• MonkderVierte
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    4 hours ago

    I mean, tradition has its place in human evolution. The elders often did knew better (btw, that’s why humans have grandparents). But in the modern fast-lived world, it’s vastly outdated.

    Still, you should learn from the past and live in the present.

    edit: though traditions in the form of customs, some of them are nice and should be preserved.

    • luciferofastora@lemmy.zip
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      3 hours ago

      Ideally, tradition and innovation are two parts of a healthy system: Tradition is what had worked so far, but as circumstances change, innovation seeks ways to improve and adapt. Critical reasoning needs to balance them, so that their oppositional forces can pull society towards their shared purpose: prosperity.

      The issues arise when the tempering mechanism of critical reasoning breaks.
      Without the lessons of the past informing the decisions of the presence, odds are that mistakes will be repeated eventually.
      On the other hand, rigid tradition obviously risks failing to adapt to changing circumstances.

      Where modernity exacerbates those issues is in the sheer destructive power of modern weaponry and the complex infrastructure and administration required to maintain modern population and living standards: errors of either kind can easily become more costly than ever before. At the same time, modern state capacity puts far more power into the hands of those entrusted with it, enabling far greater mistakes. And finally, as you noted, the fast pace and scope of modern developments and changes quickly invalidates many old premises and requires faster adaption.

      Not all traditions are bad, but figuring out which ones are and how to fix them is hard to do quickly.

      • MonkderVierte
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        4 hours ago

        Yes, they can help care and give wisdom. Directly linked to why we get that old.

        Edit: apparently, other primates have grandparents too.

        • gamermanh@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 hours ago

          I know for a fact that’s not true because when I was in Japan I saw some wild monkeys being cared for and they specifically had signs on the all showing the family trees of the different monkeys being cared for and explaining how the families all worked

          One of the things mentioned was that the grandparent/parent/child units would all work together more closely with each other than non-family members, though they were more collaborative overall than humans

          Also elephants come to mind as a non primate mammal