I was actually reading something recently about the battle between the
concept of negative rights vs. positive rights, and how it explains how
both liberals and conservatives claim to belong to the same "liberal
democratic" tradition, yet argue on two entirely contradictory wavelengths.

I think people just want correct, unchanging answers, but humans don't seem
to understand that they're wrong or off-kilter sometimes. When we adjust
our values, it doesn't necessarily mean that truth changes, it's just that
we were wrong about what the truth was. Then again, what I don't get is why
we're not allowed to define our own subjective values as humans and believe
in them with the same force as the objective good that we claim exists out
in the unknowable ether. If there's an objective truth, we're only going to
get hints of it, and not the whole shebang. In the end, I dunno.

On Fri, Jan 6, 2012 at 9:52 AM, <[email protected]> wrote:

> **
> The question this study raises by omission is this* : *
> Why do some people insist on some approximation of objectivity,
> balancing the insights of L vs R and often seeking new answers
> to questions which defy Liberal vs Conservative classifications ?
>
> Radical Centrists are not the only people in this category.
> Natural scientists also belong, and obviously many people in
> the computer field, medical doctors, plus anyone else who values
> some kind of scientific outlook, which *can be* ( even if not always true
> )
> behavioral scientists, geographers, people in communications, etc.
>
> *What attracts people to objectivity ?*
>
> Suggestions anyone ?
>
> Billy
>
> ==============================================
>
>
> January 6, 2012
>
> *University of Nebraska at Lincoln*
> *News Blog*
>
>  Political biology: The left rolls with the good, the right confronts the
> bad
>
> From cable TV news pundits to red-meat speeches from candidates in Iowa
> and New Hampshire, our nation’s political stereotypes are on full display:
> Conservatives paint self-indulgent liberals as insufferably absent on
> urgent national issues, while liberals say fear-mongering conservatives are
> fixated on exaggerated dangers to the country.
>
> A new study from the University of 
> Nebraska-Lincoln<http://www.unl.edu/polphyslab/current-research-publications-and-working-papers>suggests
>  there are biological truths to such broad brushstrokes.
>
> In a series of experiments, researchers closely monitored physiological
> reactions and eye movements of study participants when shown combinations
> of both pleasant and unpleasant images. Conservatives reacted more strongly
> to, fixated more quickly on, and looked longer at the unpleasant images;
> liberals had stronger reactions to and looked longer at the pleasant images
> compared with conservatives.
>
> “It’s been said that conservatives and liberals don’t see things in the
> same way,” said *Mike Dodd<http://psych.unl.edu/faculty/faculty.asp?id=57>
> *, UNL assistant professor of psychology and the study’s lead author.
> “These findings make that clear – quite literally.”
>
> To gauge participants’ physiological responses, they were shown a series
> of images on a screen. Electrodes measured subtle skin conductance changes,
> which indicated an emotional response. The cognitive data, meanwhile, was
> gathered by outfitting participants with eyetracking equipment that
> captured even the most subtle of eye movements while combinations of
> unpleasant and pleasant photos appeared on the screen.
>
> While liberals’ gazes tended to fall upon the pleasant images, such as a
> beach ball or a bunny rabbit, conservatives clearly focused on the negative
> images – of an open wound, a crashed car or a dirty toilet, for example.
>
> Consistent with the idea that conservatives seem to respond more to
> negative stimuli while liberals respond more to positive stimuli,
> conservatives also exhibited a stronger physiological response to images of
> Democratic politicians – presumed to be a negative to them – than they did
> on pictures of well-known Republicans. Liberals, on the other hand, had a
> stronger physiological response to the Democrats – presumed to be a
> positive stimulus to them – than they did to images of the Republicans.
>
> By studying both physiological and cognitive aspects, the researchers
> established unique new insights into the growing notion that political
> leanings are at least partial products of our biology, UNL political
> scientist and study co-author *Kevin Smith*
> <http://polisci.unl.edu/dr-kevin-smith>said.
>
> Recent research on the subject has focused mostly on physiological
> reactions to negative stimuli. The new study’s use of cognitive data
> regarding both positive and negative imagery adds to the understanding of
> how liberals and conservatives see and experience the world, Smith said.
>
> UNL political scientist and co-author *John 
> Hibbing<http://polisci.unl.edu/dr-john-hibbing>
> * said the results might mean that those on the right are more attuned
> and attentive to aversive elements in life and are more naturally inclined
> to confront them. From an evolutionary standpoint, that makes sense, he
> said.
>
> The results also are consistent with conservatives’ support of policies to
> protect society from perceived external threats (support for increased
> defense spending or opposition to immigration) and internal ones as well
> (support for traditional values and being tough on crime), Hibbing said.
>
> The researchers were careful to not make a value judgment on either
> political orientation. But they did note that their discovery provided an
> opportunity to recognize the relevance of deeper biological variables in
> politics and turn down political polarization.
>
> Rather than believing those with opposite political views are uninformed
> or willfully obtuse, the authors said, political tolerance could be
> enhanced if it was widely understood that political differences are based
> in part on our physiological and cognitive differences.
>
> “When conservatives say that liberals are out of it and just don’t get it,
> from this standpoint, that’s true,” Hibbing said. “And when liberals say
> ‘What are (conservatives) so frightened of? Is the world really that
> dangerous?’ Given what each side sees, what they pay attention to, what
> they physiologically experience – the answer is both sides are right.”
>
> The study, funded in part by the National Science Foundation, is in a
> forthcoming edition of the journal *Philosophical Transactions of the
> Royal Society B <http://rstb.royalsocietypublishing.org/>* and was
> authored by Dodd, Hibbing and Smith, as well as UNL’s Amanda Balzer, Carly
> Jacobs and Michael Gruszczynski.
>
> --
> Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community <
> [email protected]>
> Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
> Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org
>

-- 
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