by evilgenius » Sun 18 Feb 2018, 13:23:17
Why is it, do you think, that first person shooter games were(and are) the default starting point for video games? That has been the easy place to start. And once video games, around the time of the game Doom started becoming popular first person shooter seemed almost the exclusive type of game available. Developers didn't put much stock into the other kinds. It was easy to get a first person shooter game developed and hard to get some other concept past initial review. Yes, there were race car games and early sport playing games. It wasn't like first person shooter dominated so much that other concepts didn't exist. I ask you because the theme was(and is) so dominant.
I think it has something to do with agency. And those types of games turn agency almost into candy. But why would agency be so alluring, unless people felt they lacked it in the first place? The definition of agency has enough to do with death, obviously, that when people accept guns as an argument for its appearance that they also gloss over the reality that death brings with it. Agency is that important.
Where does agency come from? At its most basic level it has something to do with the seeming ability to manipulate the world. Initially, it's akin to an infant reaching out and spinning one of those mobiles their parents hang over the crib. Eventually, though, it becomes more strategic. The definition of whether it was a success, whether it moved the world, changes to become one of implementing strategy. Where do the ideas surrounding strategy come from? Boys kill girls who spurn them because they looked upon love as a sort of possession. Fathers kill their families and then themselves because they looked upon a particular setback as a critical change which wrought havoc upon the strategy which they were following in pursuit of what? Some person goes into their workplace and kills a bunch of people they work with because they couldn't get what they wanted out of the place. Where do these ideas, these minor philosophies, surrounding agency come from? Don't they come from society?
The school is the fundamental place in American society where socialization takes place. If people don't get it there, then they are expected to get it from work. Last of all, some say first of all, they may get it from family. I think family may be where what society has done to our parents is ground into us, in preparation for what will come later. That it is a work in progress, so to speak, and not a fait acompli. Unless you have one very dark and controlling family in play, that is to say, children soon mirror their peers as opposed to their families at a certain point in time. Family is a touchy subject, though. How many people, when push comes to shove, really enjoy spending much time with their extended family? And, yet, they shape us in ways that are permanent. Some of that is nature, but, by far, most of it is nurture. They don't nurture us in a vacuum.
Gosh, one, two, three. But family is the place where things go wrong the most, not schools. Schools are meant to take all of the disparate streams that come to it from all of the families and make something of them. Maybe this is about the kind of thing that KaiserJeep talks about a lot, anthropology, and maybe it is about how within a society the memes they use to describe themselves can become overextended? The world has been changing for some time, and those changes have been recorded in the failures of the family for the most part. There will always be an element of static change between generations, for lack of a better term, but it takes place at that point where there is the most rub between the old and the new. It takes place right where the very best argument for the existence of law exists(that it might prevent the most horrible things), and where, out of the three, its prevalence is the most subjective. Now the pace of change, and our continued inability to adapt to those changes, has gotten so bad that the story can no longer be confined to family alone. We are using schools and workplaces to write it. So, where are we headed?
Last edited by
evilgenius on Sun 18 Feb 2018, 14:04:44, edited 1 time in total.