"... On Jul 12, 5:11 pm, Slip Disc <[email protected]> wrote: ..."

> Fear is "A" primal emotion but not the only primal emotion.  To debate
> on the platform of a single primal emotion seems short sighted.  

Slip, I beg to differ, but fear is THE primal emotion.  It's the
primal emotion in anything that lives.  No species could survive
without it.  The emotion of fear -- I don't know whether it would
actually be called fear in plant species but on a simpler level fear
is an instinctive reaction to perceived danger.   It's the most basic
survival tool we have and given my own experiences works regardless
whether I'm to stupid to be cognizant of a danger or not.

I've heard it said by a religious psychologist that perhaps that was
god's first gift to man -- fear.  Don't eat the apple or you'll lose
all this.  Adam didn't fear eating the apple, he feared losing
paradise.  But then -- and this is included in my discussion with
RIgsy -- Eve tempted Adam into taking a bite of the apple, of course
after she identically succumbed to the talking snake.

But fear is and always has been our primal driving emotion.  Fear of
starving, fear of the elements, fear of other creatures, fear of the
rumblings and outbursts of an active planet, Fear of the spears and
hammers from the sky.  Fear has had a solid grip on our minds and
spirits since it all began.

Most animals don't get all bent out of shape over it though.  When
storms come they know of places to shelter.  When the ground trembles
they simply run, not knowing where or why.  But with us, we not only
have those basic reactions but we've a mind that is orders of
magnitude greater than any other known species and it works amazing
wonders.  Think of nightmares.  Think of the heights of paralyzing
paranoia that humans can achieve.  Think of the frequency of mental
disorders most of which have their inception in a fear of one sort or
another.  We create fears where none exist and then react to them
irrationally.

I'm not saying we do not other emotions.  I could not expect less of
us.  After all we are humans.  We expect more of ourselves.  Look at
the heights and depths to which we've examined and expressed emotions
such as love, sadness, pleasure, compassion, empathy.   We share some
of these with some species of animals but our species excels in the
exploration of them and endless others.  There are more facets of
human experience than we can imagine, I suspect.  But the one emotion
we share with every other living creature is fear and it's tied to the
strongest instinct, survival.   To me that deigns the crown of
primal.

> To draw the conclusion that all
> instances involving male domination are attributed to primal fear is
> argument by selective observation.  

It also fits all the circumstances.  But I'm not just singling out
male domination.  I'm saying that because fear is such a primal
emotion that there is some degree of it that factors into everything
we do.  Every twinge of anxiety, every self doubt, every lack of
confidence, every defensiveness as well as every aggression regardless
how benign has roots reaching back to that primal condition.  It
couldn't be otherwise.  Without fear as a primal emotion there is
serious doubt we'd have survived.

> Your belief in and/or acceptance of the Lederer view
> does not make it so and his delving into our deep past is tantamount
> to applying Platonian and Socratic principles to a modern day era
> where much of their philosophies are not applicable.

I don't know much about Plato or Socrates (other than the latter's
ideas about argument which I learned in law), but my perspective on
Lederer is that his ideas describe a psychological philosophy that
seems to fit all the circumstances my experience has accrued.  Simply,
the concept makes sense, especially given my study of Jung and man's
symbols.  I think it is true that pictures speak a thousand words, and
just as true is that our symbols speak volumes.  It was from Jung that
I first became aware of fear as an archetype of human behavior.  And
whatever the dynamic is that men and  women have going between them --
an extraterrestrial would likely believe each half of our species
hated the other given our behavior and the symbols we have produced --
you can bet fear is at the bottom of it.

> My example of
> personal  male/female relationships is by no means egoistically based
> but exemplifies the existence of women that prefer traditional roles
> in heterosexual relationships.  The attraction aspect is irrelevant
> but the existence of that particular feminine dynamic is much the
> point.  Your responses are obviously based upon your own personal
> perception and comprehension of the commentary.  Semantics aside I
> think you missed some of the intent.

Then perhaps you can bring it into focus for me.  I may have missed
it.  I think all I was saying is that the attraction aspect is not
unimportant since we each choose our mates -- are drawn like moths to
the flame -- to the complimentary facets and aspects in each other.
There is a lot of truth to the triteness that women chase daddies and
men chase mommies and defensiveness, rather than hiding the fact,
magnifies it.  Of course that's a two-edged sword.

> As far as the dregs issue is concerned I would have to say it applies
> to specific cities, regions, areas, hoods etc. and not to be construed
> as a descriptive of the national condition.  It is not a race issue
> but simply a recognition based on personal and reported observations.
> You have to admit that once clean and decent neighborhoods have become
> cesspools over time which is the core of my point.  

It's just that it's a degrading term and that seemed to be the
attitude you were implying.  But yes, it's true that any center of
population degrades into slums over time.  And it's also true that
those slums will have a larger proportion of minorities than normal.
But slums get rejuvenated.  Look at the turnover in London in just a
hundred years.  In Brooklyn the home were I was born started out in
1910 as a higher class single family house, tall rather than broad.
By the time I was born it had devolved into lower class housing
disaffected single mothers, single lonely men, and my mother and
grandmother as landladys.  In 1958 when I stopped by the neighborhood
it was an all black slum rife with gangs.  A few years ago I found the
home, just short of a hundred years old, for sale for $1.9 million and
looking a hell of a lot different than I remember on the inside.   The
outside is still just as I remember.  The same old tree out front
(thanks to Google Earth) whose bark I used to peel off and make jigsaw
puzzles.  Cities recycle.  Europe has some excellent examples of
rejuvenation of cities that go back eons.

> Besides that I
> really just tossed that in at the end after thinking about Darwin and
> how we've veered from the ideal of natural selection.  If we bred
> animals the way we breed ourselves we would have many lame and useless
> animals about.

Hmm.  I don't think we've veered from natural selection at all.  We've
just refined it.  Nor is breeding the cause of lame and useless
animals, human or not.  It's the specific conditions which cause
lameness and uselessness (i.e., poverty, strife, famine, etc.) .  Rid
ourselves of these debilitating factors and I think we'd find much
genius, talent and ability.  I grieve at times over the loss of some
spectacular human beings to never being discovered or nurtured because
of those conditions.

We have tombs for the unknown soldier but no tombs for the unknown
genius, the unknown talent, the unknown discoverer.

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