I am currently in the process of reading "Sapiens", by Yuval Noah Harari. It is the perhaps most eyeopening book I have ever read, and I throroughly recommend it to anybody with any sort of interest of understanding who we humans are, where we came from and how we became what we are.
Interestingly, Harari also writes something that has a huge bearing on our dispute about whether we have one or two killers. He writes that what tells us apart from the animals is first and foremost our ability to create myths. And myths are anything that does not objectively exist. For example, a tree in a forest objectively exists, but the American declaration of independence does not. A stone on the ground exists, but the car manufacturer Peugeot does not.
The explanation for this is how the tree and the stone will be there regardless of what we think about them - but the declaration of independence and Peugeot are inventions that are present only as inventions of human fantasy. Like the game of football. Like the laws. Like the constitution of any country. Like any country.
Hararai divides matters up in three categories, objectively existing things, subjectively existing things and collectively subjective existing things. The objectively existing things are not influenced by any idea, they are simply there and they do not go away should we not like them. The subjectively existing things are matters that individuals choose to think, like how Michael Richards thinks that my suggestion of a common killer is a crackpot suggestion. It is subjective in the meaning that it is his own take on things. Others may agree or disagree, but the deciding matter is that he and he alone can choose to abandon or uphold the idea. If he wakes up tomorrow and at long last realizes that I was probably right all along, or if evidence surfaces to prove me right, then he can erase his take and it will go away. Fortwith he will nurture another idea about it.
The collectively subjective existing things are things like the declaration of independence, Peugeot, the laws, the constitution etcetera. If Michael wakes up tomorrow and denies these matters, it will not matter, they will remain in "existence" because they are collectively accepted and one guy changing his mind about them will not make them go away. However, if everybody working with Peugeot stay home and noone replaces them, then Peugeot will disappear. If the americans as a collective denounce the declaration of independence, it will go away and be replaced with something else.
The concept is mindblowingly fresh and revealing. And, as I say, it applies to what we discuss.
How does it work in the errand of the lone killer versus the twin killer duo? Well, the objectively existing matters are the cuts to the abdomens, the taken out uteri, the stolen rings, the cut away abdominal flaps etcetera - the recorded evidence concerning the damage done.
The subjectively existing things are the ideas of differing mindsets behind the murder series, the suggestions of how the torso killer had a private abode, the notion that the Ripper went through a frenzy in Millers Court and a fair few other things. And being Ripperology, collectively subjective existing things are hard to come by.
Itīs the difference between basing our respective takes on facts as opposed to basing them on hunches, or as Harari would have worded it: myths.
It is a thoroughly worthwhile read, I can say that much. But of course, such a recommendation is a subjectively existing truth ...
Interestingly, Harari also writes something that has a huge bearing on our dispute about whether we have one or two killers. He writes that what tells us apart from the animals is first and foremost our ability to create myths. And myths are anything that does not objectively exist. For example, a tree in a forest objectively exists, but the American declaration of independence does not. A stone on the ground exists, but the car manufacturer Peugeot does not.
The explanation for this is how the tree and the stone will be there regardless of what we think about them - but the declaration of independence and Peugeot are inventions that are present only as inventions of human fantasy. Like the game of football. Like the laws. Like the constitution of any country. Like any country.
Hararai divides matters up in three categories, objectively existing things, subjectively existing things and collectively subjective existing things. The objectively existing things are not influenced by any idea, they are simply there and they do not go away should we not like them. The subjectively existing things are matters that individuals choose to think, like how Michael Richards thinks that my suggestion of a common killer is a crackpot suggestion. It is subjective in the meaning that it is his own take on things. Others may agree or disagree, but the deciding matter is that he and he alone can choose to abandon or uphold the idea. If he wakes up tomorrow and at long last realizes that I was probably right all along, or if evidence surfaces to prove me right, then he can erase his take and it will go away. Fortwith he will nurture another idea about it.
The collectively subjective existing things are things like the declaration of independence, Peugeot, the laws, the constitution etcetera. If Michael wakes up tomorrow and denies these matters, it will not matter, they will remain in "existence" because they are collectively accepted and one guy changing his mind about them will not make them go away. However, if everybody working with Peugeot stay home and noone replaces them, then Peugeot will disappear. If the americans as a collective denounce the declaration of independence, it will go away and be replaced with something else.
The concept is mindblowingly fresh and revealing. And, as I say, it applies to what we discuss.
How does it work in the errand of the lone killer versus the twin killer duo? Well, the objectively existing matters are the cuts to the abdomens, the taken out uteri, the stolen rings, the cut away abdominal flaps etcetera - the recorded evidence concerning the damage done.
The subjectively existing things are the ideas of differing mindsets behind the murder series, the suggestions of how the torso killer had a private abode, the notion that the Ripper went through a frenzy in Millers Court and a fair few other things. And being Ripperology, collectively subjective existing things are hard to come by.
Itīs the difference between basing our respective takes on facts as opposed to basing them on hunches, or as Harari would have worded it: myths.
It is a thoroughly worthwhile read, I can say that much. But of course, such a recommendation is a subjectively existing truth ...
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