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@a_yawning_cat

stray thoughts, loosely held. rat jaeger.

California, USA
aycat.substack.com
Joined December 2018

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     🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

    Wolves start the socialization process earlier than dogs. The cubs begin to "attach" to its world mostly based on its sense of smell as that's the first sense that develops. It's sense of family is attached to feeling and scent.

    1:01 AM - 9 Aug 2020
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    • Dailan . Marras (48/100 wefts of soul)
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      2.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        Dogs on the other hand star this process later, when senses like sight and hearing have developed. When they start attaching to the world, it's a world that contains people.

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      3.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        Wolves thus never get a sense that humans are trustworthy. They're always a bit alien. Kind of like how food and taste works for humans.

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      4.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        As human-raised deer fawns grow they consider human "other deer". When male fawns mature, the instinct to drive away rivals makes them more dangerous than wolf-hybrid dogs to the owners. When released into the wild, they can start to attack humans.

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      5.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        Per "The Inner Life of Animals" by Peter Wohlleben.

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      6.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        No matter how accurate this is, there are 2 interesting models here. One is that of a "attachment period" that closes. Once your base assumptions of the world are formed, they're impossible to change.

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      7.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        The other is a "maturity override" that overrides an immature script, flushing out the child scripts and starting the adult script.

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      8.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        For humans I suspect we differ primarily in our base attachments as well as our maturity rituals. Different cultures probably cannot get along in a truly intimate way because of these fundamental differences just like wild animals can't ever be domestic.

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      9.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        Promoting diversity is all about protocols. The relationship at a max will only reach the intimacy level of lawyers exchanging information. The gap between different cultures cannot be bridged because the existence of such a gap *defines* a culture.

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      10.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        If the gap can be bridged, then it was never really a different culture. The more easily gaps are bridge, the more surface level the cultural differences actually are.

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      11.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        When you aim for world peace and unity without this understanding your efforts homogenize and harm. The only truly global culture is a lawyer/business like one. A purely protocol based form of communication. You unify all cultures only when you destroy them all.

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      12.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        If you desire world peaces because you cannot deal with conflict, then your peace comes at the price of destruction of all culture. Where every interaction between humans is like a dialog between lawyers.

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      13.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        Cultures can mix a bit because of the maturity override mechanism. The fundamental constants of your mental model of reality can be tweaked a bit under the heat of a flood of emotions.

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      14.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        Spartan maturity rituals, fraternity hazing rituals, baptisms, near death experiences, psychedelics, etc... These all allow a reforging of your world to different degrees.

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      15.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        However.. once you have already been through a maturity ritual it no longer works on you. If you can get the young one from other cultures to go through *your* maturity ritual, you can actually add a member to your culture.

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      16.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        This is why warlords want child soldiers and companies want interns. Only fresh blood can commit heart and soul. A mercenary will always be an outsider because they have already matured.

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      17.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        For humans, the attachment differences are individual, not identity based They're different quirks in taste in food, music, other people. They different personalities and different temperaments. They don't affect ability to "belong" to another culture

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      18.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        We don't really care about these differences. We're primary concerned with their path through a ritual. Rituals are diverse. They can be short and brutal, or long and gradual. You can have a culture with rituals around delaying rituals, rituals around maximizing rituals, etc...

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      19.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        If you grab a youngling who is in the middle of a long ritual and subject him or her to your harsher one, you can convert. The opposite is very hard to do. E.g. A response to feeling like your culture is being encroached on is to start becoming more "Spartan" like.

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      20.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        When you make your culture harsher you increase the rate of maturity for our younglings, preventing your culture from slowly being eroded away.

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      21.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        The fundamental underpinning of a culture is what it holds sacred. Sacred ideas are often better than sacred people (since people die) or sacred items (since they can be lost). Cultures based in items or ideas often splinter because the original source can be lost.

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      22.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        One of the greatest divides in our modern times is the gap between those who have their cultures revolving around ideas, and those who have their cultures revolving around nation or race.

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      23.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        Idea cultures like "scientist" or "academic" or "technologist" or "businessmen" are relatively immature and far more different than the cultures around race and nation. (for young nations like the u.s., being american can mean anything culture wise.)

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      24.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        China is an interesting case where its current incarnation as a modern nation is very long, but its culture, rooted in race, is very deep.

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      25.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        While american business culture *used* to be the ultimate pragmatic protocolizer that could unite the world by getting two people who hated each other to work together for riches now that strength is being co-opted by china.

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      26.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        The less sacred things a culture has, the less baggage it has because there's less to hate, only business to be made.

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      27.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        This combination of both youth and old age put china in a very interesting position. The concept of "China" for example is important because it is the very glue that ties together nation and race. Without it, this powerful paradox will fall apart.

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      28.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        American born chinese for example often actively want to dissociate with their chinese heritage. Surface level "asian" interests like boba and matcha are just that, surface level. There's an almost violent desire to escape chinese 'culture'.

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      29.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        This is difficult because there is such strong pressure to keep the racial identity tied with the cultural one. (Like how some religions only could be passed down via blood)

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      30.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        Sacred objects shine. Their visual. When our sense cannot determine what is sacred from what is profane then that sacred object has been destroyed. When a race can have a mix of very different cultures that race as a cultural carrier dies. Race no longer identifies the soul.

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      31.  🐈‏ @a_yawning_cat 9 Aug 2020

        Newer more 'fluid' cultures like 'academic' or 'technologist' disrupt and destroy existing cultures because they destabilize coordinating mechanisms. A last name or tone of skin no longer creates a sense of trust and unity.

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