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Design & Development / Re: Partisan Playing Cards
« on: April 20, 2016, 09:19:47 PM »Well, so far, you're asking for feedback not on a deck but on three cards, seen from a raking angle that distorts the view. They look interesting enough, I suppose, though the monochrome design is a little flat. Perhaps if you included more (less-distorted) images and explained a layman's version of Moral Foundations Theory it would help us understand what you're trying to achieve here.
Moral Foundations is a social psychological theory that proposes a basis for moralization in the form of discrete, innate moral senses. The theory puts forward that Care, Fairness, Liberty, Loyalty, Authority, and Sanctity are moral foundations upon which cultures and individuals base their morality. Different cultures and individuals value these foundations to varying degrees, resulting in a variety of perspectives on what constitutes the "right" way to live life, and an explanation as to why people who live "wrong" seem to get along in life well enough. Politically, liberals have a strong favoring of care, fairness, and a hint of liberty, while libertarians strongly prefer liberty and fairness at the expense of other foundations. Conservatives favor all more or less equally.
I've set up these cards so that spades represent the trio of conservative foundations, loyalty, authority, and sanctity. The remaining suits are hearts - care, diamonds - fairness, and clubs - liberty. The interpretation of the cards can be left up to the player, but each card does represent an aspect of the moral foundations. With regard to the three hearts I have completed, the king represents friendship (clasped hands) and murderous hatred (no explanation needed, really), the queen represents love (right hand) and loss (left hand, wilting rose), and the jack represents care (plague doctor) and suffering (... plague doctor).