• by riskable on 2/7/2021, 3:55:49 AM

    I'm keen on the eccentricity inflation idea. We've all become "eccentric" by the standards of old so we're not quite sure what counts anymore.

    The guy down the street cares for a tree that bears many different types of fruits. It's not his specialty, just a hobby. In his day job he works at a museum that specializes in the collection of mummified body parts and at night he likes to role play with random naked women from all over the world. Does that even seem strange anymore

    If he invented something amazing would we history books of the future describe him as eccentric? I don't think so.

  • by marquisdepolis on 2/7/2021, 9:24:51 AM

    Found out from a random share that this resonated and reached HN! Happy days ... Am the author and glad it sparked a discussion.

    Re the eccentricity inflation, I do think the fact that we now know more about everyone and everything means the need for peacocking is much higher! So it does play a part.

  • by funkisjazz on 2/5/2021, 10:19:09 AM

    Not sure it fits on HN, for some reason it really resonated with me though.

  • by rstuart4133 on 2/7/2021, 9:31:06 AM

    Well written fun to read article, but surely just an example of someone complaining "someone is wrong on the internet".

    We just passed through 4 years of Trump, QAnon, the resurrection of flat earthers, a man wearing horns storming Capitol hill, Goop selling out of $5 candles selling for $80 because they smell like Gwyneth Paltrow vagina, GameStop take downs, Imelda Marcos 2,700 shoe fetish, and a training driver trying sink a hospital ship by ramming it. It's not so out there for some parts of the world, but for a fellow Australian "That's my Boy" [0] takes the cake.

    And the claim is we don't have eccentricity like the old days. Ye gods, I hope the aren't pining for the old days.

    [0] https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2721230/x.html