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Old Jan 14, 2010, 03:47 AM
sanityseeker sanityseeker is offline
walker
 
Member Since: Feb 2008
Posts: 2,363
Hi Rainbowzz... I do agree to a point. It depends on the audience and the degree of diversity. Differences in nationality, culture, race, religion, gendar, social-economic status will present challenges to 'walking in the other person's shoes.' Same can be said in my opinion with applying common sense. What may be common sense to one person may not be the same for another of a different background and life experience.

I understand what you mean in a general sense and think it is an admireable guide but I think they are subjective and dependant on commonalities to be present.