I was drawing assuming that in a first year philosophy subject the class sizes are huge, largely anonymous, not often directly graded by the lecturer and a mix of students from a large number of different majors.
[re-reads thread, and notices the OP mentioned there were more than 200 students in the classroom] Good point.
Even a large subset of the peers who find it obnoxious or annoying will also intuitively consider the individual to be somewhat higher status (or ‘more powerful’ or ‘more significant’, take your pick of terminology) even if they don’t necessarily approve of them.
That kind of status is structural power, not social power in Yvain’s terminology, and I guess there are more people in the world who wish to sleep with Rebecca Black than with Donald Trump. [googles for Rebecca Black (barely knew she was a singer) and realizes she’s not the best example for the point; but still] And probably there’s also a large chunk of people who would just think the student is a dork with little ability to abide by social customs. But yeah, I guess the total chance for them to get laid would go up—high-variance strategies and all that.
[re-reads thread, and notices the OP mentioned there were more than 200 students in the classroom] Good point.
That kind of status is structural power, not social power in Yvain’s terminology, and I guess there are more people in the world who wish to sleep with Rebecca Black than with Donald Trump. [googles for Rebecca Black (barely knew she was a singer) and realizes she’s not the best example for the point; but still] And probably there’s also a large chunk of people who would just think the student is a dork with little ability to abide by social customs. But yeah, I guess the total chance for them to get laid would go up—high-variance strategies and all that.