Not sure if finding something funny in the context of a joke necessarily leads to one not taking it seriously in other contexts. [E.g. when xkcd and smbc make science jokes I don’t think my belief in the science they are referencing diminishes.]
When xkcd and smbc make science jokes, they’re real jokes written by clever humans.
Flippancy is more like Dell’s recent “shut up bitch” scandal and the it’s a joke, laugh reactions to it. Mads Christensen presented no substantive evidence that women are unable to contribute to IT, he just tried to train the crowd to regard the very idea of a capable woman as if it were funny.
-- C.S. Lewis, The Screwtape Letters (from memory—I may have the exact phrasing wrong).
You can replace “goodness” in this sentence with almost anything that tends to get flippantly rejected without thought.
Good memory. The original reads:
Not sure if finding something funny in the context of a joke necessarily leads to one not taking it seriously in other contexts. [E.g. when xkcd and smbc make science jokes I don’t think my belief in the science they are referencing diminishes.]
When xkcd and smbc make science jokes, they’re real jokes written by clever humans.
Flippancy is more like Dell’s recent “shut up bitch” scandal and the it’s a joke, laugh reactions to it. Mads Christensen presented no substantive evidence that women are unable to contribute to IT, he just tried to train the crowd to regard the very idea of a capable woman as if it were funny.
The bit about “trained to act as if” is very astute. The same training can be applied to overvaluing things with little or no apparent value.