Originally posted by Richard Barrett
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Are traditions important?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostMaybe he'll give us the benefit of his inevitably unique experience and tell us whether or not it is so...[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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But of the 42,000 words she has spoken, only 3,991 are distinct words which have never been repeated, according to mathematicians at University College London (UCL)
(But I'm not about to do more research to find out.)
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWhilst I can do no other than agree with that last bit, the rest is flawed; "science" - or rather practitioners in the world of scientific research - do/does not pretend to "know everything", which is why there remains so much to be discovered; the fact that, despite discoveries that have already been made and the ongoing advancements in scientific research, the remains so very much to be learned is hardly a legitimate excuse to pour scorn on those practitioners and their faith in learning and discovery, is it?
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"Tradition" could be used as a way of "justifying" NIH - Not Invented Here - which is somewhat bogus. Many people involved in making decisions really have very little experience outside of "what they know" - so actually are mostly not well placed to have a view. They can't compare different systems because they only have knowledge of one (at most) so really can't make an informed judgement. However, occasionally inertia does have its place, if the "benefits" of uncertain new ways of behaviour are unclear, and many people would rather stick with what they know, rather than try out new things and ideas. Sometimes this is baseless, and stupid, IMO, though not always.
Traditions are fine if people can derive benefit and pleasure from them, but some definitely do outlive their usefulness. Some evolve though.
One example is mince pies, which are a curious British invention. Apparently historically they really did contain meat, and the meat was mixed with spices and other flavouring in an attempt to make meat palatable during the winter - hence the name "mincemeat". I doubt whether many of us would like to eat one of the original forms of mince pies, though some of us still enjoy the modern variant. I wonder how many people died as a result of having dodgy mince pies in centuries past.
Another is the evolution of Santa Claus - obviously dressed in something like a red dressing gown. Apparently in centuries gone by, green was the colour of the stand ins for the modern Father Christmas, so now "red is the new green".
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But in answer to the original question, some are, some aren't. There is no other answer. Many 'traditions' relate to the seasons of the year, the annual repetition of natural events. Do you stop planting ALL your vegetable seedlings in spring and try planting out in October instead? Are birthday celebrations a 'tradition'? Tradition, in a general sense, is essential; but some traditions aren't; and others should be discontinued. As far as national traditions are concerned, who should decide when they should be stopped, which ones, and how?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostAnd indeed usually necessary, or balgy struits rimblify your empralfage and nobody knows what you're talking about.
I still think Burke is the person who sets out why 'tradition' might be important as a stabilizer in society over time (he can of course be argued with).
There must have been psychological and sociological research done on the kind of people who are drawn to 'tradition' and those who are drawn to reject it.
I like small meaningless traditions that give some picturesque local colour to life; I am much more suspicious of (and inclined to rebel against) those Big 'Traditions' which we are Called On To Respect with lots of capital letters - royal and military flummery and the like...
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