Looking forward to hear more on it from your side@krnel much thanks for deciphering ins and outs of a habit regarded often as a product of specific milieu. Indeed, Davis’s study opens new vistas by reforming the traditional notions attached to gossip-making. To me, as an interpersonal skill that is under persistent stream of evolution, gossip has much broader a range of factors. Admittedly, realizing a competitive edge overshadows almost every instance of what is commonly seen as bragging, tying it to the quest for mate-win remains debatable as competition spans over much wider landscape in human life. Sports, war, and politics among others are few like instances.
You are viewing a single comment's thread from:
Good observation of how it carries over into sports, war and politics as a tool to bring others down and possibly "win" in competition ;)