One of my students asked me this question and I did not really know how to answer her. She was referring to the kinds of “games” that children and sometimes adults play in order to make a decision, like other forms of flipping a coin, for example.

Here in my country we also do rock paper scissors, but we call it joquempô. We also do odds and evens, par ou ímpar, and a more extended version called dois ou um, “two or one”, in which players present either one or two fingers, and then the ones who chose the same amount of fingers leave the game or become a team. This can also be done with up to five fingers, and then it’s called dedos iguais, “equal/same fingers”.

Are there any other such games in your country? My student really caught me off-guard when she asked that, I had never thought about this cultural aspect.

Also, I’m curious to know what you do and/or did as a child if you’re not from an English-speaking country as well!

  • Demoncracy
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    4 months ago

    Here in the west we don’t have such things as agency to make decisions, because we live under capitalism.

    • joaomarrom [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.netOP
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      4 months ago

      We play these games to try to convince ourselves that we have free will, but we’re just adding a layer of near-randomness in order to pull the wool over our own eyes. What I’m saying is that rock paper scissors is the ultimate form of ideology.

      zizek-theory