So what kind of things people believe (or are socially expected to pretend to believe) is irrelevant and doesn't result in actual functional differences, but what kinds of sounds and symbols people use to communicate about what they believe is relevant and does result in actual functional differences?Moose-tache wrote: ↑Thu Sep 08, 2022 9:56 amPro-tip, if you're scraping ancient sectarian schims off the bottom of the barrel, you're functionally out of differences.
We could apply a general culture test here:
What language do people speak?
Sorry, but that doesn't make the slightest amount of sense to me. It's as if someone would seriously argue that a strategy game and a word processing app that were written in the same programming language are the same software, while two word processing apps with near-identical user experiences that were written in different programming languages are very different from each other. As far as I'm concerned, people's attitudes towards life and major issues are more relevant than the specific sounds that come out of their mouths when they talk about their attitudes.
And - a list of supposedly relevant traits that doesn't list attitudes towards sex or sexuality? WTF?