In my experience and research, we tend to be of two minds on this issue.
First, we have the universal system of morality, where all people are created equal, and all that sort of thing. This is honestly more prevalent in theory than in practice, because, well, an ideology where everyone is valued is one where you are valued.
Second, we tend to value people with certain characteristics over those without those characteristics. What said characteristics are tend to vary from person to person, and are dictated largely by those characteristics people have (or believe they have) or want to have, or less commonly, characteristics shared by people they have lived with and grown to admire. These can be anything from abstract characteristics (like courage) to physical characteristics. This is more prevalent in practice, because, unfortunately, it's built into human nature. There's a finite limit to the number of people the average person can have stable relationships with, and the commonly accepted number is 150 (there is some debate about the number, and I have heard some estimates saying the number is as high as 290, but this doesn't make it much better). And to treat the human mind like a computer, this isn't just some problem that some software (new beliefs) can fix, this is a hardware limitation built into the human neocortex, like trying to run a new program with a lot of bytes on a Commodore 64 with 64 kb of memory. I strongly suspect that this is the reason bigotry came about: as horrible as it is, it's a convenient way of narrowing down your pool of potential relationships. And that's why, in practice, the universal view will always be more theoretical than practical. Why, yes, that does suck.
First, we have the universal system of morality, where all people are created equal, and all that sort of thing. This is honestly more prevalent in theory than in practice, because, well, an ideology where everyone is valued is one where you are valued.
Second, we tend to value people with certain characteristics over those without those characteristics. What said characteristics are tend to vary from person to person, and are dictated largely by those characteristics people have (or believe they have) or want to have, or less commonly, characteristics shared by people they have lived with and grown to admire. These can be anything from abstract characteristics (like courage) to physical characteristics. This is more prevalent in practice, because, unfortunately, it's built into human nature. There's a finite limit to the number of people the average person can have stable relationships with, and the commonly accepted number is 150 (there is some debate about the number, and I have heard some estimates saying the number is as high as 290, but this doesn't make it much better). And to treat the human mind like a computer, this isn't just some problem that some software (new beliefs) can fix, this is a hardware limitation built into the human neocortex, like trying to run a new program with a lot of bytes on a Commodore 64 with 64 kb of memory. I strongly suspect that this is the reason bigotry came about: as horrible as it is, it's a convenient way of narrowing down your pool of potential relationships. And that's why, in practice, the universal view will always be more theoretical than practical. Why, yes, that does suck.
Comparing the Universal Oneness of All Life to Yo Mama since 2010.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.
I was born with the gift of laughter and a sense the world is mad.