Nov. 5th, 2004 10:58 am
Common as hen's teeth
Does common sense exist?
Last night, I came across a pamphlet entitled Street sense is common sense. My immediate reaction was that street sense is cover a term for a number of learned skills. I wouldn't necessarily expect someone from a radically different environment--say a proverbially idyllic pastoral setting--to walk into a major urban area already possessed of them.
That got me thinking: Is "common sense" just a rhetorical turn of phrase used by a speaker to emphasise that he considers certain skills especially simple and basic or is it actually possible to codify a body of skills which together constitute "common sense"? Has anyone formally tried, say in the way that Hirsch et al. tried to define "cultural literacy"?
What d'y'all think? Or is the answer so commonsensical that I'm foolish to even pose the question?
Last night, I came across a pamphlet entitled Street sense is common sense. My immediate reaction was that street sense is cover a term for a number of learned skills. I wouldn't necessarily expect someone from a radically different environment--say a proverbially idyllic pastoral setting--to walk into a major urban area already possessed of them.
That got me thinking: Is "common sense" just a rhetorical turn of phrase used by a speaker to emphasise that he considers certain skills especially simple and basic or is it actually possible to codify a body of skills which together constitute "common sense"? Has anyone formally tried, say in the way that Hirsch et al. tried to define "cultural literacy"?
What d'y'all think? Or is the answer so commonsensical that I'm foolish to even pose the question?
no subject
its results, if i remember right, were roughly:
they took common sense as essentially meaning common knowledge, i.e. of the "grass is green" variety. i'm not sure that captures what we really think of as common sense, which to me seems more to imply cached higher-order inferences ("if you put your hand in water, it will get wet"). but i imagine one might take a similar approach to those; and you would need a base of common knowledge to start from.
i think their model for what was common was roughly "the encyclopedia." though i'm sure it was refined over time.
no subject
Personally, I don't think there is any such thing as common sense and thusly I never use "it's common sense" to try to prove a point.
Actually, if common sense did exist, I don't think I'd have to say "it's common sense" in order to prove a point because the other person would already agree with me. :)
no subject
My mother's common sense tells her that you wear a coat at anything under 40 degrees, you wear long sleeves at anything under 65, at 75 you wear short, and at 80 you can swim. These are unassailable laws in her world. And so she's obviously crazy. Therefore, so such thing as common sense.