "fad of the day" club; then they fall victim to the peer pressure and fears of the day. Every day it's something different; do you remember that during the Bush administration, everytime his popularity polls fell, we suddenly became aware of some third world nation who was planning to poison or bomb us? Now, alot of Americans are constantly in fear of poverty; but we've rode this horse before! Prices have went up before and companies have failed and people have lost their jobs; the only difference is that people are in constant fear mixed with constant optimism by listening to the media, trying to take advantage of scams.
I think that Americans idea of freedom is truly a very personal one; we are only aware of our constitutional rights when they are being violated. We are not really team players. I have noticed that more Americans are having to dismiss their pride, do what many countries have done for generations, and depend on each other for their livlihood; but it does not seem to be a happy marriage. It is a marriage of convenience.

Pryderi Agni
10-14-2009, 07:52 AM
Well, I though 'Crush everyone who's not American!' was the American frame of mind. Other than that, I don't think America is in any other frame of mind, unless it's the nation's ridiculous love of money.