u/Proper_Measurement86

<blockquote class="reddit-embed-bq" data-embed-height="276"> <a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/DebateLikeAEnglishman/comments/1tgvcux/comment/omk3y4j/">Comment</a><br> by <a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/Proper_Measurement86/">u/Proper_Measurement86</a> from discussion <a href="https://www.reddi

https://genius.com/Bloodhound-lil-jeff-exotics-lyrics break this down to me if your a smartass

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u/Proper_Measurement86 — 4 days ago

<blockquote class="reddit-embed-bq" data-embed-height="276"> <a href="https://www.reddit.com/r/DebateLikeAEnglishman/comments/1tgvcux/comment/omk3y4j/">Comment</a><br> by <a href="https://www.reddit.com/user/Proper_Measurement86/">u/Proper_Measurement86</a> from discussion <a href="https://www.reddi

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u/Proper_Measurement86 — 4 days ago
▲ 13 r/Aging+1 crossposts

Concepts of aging

Hello- I’m looking for book suggestions around the anthropological + historical, sociological, cultural, and/or philosophical concepts of aging. I’m not looking for explanations of aging, per se, but how the concept of “older” or “senescence” came into being. Why do we have the cutoffs that we do (eg age 65 = retirement age, older adult)? Where did the idea of being “old” come from? How do different cultures approach the concept of aging and older adults?

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u/Proper_Measurement86 — 3 days ago