TIL about how the idea of stereotype on race works. It's called Stereotype Content Model (SCM) in psychological theory. It tells how we can separate stereotypes into 4 categories
>The SCM postulates that all social groups (e.g., older people, the homeless, drug addicts) fit within each of the four combinations of high and low levels of warmth and competence.[1][4] Contradicting earlier theories of stereotype content which assumed that stereotypes reflected unidimensional and uniformly negative attitudes,[5][6] the stereotype content model theorizes that stereotypes are often mixed or ambivalent: groups perceived to be high in one dimension, but low in the other (e.g., old people as rated high on warmth, but low on competence).[1] The groups within each of the four combinations of high and low levels of warmth and competence elicit distinct emotions:[1][4][7]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotype_content_model
>>2123918
Seems interesting.
How would we integrate it into society or make it known enough?
>Asians
>Feminists
>high status
>>2123918
>Feminists
>Envious
Some """science""" you have there
>>2123933
probably by understanding these stereotype works, we can set a target on how to improve a certain group traits and make them less threatening. Like improving eg. immigrants stereotypes of warmth on them. Which in long term could increase integration or something similar.
>>2123937
yeah that feminist part makes me wonder too. But I think it's the idea of strong woman makes them seen as a threat by some
>>2123954
They're powerful, but not respectable because they always tried to over enforce the idea of feminist too much in short time that makes them hated. I think the idea that one group is powerful in a really short time makes it seen as distrust
>>2123918
>TIL
>>>/reddit/
This thread makes me wonder why I bother with this board, I might as well just go on reddit and play with my dragon dildo