PurrfectPeach
New member
Is anyone else just amazed by how little the typical person (I am American but I'm sure this is common in other places too) knows about other cultures? And also, by how we assume that things that are common in OUR culture are the "normal, natural" way things are for humans in general?
The reason I ask is I was just reading a question about why men like large breasts. The answers basically fell into 3 groups: because men are sexist pigs, because breasts are just sexy and all men like them, or biology explanations about big breasts being a sign of fertility.
None of these answers mentioned anything about culture or showed any awareness of the fact that breasts are not as big a deal in other cultures as they are in ours.
In many cultures, for example, a woman's thighs are considered the most arousing body part and breasts are considered mainly for babies.
Thoughts? Do you think this ignorance of other cultures and tendency to assume all people are like one's own culture contributes to many of the world's problems?
I'm not trying to suggest that other cultures' sexual differences are the most important or interesting part of cultural diversity. That just happened to be what the question which spurred this train of thought was regarding. It would probably be an interesting conversation though if neither person was uptight about it.
The reason I ask is I was just reading a question about why men like large breasts. The answers basically fell into 3 groups: because men are sexist pigs, because breasts are just sexy and all men like them, or biology explanations about big breasts being a sign of fertility.
None of these answers mentioned anything about culture or showed any awareness of the fact that breasts are not as big a deal in other cultures as they are in ours.
In many cultures, for example, a woman's thighs are considered the most arousing body part and breasts are considered mainly for babies.
Thoughts? Do you think this ignorance of other cultures and tendency to assume all people are like one's own culture contributes to many of the world's problems?
I'm not trying to suggest that other cultures' sexual differences are the most important or interesting part of cultural diversity. That just happened to be what the question which spurred this train of thought was regarding. It would probably be an interesting conversation though if neither person was uptight about it.