One of the things I love about the French is their readiness to take abstract reasoning and theory seriously. It allows them to use that reasoning to penetrate much more deeply into the nature of reality - to think strategically.
The Anglosphere often disdains this kind of reasoning and prefer heuristic arguements and common sense. While this is great at cutting through the bullshit it gets caught in provincial thinking and struggles to adapt once the low hanging fruit has been picked.
The French attitude (broadly speaking) might fall into ideology more often than the English/American, but they have to tools to parse between ideologies and meaningfully develop them.
Anglos remain flexible in the face of the matter at hand but we're often subtly beholden to many values which we don't have the tools to meaningfully analyse. I think these values are generally speaking good but their development tends to occur organically and over a long period of time.
Don't get me started on the Germans.
as german:
> It's a cliché but they do take rules quite seriously without the ability to "play" with them quite like the French do (or ignore them like the British.)
i'm pissed if i consider rules to be bullshit, on the other hand i value rules very much and am _really_ pissed if someone doesn't adhere to them, especially if those actions bother/harm others, like littering. i have a soft spot in my heart though for creative use (in the classical hacker sense) of rules.
> a German may become either deeply conflicted or unreasonably dogmatic about it - you'd probably never see it though, just someone steadfastly doing it "their own way."
yes, and it's fucking exausting. i can't just do things if it is against my values. that said, i have heard that i'm rather extreme in this. i can't stand for example doing work which is obvious bullshit, it really drives me mad, while others seem to have no problem doing it for the money.