On Mon, 2014-03-03 at 13:00 -0800, Raj Shekhar wrote:
> What I see here is that you are using the model laid out in the Indian
> texts (I assume the Hindu religious texts).  Using this model has
> benefits, but the bias that might creep in there is that the good of
> many outweigh the needs of few. 

In fact I have not read a single Hindu religious or non religious text
in my entire life which will soon hit six decades. Note that I did not
even mention the word Hindu in my post. I base my views solely on my
observations of society in India and they apply to Indians - meaning
Hindus, Muslims, Jains, Sikhs and Christians. That is the way life has
been lived in Indian society and continues to a great extent.

There is a curious way in which things that are common to a whole lot of
Indians are attributed to Hindus alone - and this is one example of a
type of cognitive bias. Parents looking after children looking after
elderly parents, collective family decision making, mandatory
heterosexual marriage, fixing marriages within a community, a bias
against homosexuality, the requirement to procreate are social mores
that cut across all religions in India. 

Yes it may be "Hindu behaviour" in common parlance but guess what?
Within this common "Hindu behaviour" the only thing that is not common
to all is the particular god that is worshipped. Funny innit? So what is
religious about this behaviour? 

shiv


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