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Major Pettigrew's Last Stand
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Question #12. Philosophical Rigidity
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Ashley
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Oct 11, 2011 09:06AM

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For your question, perhaps it is not so much about age, but more about real-world experience. Someone who has lived in the same town around the same-minded people for 50 years could be way more rigid than an 18 y/o who has moved around and encountered diverse populations and situations.
As far as not bathing and strange haircuts... the Major would have a fun time checking out a typical day in downtown Portland (or Eugene, or any number of blue state cities).

I do think there's some truth to what the Major is saying, but I also think that comment indicates his own rigidity. Can't habit and routine also make us rigid? The Major frets abut unwed mothers and living together outside of marriage - things the younger generation views as more fluid. Sure, his haircut is normal for him, but what's weird for a ex-military officer is normal for someone else ...
What is real-world experience? Or is rather about being open to the world and avoiding complacency in beliefs or the opinion that you absolutely have to be right with no room for negotiation?