Why Do People Refuse To Practice Social Skills?

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VioletKnight
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11 Jun 2025, 10:05 pm

uncommondenominator wrote:
It's a bit hypocritical how you refusing to change your mind is perfectly acceptable, but me refusing to change my mind makes me "stubborn".

It's also a bit entitled to expect me to stop standing on my hill just cos you're tired of standing on yours. How you choose to allocate your social battery is not my responsibility. Claiming that it's somehow my fault that you choose to keep interacting with me sounds very much like a "look what you made me do!" type of gaslight.

Anyways, there's a 3rd option as I see it. I can simply nod and smile, and carry on talking about social skills.

There you go again with the misinterpreting and accusing me of doing what you're doing. I didn't say that I was refusing to change my mind, I said you would not be changing it with the way you're going about things. Had you engaged me without all the willful misinterpretation and projecting and had your argument been compelling enough I might have at least considered your stance. Nor did I say that you are stubborn for sticking to your views. I said "You have made it very clear that you are going to stubbornly stick to your own views regardless of anything I say." where the important part you're neglecting is "regardless of anything I say.". This refers back to the fact that you haven't be responding to the things I'm actually saying and instead rely on misinterpretations, word twisting and various fallacies. Simply put, I am not saying that you are stubborn for sticking to your views, I am saying you are stubborn for refusing to even listen to what I'm saying and twisting my words in order to stick to your views. These are two different things.
I didn't ask you to stop standing on your hill either. That would imply that I am asking you to change your position and/or stop having strong convictions about it, which I am not because it's already clear that nobody will be changing their mind here. I asked you to agree to disagree. You can stay on your hill and I will stay on mine, but we acknowledge that we are on different hills and neither of us will be joining the other on their respective hill.



uncommondenominator
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12 Jun 2025, 10:17 pm

I could make the same argument, and claim that you're stubbornly sticking to your views regardless of anything I say.

I'm not twisting your words, I'm scrutinizing them. Scrutiny is not obfuscation. And I'd stick to my views regardless. You keep inventing new narratives to accuse me of, and while it's creative, it's still untrue.

Agreeing to disagree is a privilege I reserve for subjective opinions - what flavor of icecream is better, what car is cooler looking, who makes the best pizza in town, etc. I will not agree to disagree on matters of fact, or where I have every reason to believe it is true, based on facts. This is part of my conviction, and asking me to act contrary to that is asking me to compromise my conviction.

I think see where part of your misunderstanding is though. I'm not trying to change your mind. I'm just stating why I disagree. I don't expect you to change your mind. I'm just saying why I won't change mine.

You've asked me to agree to disagree. I've declined. Moving on :)



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12 Jun 2025, 10:38 pm

A valid point about being a novice / beginner I heard tonight. As a novice, with no previous experience, you don't even know how little you even know. After you learn for a while, you start to realize just how much you didn't know, and still don't know. It's at this point where people may give up, cos finding out how much they don't know, even with everything they've learned, can certainly make someone feel like they aren't learning, and will never learn.

In reality, when you've learned enough that you KNOW how bad you are, that means you have in fact learned. Key point - you've now learned enough to self-assess. However, realistically, most people don't realize this, and rather than realizing it means they've made progress, they see it as "proof" they will never be good at it, cos they've "realized" they're terrible at it.

But, of course you're terrible at it, you're still new. But you've learned enough basics to be able to tell the difference between doing it well and doing it poorly. Which itself can be used as a springboard to further improve, knowing that you now know how to tell if you are even improving or not. Realizing you are in fact bad at something isn't the end of the journey - it's just the beginning. Keep moving forward.



funeralxempire
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12 Jun 2025, 10:57 pm

uncommondenominator wrote:
I could make the same argument, and claim that you're stubbornly sticking to your views regardless of anything I say.

I'm not twisting your words, I'm scrutinizing them. Scrutiny is not obfuscation. And I'd stick to my views regardless. You keep inventing new narratives to accuse me of, and while it's creative, it's still untrue.

Agreeing to disagree is a privilege I reserve for subjective opinions - what flavor of icecream is better, what car is cooler looking, who makes the best pizza in town, etc. I will not agree to disagree on matters of fact, or where I have every reason to believe it is true, based on facts. This is part of my conviction, and asking me to act contrary to that is asking me to compromise my conviction.

I think see where part of your misunderstanding is though. I'm not trying to change your mind. I'm just stating why I disagree. I don't expect you to change your mind. I'm just saying why I won't change mine.

You've asked me to agree to disagree. I've declined. Moving on :)


Asking someone to agree to disagree is often merely a polite way of saying your arguments aren't persuasive and I've lost interest in waiting for them to become persuasive.


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funeralxempire
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12 Jun 2025, 10:59 pm

babybird wrote:
It's funny how this thread is based on practicing social skills innit


And everyone who's participated has been forced to practice their social skills whether they realized it or not. :lol:


_________________
The Party told you to reject the evidence of your eyes and ears. It was their final, most essential command.
If you're not careful, the newspapers will have you hating the people who are being oppressed, and loving the people who are doing the oppressing. —Malcolm X
Real power is achieved when the ruling class controls the material essentials of life, granting and withholding them from the masses as if they were privileges.—George Orwell


VioletKnight
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12 Jun 2025, 11:04 pm

uncommondenominator wrote:
I could make the same argument, and claim that you're stubbornly sticking to your views regardless of anything I say.

I'm not twisting your words, I'm scrutinizing them. Scrutiny is not obfuscation. And I'd stick to my views regardless. You keep inventing new narratives to accuse me of, and while it's creative, it's still untrue.

Agreeing to disagree is a privilege I reserve for subjective opinions - what flavor of icecream is better, what car is cooler looking, who makes the best pizza in town, etc. I will not agree to disagree on matters of fact, or where I have every reason to believe it is true, based on facts. This is part of my conviction, and asking me to act contrary to that is asking me to compromise my conviction.

I think see where part of your misunderstanding is though. I'm not trying to change your mind. I'm just stating why I disagree. I don't expect you to change your mind. I'm just saying why I won't change mine.

You've asked me to agree to disagree. I've declined. Moving on :)

Again: I didn't say that I was refusing to change my mind, I said you would not be changing it with the way you're going about things. Had you engaged me without all the willful misinterpretation and projecting and had your argument been compelling enough I might have at least considered your stance.
A scrutiny is a careful examination while twisting words is to rephrase what's been said in a way that changes the meaning. You have very much been doing the latter. Though, I suppose you might have to do the former in order to do the latter. I'm not "inventing new narratives to accuse you of" either. I'm restating the same things I've been saying basically this whole time. And they're still true, as well as fairly obvious.
Your last three paragraphs seem to contradict one another. Ignoring that you still don't seem to grasp what agreeing to disagree actually means - You say that you decline to agree to disagree yet you also say "I'm not trying to change your mind. I'm just stating why I disagree. I don't expect you to change your mind. I'm just saying why I won't change mine." as well as "Moving on" which seems to imply that you wish to end this debate and intend to cease responding. Which sounds like you're agreeing to disagree.

funeralxempire wrote:
Asking someone to agree to disagree is often merely a polite way of saying your arguments aren't persuasive and I've lost interest in waiting for them to become persuasive.

This is very much true.



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Yesterday, 1:10 pm

funeralxempire wrote:
Asking someone to agree to disagree is often merely a polite way of saying your arguments aren't persuasive and I've lost interest in waiting for them to become persuasive.


And I've politely declined.

I can see where further confusion arises from, though. My arguments aren't meant to be persuasive - they are meant to be declarative. I'm not trying to convince - I'm merely stating and observing.

Furthermore, just cos one side feels that way doesn't mean both sides have to agree on it. I'm still quite interested in the topic, including the aspects which are disagreed upon. Even if I no longer address VK directly, I am still going to express my opinions regarding the nature of "natural talent".

funeralxempire wrote:
babybird wrote:
It's funny how this thread is based on practicing social skills innit


And everyone who's participated has been forced to practice their social skills whether they realized it or not. :lol:


Fun fact! Nobody is "forced" to be here, or participate, or even engage with me in particular. Those are choices. You've made them for yourselves. Everyone who has participated has chosen to practice their social skills - whether they realize it or not.



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Yesterday, 1:54 pm

VioletKnight wrote:
Again: I didn't say that I was refusing to change my mind, I said you would not be changing it with the way you're going about things. Had you engaged me without all the willful misinterpretation and projecting and had your argument been compelling enough I might have at least considered your stance.
A scrutiny is a careful examination while twisting words is to rephrase what's been said in a way that changes the meaning. You have very much been doing the latter. Though, I suppose you might have to do the former in order to do the latter. I'm not "inventing new narratives to accuse you of" either. I'm restating the same things I've been saying basically this whole time. And they're still true, as well as fairly obvious.
Your last three paragraphs seem to contradict one another. Ignoring that you still don't seem to grasp what agreeing to disagree actually means - You say that you decline to agree to disagree yet you also say "I'm not trying to change your mind. I'm just stating why I disagree. I don't expect you to change your mind. I'm just saying why I won't change mine." as well as "Moving on" which seems to imply that you wish to end this debate and intend to cease responding. Which sounds like you're agreeing to disagree.


It seems a bit hypocritical to both claim that I'm twisting your words, but also try to manipulate my words so they say what you want them to say.

And you're still just engaging in ad-hominem, claiming that I don't know what this or that means, just cos I won't bend to your will. Your "evidence" that I'm engaging in these suppose acts seems to be little more than your claim that I am. I guess we'll have to agree to disagree on that one.

However, I still flatly disagree on the matter of "natural talent", as either an excuse, or a reason, to not try, or to give up. To be clear, I am not "moving on" from the topic of skills and talent, or the nature of it's source - I am "moving on" from entertaining your claims regarding my character and intent, since that seems to have become your sole focus, and is of no further interest to me - nor is it on-topic.

Relevant question related to the actual topic - although you claim to dislike arguing, you seem to have developed some skill at it. Have you always been this good at arguing, or did you get better at it over time?



VioletKnight
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Yesterday, 4:20 pm

uncommondenominator wrote:
It seems a bit hypocritical to both claim that I'm twisting your words, but also try to manipulate my words so they say what you want them to say.

And you're still just engaging in ad-hominem, claiming that I don't know what this or that means, just cos I won't bend to your will. Your "evidence" that I'm engaging in these suppose acts seems to be little more than your claim that I am. I guess we'll have to agree to disagree on that one.

However, I still flatly disagree on the matter of "natural talent", as either an excuse, or a reason, to not try, or to give up. To be clear, I am not "moving on" from the topic of skills and talent, or the nature of it's source - I am "moving on" from entertaining your claims regarding my character and intent, since that seems to have become your sole focus, and is of no further interest to me - nor is it on-topic.

Relevant question related to the actual topic - although you claim to dislike arguing, you seem to have developed some skill at it. Have you always been this good at arguing, or did you get better at it over time?

Not in the slightest. You're once again claiming that I am doing what you are. You'll notice the words "seem", "seems" and "sounds like" in my reply prefacing potential meanings, which clearly indicates that I am stating what impression I am being given by these words rather than acting as though or stating definitively that that is what they mean. It leaves room for and encourages clarification. You'll also notice that I've quoted you directly rather than rephrasing what you've said.
And yes, we have moved away from actually discussing natural talent, but this occurred because you were not responding to the things I was actually saying and instead misinterpreted and twisted my words. Your responses began relying on a variety of fallacies while accusing me of doing so. The evidence for which, by the way, is your replies and how, in them, you neglect key words and change the phrasing of my replies in a way that changes the meaning. By addressing these things, the conversation naturally moved away from the subject of natural talent. I half suspect that shifting the focus of the discussion was intentional on your part. However, it could be argued that this argument is still on on topic for the thread itself as the topic of the thread is social skills, particularly, poor social skills.
While I appreciate the flattery, I don't think I'm particularly skilled at debating. After all, it's been three pages now and I've not managed to get anywhere with you. If you must know, I've always been fairly good at writing persuasive essays without the need of creating an outline first, but that's not the same as an actual debate. A persuasive essay is simply the presentation of one side while a debate sees opposing sides actively engaging one another over the issue. At my school debate wasn't even a required class, so I never took it.