Wei Dai suggests that offense is experienced when people feel they are being treated as being low status.
I would generalize this and say that offense is experienced when people feel they are being treated as being lower status than they feel they are/deserve.
The reason for the generalization: some people get offended by just about everything, it seems, and one way to explain it is a blatant grab for status. It’s not that they think they’re being treated as low status in an absolute sense necessarily, they just think they should be treated as higher status relative to however they’re being treated.
I think that’s much closer (and upvoted), but you don’t need to invoke such an extreme example to demonstrate it; you just need to notice that offense thresholds are different in different contexts. Treating your boss as if she’s your drinking buddy is likely to provoke offense. So’s treating your drinking buddy as if he’s a child. Yet you’re generally safe treating boss as boss, buddy as buddy, and child as child—in other words, giving people the status they contextually expect.
I would generalize this and say that offense is experienced when people feel they are being treated as being lower status than they feel they are/deserve.
The reason for the generalization: some people get offended by just about everything, it seems, and one way to explain it is a blatant grab for status. It’s not that they think they’re being treated as low status in an absolute sense necessarily, they just think they should be treated as higher status relative to however they’re being treated.
I think that’s much closer (and upvoted), but you don’t need to invoke such an extreme example to demonstrate it; you just need to notice that offense thresholds are different in different contexts. Treating your boss as if she’s your drinking buddy is likely to provoke offense. So’s treating your drinking buddy as if he’s a child. Yet you’re generally safe treating boss as boss, buddy as buddy, and child as child—in other words, giving people the status they contextually expect.
I agree