Overlapping subjective communities.
https://gyazo.com/9ba293f62ba03d5a90958d6eda5bd0d5
prev There are two societies.
1: There is a group of people like this
https://gyazo.com/b59dbc606cc558f567767a036fb1a762
Mr. A. thinks, "We're all part of a community!" he thinks.
https://gyazo.com/219069cf66402fee3cd3ef817b748b37
Mr. B sees "A, B, and C are the regular core members and the rest are guests".
https://gyazo.com/6c46d54ebe02bea46058923a113c81a7
Mr. C thinks, "Mr. F must be one of us."
https://gyazo.com/f67552816620c43584bfcc39184ba533
Mr. D thinks he is a "regular core member like A, B, and C" (but neither B nor C think so).
https://gyazo.com/7284497014b226aa6ef73a0b3e740a33
Mr. E. thinks "I only attended an event once, I don't belong to the community."
https://gyazo.com/b99dd61345d211526585ad91fa7d8a10
Mr. F thinks "I just attended the event with my friend Mr. C. I didn't join Mr. A's community."
https://gyazo.com/7a0174ff2a1fef63d840372ba5ce924f
2: These various individual feelings of belonging to different communities overlap to form a "somewhat colorful, boundary-blurring group".
https://gyazo.com/702e1ec6c77a3ee192392a31c145c599
"There are two societies." "Communities do not objectively exist" is "Communities do not objectively exist, but rather there are what each person subjectively believes to be a community, which overlap to form a group with blurred boundaries." I think we can agree on that if we bite the bullet.
Each is an individual belief
It is easier to develop shared beliefs when people perceive the same scope as a community, for example, if you create a group chat and plug into it, or if there are initiation rituals of community participation.
legitimate participation.
initiation
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