Posted March 21, 2017
low rated
Shadowstalker16: It isn't universally acknowledged because it isn't as close to as science-ey as you say. Its effects are intangible and vary from person to person, and using it as a universal rule for predicting behavior is stupid to say the least. The subconscious having some role in our behavior doesn't mean it controls it, nor that it is the same for everyone.
So in arguments about these so called questionable games, the people who acknowledge the subconscious talk as if everyone is affected equally and that effect is usually assumed to be the most negative one, which is a very subjective assumption, because that is assuming the subconscious of everyone, which cannot even be found out without assuming.
Given the nature of what we know about this subconscious, its very much a matter of opinion and not fact. If I'm wrong, then tell me if human behavior can be predicted to a tea based on this idea of the subconscious mind controlling us, or how such questionable games don't seem to affect everyone equally.
– Yes, it's science. Social science. "Soft" science. But science. Not "science-ey". So in arguments about these so called questionable games, the people who acknowledge the subconscious talk as if everyone is affected equally and that effect is usually assumed to be the most negative one, which is a very subjective assumption, because that is assuming the subconscious of everyone, which cannot even be found out without assuming.
Given the nature of what we know about this subconscious, its very much a matter of opinion and not fact. If I'm wrong, then tell me if human behavior can be predicted to a tea based on this idea of the subconscious mind controlling us, or how such questionable games don't seem to affect everyone equally.
– Science in a field in which our findings are necessarily limited is still science.
– The natural sciences mostly deal with theories anyway, not "facts"
– The theory of relativity is still just a theory.
– Without it, e.g. satellite navigation would not work, but we still can not attain "proof" that it is correct
– The theory of relativity is e.g. also not "science-ey", it's science, plain and simple.
– No one here has tried to use some hypothesized media effect to precisely predict a certain type of behaviour
– No one here has asserted that these effects are necessarily always negative
– Few would even attempt to
– Kasper definitely didn't
– The validity of e.g. cultivation theory is not defined by its ability to "predict behaviour"
– hence I think you're asking Kasper to prove something that he hasn't at all claimed
– hence I think you're assuming something about some theories that the theories themselves don't claim
– The danger of media consumption is not that consumers lose of their sense of reality
– Your average shooter differentiates between reality and fiction quite well actually
– According to cultivation theory we increasingly assume the world around us to be like the one shown in the media
– understandably so, as we connect to/experience most of the outside world through the media only, including esp. fiction
– this has scarcely anthing to do with "losing your sense of reality"
– these world views would lead to vastly different, unpredictable kinds of behaviour based on the individual
– most of those behaviour patterns would not be violent or otherwise overtly antisocial
– however, there's worth in debating violence normalisation or stereotypical female as well as male roles
– Not with intent to censor or otherwise abandon, but to diversify
– I'm not an expert on cultivation theory, but "common sense" tells me that diversified media would help
– If you love both violent and non-violent games, the effects of violence normalisation could be mitigated
– If you're confronted with a wide array of non-stereotypical characters, you don't get your prejudices validated
– You don't have to make a "conscious effort" to let media portrayals seep into your perception of the world
– On the contrary, you have to make a conscious effort to view the media you love critically
Uhm, back on topic now any time soon?
Post edited March 21, 2017 by Vainamoinen