
Posts by Kevin Goodman:
- Universal
- Mobilize and unify natural alliances
- Solidify ingroup identity
- ritualistic and often grounded in tradition
- Based on primal ethics
- Preserve class and can elevate or diminish social standing
- Insist on an individual right to determine and administer justice/which often overrides communal statutory law.
Spam
July 26th, 2010This blog has been attacked by over five thousand spam comments in the last year. For god sakes, man!
Language of the Body
July 23rd, 2010Support Internet Freedom!
July 17th, 2010Though the internet can be abused, it also levels the playing field. It provides private citizens with a global voice and access to information. Despite the freedom of the internet, there are those who believe that the internet should be regulated and they are attempting to impose restrictions. The governments, corporations, and organizations that attempt to control access to information are essentially denying power to the private citizen. Despite the risks of bullying, slander, propaganda, and misinformation to personal, corporate, and government interests, freedom at least permits all sides of an issue to be told. In the least, such an overload of information forces us to take things with a grain of salt and exercise the critical faculties that we once took for granted.
Take a stance against information repression by pledging to Amnesty International’s irrepressible.info.
No new post, here, for a while…but,
May 26th, 2010You can follow my new project–Prestige.
War is Natural
May 18th, 2010The notion that human aggression is natural and behaviorally innate seems to have a long history deriving from the natural sciences. Darwin’s theory has long been construed as demonstrating the utility of aggression—the strongest control resources, detour challengers, and survive. In 1963, Robert Ardrey proposed that man descended from killer primates and retained his primordial ancestor’s killer instincts. Ardrey built on Raymond Darts’s theory that man evolved as a hunter into a killer from which the most cunning tool builders (weapon makers) and aggressive personalities prevailed—thereby arguing that human intelligence was the result of natural selection from violence.
Despite the killer primate being an interesting theory, it has largely been ignored by serious scholars on the auspices that there is no evidence to say that man is particularly more violent than any other predator. Early criticism also claimed that Ardrey and Dart ignored the supposed peaceful behavior of man’s closest relative, the chimpanzee.1 Interestingly, a new generation of primatologist are now claiming that chimpanzees are among the most aggressive primates. It is now readily accepted that chimpanzee males will form alliances, defend their own territory, attempt to expand their territory, and that some populations will kill members of their own species. Accordingly, the only other primate known to actively kill members of its own species is Homo Sapiens, the chimpanzee’s closest relative. 2
This shared behavior has inspired Harvard primatologist, Richard Wrangham, to propose the Demonic Male Hypothesis. Wrangham believes that natural aggression is primarily found in males of the two species and like his predecessors, Ardrey and Darts, Wrangham believes humans and chimps share a particularly violent common ancestor.2 3 But of course, such theories draw strong criticisms. There are those criticisms that say it is wrong to call violence natural because doing so condones it or in the least excuses it. There are those criticisms that say that the available data on chimpanzee behavior is inconclusive, that studied populations are under unnatural stress and therefore their behavior is not typical. There are those who say human violence is too complex to make sense of by relating humanity to our underdeveloped primate cousins and speculative common ancestors. Accordingly, to propose a theory and defend a theory is usually to disregard other theories and data—and disregarding relevant arguments is always grounds for dismissal or the assaulting label of careless scholarship—at least for the opponents.
Despite my own cynicism for scholarly debate, I must contend that the precise nature of man’s evolution really doesn’t change the fact that civilization is often violent. That is to say, that it really doesn’t matter whether the original humans were peaceful or not because our nature today often is not. But, of course, it does matter for the evolutionary theorist—but nature remains nature regardless of one’s predispositions. The fact that there are wars, there are murders, strongly suggest a natural predisposition in the species for such. Those who contend that primitive man was more peaceful have it wrong—the evidence for prehistoric cannibalism, ritual sacrifice, war, and murder are very prevalent in the fossil record—and so too does the noble salvage, the modern hunter gatherer, give us a record of regular neighborly conflict, rape, and murder.
While I’m not ready to say that the killer primate theory is correct—I do believe violence is natural. If we were a different species of intelligent life studying humanity, we would certainly make note of humanities periodic warfare, tribal raids, lynchings, gang violence, and individual conflict—we would say these occur with enough regularity to be natural descriptors of the species, and we would probably contend that this violence serves a number of regulatory functions. The arguments that I am against are the ones that want to deny nature merely because it doesn’t sit well with ideal views or because their proponets see confirmation as being affirmation. I believe social science must be separated from social engineering and while science may be used with utility, it is wrong for scientist to politicize…to deny a truth, because it is threatening, is to politicize.
However, Oxford primatologist and anthropologist, Vernon Reynolds has warned me not to “fall into the trap of overstating the power of evolutionary explanations”4. Doctor Reynolds recognizes that there are other causes for violence, such as “learned perceptions”, though he does concede that we can argue that we are evolutionarily “programmed” to “learn” (and I presume he means this with a predisposition for violence). However, I take a lot of inspiration from social psychology (being that it is one of my interdisciplinary disciplines) and am more concerned with “what” and “how” than “why”, which is the concern of evolutionary psychology and evolutionary anthropology. Nevertheless, Doctor Reynolds caution has caused me to do just that, and ask—can we overstate human aggression?
Interestingly, I am beginning to wonder if those who so ardently oppose the classification of violence as natural, lend a valuable clue to human nature itself. Indeed, it seems that there is just as much predisposition (not to be confused with desire) to avert aggressive behavior as there is for aggressive behavior itself. Therefore I’m currently of the belief that any debate concerning man’s predisposition for war should also examine man’s predisposition for peace and any argument that is either/or is incomplete. I would suggest that we are conditioned to make and enjoy peace, but I will take the realist’s view and say that aggression is just as natural—that it is scientifically unreasonable to predict that we will ever eliminate violence and war as long as evolution has us defined as Homo Sapiens (perhaps the politically hopeful will see fit to call us something else).
Notes
1. http://www.aliciapatterson.org/APF001973/Rensberger/Rensberger08/Rensberger08.html
2. http://www.bbc.co.uk/science/horizon/2004/demonicapeqa.shtml
3. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/3317461/Apes-of-war…-is-it-in-our-genes.html
4. From private email correspondence 03-23-10
The Semiotics of Abu Graib’s Prison Abuse
May 5th, 2010
Most psychological discussions pertaining to Abu Graib’s prison abuse seem to follow Philip Zimbardo’s assertion that it was a matter of situational and conditional influences. That is to say that the proponents were not necessarily inherently bad but became products of their environment. I believe Zimbardo would have us believe that any person would have been susceptible to following the same path because the situational influences were that powerful—and I don’t disagree.
However, what interests me about Abu Graib’s photographs are their symbolic connotations. Essentially, we have to ask what purpose these photographs serve or served. The question that particularly intrigues me—could these photographs offer a psychologically strategic advantage to U.S. operations in the Middle East? Is there some tactical benefit to their existence and exposure or to the feats in and of themselves? My intentions are not to encourage conspiracy theorist but to gauge the problem holistically with questions that aren’t readily asked.
The very idea that there is some kind of advantage to cruel and humiliating behavior seems counter-intuitive to everything I have been taught. In business school, I recall being told that coercive influence is proven to be the least effective (long-term) form of persuasion and though it could be used for immediate results the repercussions are rarely worth it. While I am certain there are specific studies supporting such claims I do not intend to consult the scientific literature for this particular discourse. I would argue that coercive action can be many things and the tendency to righteously generalize them to the same affect is questionable. Any action that threatens another’s interest and is motivated on the intention of creating a concession is a form if coercive influence and I would posit that situations exist were this is effective and strategically sound.
With the aforementioned said, first, I have to ask what these pictures say about the prisoners themselves. Of particular interests to me are the demonstrations of compliance such as when the naked prisoners take the formation of a pyramid or perform sexual acts on other prisoners. It comes across, to most of us (I assume), as a situation of forced depravity and human indignity of the worst kind. I find myself wishing I could relate this question from the enemy’s perspective. The terrorist and enemy combatant must be disgusted with these images but I would also reason that a considerable share of this disgust derives from the prisoner himself—a martyr would die painfully before complying with such evil.
The terrorist is in fact a moralist, at least from his own perspective, an ideology likely shared by his immediate social circle. The soldier fights ready to die and knows that in his death he will be called a martyr—there is no higher honor. Further, his war is a holy war, the enemy has invaded a holy people and a holy land, and therefore if evil presents or threatens—martyrdom is his duty. Nevertheless, at Abu Graib a man calls himself Muslim and sexually violates his Islamic brother because he is made to do so and yet there appear to be no bruises, cuts, or scrapes on either one of their bodies. If Abu Graib is Satan’s portal, then the complacent prisoners have also succumbed—so might be the perspective of a jihadist.
Of course, a jihadist might also believe that the Abu Graib victims are martyrs in enduring the most demeaning abuses in a global show that exposes the depravity of Americans. However, this is particularly problematic. While such images effectively damage America’s reputation, its tarnished reputation has little affect to those America can overpower. An analogy comes to mind with the words of an Israeli man who once told me that he did not care if Muslims hated him and wanted to kill him so long as they couldn’t. Otherwise, power isn’t a condition of sympathy or mutual appreciations but ability. In these regards, the question I pose is what is more empowering and fearful and to whom–Americans being exposed for war crimes or Americans having the ability to control and deprive Iraqis of their dignity and morality?
Notwithstanding, the long term implications on our global credibility hardly seems worth cultivating such indignity. In fact, it is counter-intuitive to our ideology of individual liberty and respect for basic human dignity—isn’t this the message we wanted to spread in Iraq? It seems as though our strategic interests would be better served if former prisoners walked away and said that we treated them with the upmost respect. However, it may be that a significant ratio of prisoners are released in such an ideal state—we can’t hold an incident to be the norm. While it appears to be against American interest to encourage such indignant behavior, such an incident can be (and was) held as a relative exception.
General Janis Karpinski claims that that particular wing of the prison was under the control of Army intelligence and that they encouraged the abuse. What do we benefit in creating a situation that encourages such inhumane behavior? I propose that the environment certainly conditioned a high degree of complacency and that such complacency would terrify any dedicated combatant. How would an incoming prisoner react at the prospect of joining their ranks—and this is the signification—this particular place is HELL—the very prospect of it is disorienting. I can only imagine that existence in such a place takes on an unreal feeling, that indignity eventually gives way to numbness, that reality no longer exists—this is the surreal yet unending nightmare.
Then the question begs, are these prisoners the same people who were volunteering to kill American liberators, are they conspiring with terrorist, destabilizing our efforts? Are these prisoners guilty of terrorism, has each and every one of them killed another human being, a patriotic son? Has their atrocities against America earned them their place in American hell? I find it challenging to believe that the committed jihadist would be subject to degrading complacency but then funny things happen at funny farms—gravity no longer applies when reason is gone. However, with General Karpinski’s assertions, I can’t help but wonder if non-violent prisoners were used to create an atmosphere that would challenge real intelligence assets.
While we can only speculate the reasons why such a situation occurred, I would posit that tactical advantages existed so long as such abuse was isolated from the greater prison system and padded from key personal (both of these conditions have been claimed by General Karpinski) — albeit, any such tactics seems wholly against the American way. Meanwhile, I can say that the pictures are an iconic hell, a place of absolute depravity and indignity. The U.S. soldiers in those pictures seemingly pose with the pride of big game hunters only the big game isn’t the carcass of a large animal, a human being, but something that is immaterial—dignity for one. I suppose many people wonder why these guards incriminated themselves. A photograph is an attempt to make a moment last forever or else to share it. I wonder if Lynndie England will look back on those pictures and think, “those were good times,” and yet she may very well be one of the victims of Abu Ghraib, herself
Brainwashing 101
May 1st, 2010Can we radically alter the beliefs and morality of a mentally healthy person against their conscious predisposition?
Probably one of the most interesting and freighting phenomena related to persuasion and influence studies is the myth of brainwashing. YES, I call it a myth, but as a matter of semantics, I do not regard the term, myth, as meaning something that is false or untrue, rather, I consider myth to be a quality of belief. That said, in order to begin to ponder the reality of the myth we must first define what it means to be brainwashed. Political propaganda, advertising, religious conversion, terrorism, and cult devotion, have all been called and considered by some, forms of brainwashing. For the purposes of this article, I am interested in the most radical concepts of persuasion, the idea that we can take an ordinary healthy individual and force them, against their will, to adopt an attitude and ideology (of our design) that is against their basic preconditioned morality, sense of self, and world view. The question is simple—can we create our own Manchurian candidate?
A little background first
The term, brainwashing, was first used to describe the successful communist indoctrination of American GIs in Chinese POW camps during the Korean War. These American communist converts caused a sensation for the American public and created an intrigue for researchers in what becomes the beginning of a legend. However, according to psychiatrist Edgar Schein, an early researcher of POW repatriation, the real purpose of Chinese brainwashing methodology wasn’t to convert prisoners but to manage them. This was apparently very effective as the POWs policed themselves, readily divulging information about the dissent and escape plans of their fellow soldiers (Robert Cialdini offers a theoretical analysis of POW complacency in his book, Influence: Science and Persuasion).1 Of course, any prospect for mind control is going to interest the government, both as a cause of concern and for its potential utility.
Project MK-ULTRA (MKULTRA) was the code name for a CIA research project in mind control, interrogation, and potentially for broader psychological warfare. MKULTRA began operations during the 1950s, though operational predecessors existed since at least 1947 with Project CHATTER (testing of mind-altering drugs for interrogation and behavior modification) as an example. An interesting legacy of project MKULTRA is that the program instigated the clandestine dosing of LSD (the seeds of another discussion) on unsuspecting non-consenting American citizens.
Meanwhile, a marketing researcher named James Vicary releases a study (1957), which demonstrates that subliminal messages promoting Coca-Cola and popcorn increased sales in movie theatres. This landmark study captured the public’s imagination, inspired CIA attention, and caused concern for public officials, which ultimately resulted in subliminal messages being banned from broadcast media. Notwithstanding, Vicary later admitted that his study had been fabricated and the results were falsified (apparently a publicity ploy) — but public belief now captured, remained unfettered. The idea that thought can be scientifically controlled is blooming at a time of technological revolution— popular media is still in its youth and sweeping American culture with sensation and authority (if it’s on the air it must be true). Culture reaffirmed its belief in mind-control with such cult hit books and films as 1984 and The Manchurian Candidate. Meanwhile, popular belief continues, hypnosis and subliminal self help tapes continue to be popular, advertising and pop culture continue to produce legends and the scientific debate marginally continues.
Beyond popular culture
Brainwashing as we know it is a popular culture phenomena but the desire to impart exacting control over our fellow human being is ages old. If we consider brainwashing to be a narrative unit of human culture then we might classify brainwashing with the Haitian zombie and the Hebrew golem. The creators of the zombie and golem are both practitioners of dark magic, and what could be darker and more magical than controlling another’s thoughts? The brainwasher succeeds the cultural narrative of witchcraft and sorcery. Belief that certain individuals can control supernatural forces over the will of their fellow human beings is widespread and universal. It is reasonable to assume that society readily accepted the brainwashing myth as an adaption to an ages old cultural narrative and or that it is a neurological predisposition to believe that others can control us—after all, status and dominance are both seemingly universal behaviors of the human species. The fantasy of mind-control then seems natural, but is it plausible?
The scientific dilemma
The scientific problem of brainwashing is that we can neither prove nor falsify an absolute hypothesis of the phenomena because of legal and ethical concerns. If we claim that a phenomena exists we must also demonstrate it with certain rigor in way the others can replicate as a condition to calling it scientifically proven. The very notion of radically changing somebody’s personality and ideology is akin to a partial murder because the act of brainwashing is essentially breaking down and destroying the existing personality. The very essence of brainwashing is to make the subject believe and adopt attitudes, which are against their premeditated will. Ethical considerations aside, the theories and ideas regarding the process of brainwashing would put our hypothetical test subject under considerable physical and mental risks. In essence, the way to confirm that brainwashing actually exists is to replicate the phenomena by actually brainwashing test subjects and we simply cannot do that.
Proposed ways to brainwash somebody
William Sargant suggests in his book, Battle for the Mind, that brainwashing is a physiological process that requires the mind to be overwhelmed and over stimulated to the point that it breaks down. Methods for overwhelming the mind include sleep deprivation, physical exhaustion, various drugs, and dramatizations and once the mind is no longer able to tolerate such a physical hardship it begins to restructure itself in an attempt to survive the circumstances. Sargant’s inspiration derived from the work of Ivan Pavlov who studied how experiences conditioned the behavior of dogs. Sargant recognized behavioral restructuring similarities between accounts of Pavlov’s traumatized dogs and shell shock victims and concluded that radical attitude change must be biologically based.2
If we are going to brainwash a person from Sargant’s perspective then we have to subject our victim to considerable stress and this stress must have such an impact that the mind can no longer accept its reality. Pavlov had identified four stages of conversion, applied by Sargant, these being the equivalent phase, paradoxical phase, ultra-paradoxical phase, and transmarginal inhibition. With each phase of stress, the mind becomes increasingly susceptible to radical and lasting change. During the equivalent phase, the subject treats major and minor stimuli equally. The paradoxical phase begins when the subject responds stronger to weak stimuli than to strong stimuli (as seen with some posttraumatic stress disorders). In the ultra-paradoxical phase, attitudes are inverted and the subject may like what they once hated and dislike what they once loved. Transmarginal inhibition is recognized by the complete collapse of identity—the subject is no longer able to function as core behaviors and attitudes are lost and forgotten. It is during a transmarginal collapse that an individual’s core attitudes and behaviors can be radically and systematically restructured.2
Psychologists Anthony Pratkanis and Elliot Aronson proposed in their book, Age of Propaganda, seven persuasive principals used by cult leaders in a chapter called how to be a cult leader. Principal number one, create your one social reality, which necessarily means isolate the subject, control information, and introduce an alternate ideology. Principal number two is to create a granfallon, which is what authors use to describe strong in-group identity and bias. Principal number three is to create commitment through a rationalization trap (escalating commitment through circular argument). Principal number four is to establish the leader’s credibility and attractiveness. Principal number five is to send members out to proselytize the unredeemed and to fund-raise for the cult (escalates and reinforces self-commitment). Rule six is to distract members from thinking undesirable thoughts. Finally, rule number seven is to fixate members’ vision on a phantom (a common enemy unites the group and the dissonance of the non-believer intensifies the cultist’s beliefs).3
Psychologists Margaret Singer offers six principals for cult conversion in her book, Cults in our Midst. Rule number one is to keep the person unaware of intentions to change him or her. Rule number two is to control the subject’s time and environment. Rule number three is to create a sense of powerlessness (make them dependant). Rule number four is to suppress old behaviors and establish new behaviors with positive and negative reinforcement. Rule five is to establish the new ideology. Rule six is to establish authority, hierarchy, and a closed system of logic. As with Pratkanis and Aronson, Singer emphasizes a systematic approach that isolates the individual, establishes the leader’s absolute dominance, and skillfully reinforcing positive and negative behaviors with cascading commitment.4
The Controversy
In 1983, the American Psychological Association (APA) created the Task Force on Deceptive and Indirect Techniques of Persuasion and Control (TFDITPl), which was chaired by Margaret Singer. In 1987, the APA rejected the findings of the TFDITPl, claiming they were biased in favor of accepting the brainwashing phenomena and lacked scientific rigor. Prior to concluding the TFDITPI, the APA had issued a memorandum to the California Supreme Court claiming that Singer’s (evidently serving as an expert to the court) hypothesis “were uninformed speculations based on skewed data.” While the APA later revoked its memorandum, those scholars who had signed it did not; among them was David Bromley, a sociologist and critic of brainwashing theories. Some of the other scholars who had signed the memorandum also opposed brainwashing theories, had alternate theories, or viewed brainwashing theory as a threat to religious freedom. Singer tried to sue the APA and the American Sociological Association for defamation but was unsuccessful.
The Taboo
I already mentioned the ethical (and therefore scientific) dilemma of proving the brainwashing phenomena. Cult conversion is often questioned on grounds that the subject must have had a certain predisposition for mental illness or instability. Another criticism of brainwashing theory is the notion that the participant is wholly willing. In this case, brainwashing is a more comfortable prospect to family and friends who oppose the conversion. There is also the idea that mind-control feels something like magic and black magic at that—can scientists accept that? If scientist can’t establish statistical significance for brainwashing merely because basic human decency doesn’t permit them to replicate the phenomena then it certainly doesn’t mean that it doesn’t exist. The idea that there are greater forces acting on our thoughts, feelings, and behaviors is taboo, a threat to human supremacy, which is freewill—some might see it as a toss back to a belief in witchcraft, demonic possession, and superstition—an ideological correction against freedom and accountability.
Singer’s theory on brainwashing seems to be an attempt to describe a narrow classification of mind-control methods on a broad phenomenon. Nevertheless, I can’t help but believe that Singer’s position became unpopular with certain scholars when the APA considered an official stance on the matter because others had competing views and therefore it became politically pertinent for them to become advocates and act in coalition. As demonstrated, mind control is simply taboo, especially when ethics and law prohibit one from proving the brainwashing hypothesis.
Also worth remembering is that journalist Edward Hunter popularized the term to describe the communist conversion of American POWs. Ironically, Hunter turned out to have an intelligence background. Needless to say that there is fair amount of speculation that the CIA promoted the idea of brainwashing to alleviate the embarrassment of Americans converting to communist ideologies and to incite fear—another example of how brainwashing becomes the contemporary witchcraft in a contemporary witch-hunt. The relevance of this is that culture, myth, and mythic thinking are not always appreciated in the scientific community as myth is often mistakenly interpreted as the polar opposite of science’s enlightened reason, which the virtuous scientist must automatically oppose. I propose that skeptics may in fact be obsessed with the myth merely because of its symbolic or popular connotations and their bias towards such than for empirically sound reasons.
Circumstantial Evidence
The reality is that so very few POWs converted to communism that it is statistically insignificant. What is interesting about the Chinese POW camps is that they inspired a large degree of cooperation and enemy collaboration.1 Prisoners regularly informed on their fellow soldiers and this information was often publically broadcasted to the whole camp with enemy accolades and prisoner acceptance. It appears that enemy collaboration became the norm in Chinese POW camps. However, these behaviors were not lasting and most POWs returned with little empathy for their captors. The ant-loyal behaviors exhibited by POWs of Chinese communist camps are remarkable but they appear to be survival adaptations rather than ideological brainwashing. The Chinese merely reinforced the belief that cooperation was better for everybody and the prisoners concurred.
On the other end of the radical belief spectrum, cult suicide presents an intriguing case study that we cannot take lightly. Let us not forget the nine hundred members of Jones Town who voluntarily took their own lives as well as the lives of their children. The question that begs is how dependent is cult belief on continuous social reinforcement? Had individual members been isolated from the group would their convictions remain? Nevertheless, the willingness to take one’s own life is significant, regardless. In most cases, members of suicide cults are severely isolated and dependent on the cult—the outside world has seemingly disappeared to them and therefore they are conditioned to the singular worldview of the cult. Can we call it free will if you are encouraged by an imposing authority to systematically give up your past to the point that you feel you can no longer go back?
Our contention however, is whether we can take a mentally competent individual and turn them against their long-standing beliefs and values. Unfortunately, the most famous research on this topic is project MKULTRA. Most of the files related to project MKULTRA were destroyed and therefore we can never know the full extent of the projects experiments or findings. However, I believe there is plenty of circumstantial evidence that brainwashing is possible. The evidence I propose is not the case studies of POWs, cults, or alleged brainwashing but the countless experiments of social psychology that demonstrate our behavior is predictably innate and responsive rather than rational.
There are famous experiments such as those performed by Milgram, Asch, Tajfel, Sherif and Zimbardo that demonstrate that our behavior is much more innately conditioned and situationally predictable than we rationally believe. The Asch conformity experiment, for example, demonstrates the amazing urge we have to conform to groups. In this experiment, participants are shown a card with three lines drawn on it, under each line is a letter, one line is noticeably longer, and the subjects are asked to call out the letter of the longest line. All but one participant are collaborators who have agreed to call out the wrong letter. In most cases, the individual confers with the group and names the wrong answer though they might initially hesitate. However, the Asch experiment is only one example of countless experiments that demonstrate that behavior is innately conditioned.
While Asch demonstrated that we have a natural inclination to conform to group behavior Milgram demonstrated the power of authority. In this experiment, participants deliver electric shocks (fake) to an unwilling subject (an actor) at the repeated demands of authority (a doctor) and successively increase the voltage at his demands. Participants are told that the experiment is designed to study motivation in learning though it is really meant to gauge the participants’ response and willingness to comply with authority. The actor must solve a problem, and when the actor fails to give the correct solution, the participant must shock him, increasing the voltage with each successive failure. As the voltage increases, the actor demonstrates pain and the participant looks to the doctor but the doctor insists that the experiment continue. Most subjects continue to oblige the request of the “doctor” and deliver shocks to an unwillingly subject even though he is now screaming in pain and warning of heart problems. Many of these participants showed reluctance and questioned the doctor but at his absolute demands, they oblige.
The Milgram and Asch experiments are just famous examples of the countless experiments in social psychology that reveal the innate nature of our behavior. Most of us probably believe that our actions are based on thoughtful reasoning though experiments in social psychology consistently demonstrate that our actions are motivated on instinct. We now know many of the innate behavioral predispositions that situations and interactions arouse. The experiments and findings of social psychology, in their sum, constitute significant evidence that situations and social environments influence a person’s behavior in predictable ways. Furthermore, the experiments in and of themselves demonstrate that a social environment can be manipulated to the purpose of influencing a person’s behavior. Finally, in many cases, the experiments of social psychology are counter intuitive and dramatic in their results thus suggesting that behavior can be manipulated in dramatic ways.
An alternate theory
We set out not to discover whether brainwashing exists but whether it is possible. I posit that we could take an average person captive and radically change their beliefs and attitudes as well force them to commit atrocities that are against their prior values. This proposition is not based on the case of cults, POWs, interrogations, and such but on the revelation that social and situational reactions are innate, predictable, and therefore exploitable.
I would suggest that controlled behavior is either conforming or committing and that much of what is exhibited in groups is a conforming behavior. The critical threshold to brainwashing a person would be the transformation of conformance into commitment.5 However, conformance can lead to commitment especially when the actions of conformance can no longer be reconciled with a person’s beliefs and values—this is to say that the threshold is a point of no return—the victim accepts their alternate reality based on their own irreconcilable actions or else becomes wholly dysfunctional.6 If you are forced to commit murder, will you be the same person that you were before the crime—are you more likely commit murder again?
Further, I would propose that there are many routes to acquiring conformance. Creating an environment of uncertainty will make alternate social and ideological structures easier to accept, even desirous.7 I would suggest that disorientation assist the process of commitment, and to these ends psychedelic drugs, sleep deprivation, and extreme stress have significant potential. Combined physiological and psychological stress weakens one’s rational functionality and therefore lowers ability to resists. I believe such states have the ability to challenge ones sense of self and may make one susceptible to false memories or guilt.8 Such actions should then facilitate actual and escalating commitments that are against the subject’s initial ideology and reinforce implanted beliefs.
Finally, I would also suggest that the brainwasher introduce confederates to the victim who appear to be in the same situation as he.9 The confederates will provide a behavioral reference for the victim to follow. In the beginning, the confederates will appear to resists the imposed ideology as does the victim and this will encourage the establishment of a group identity. The idea is that the confederates will slowly conform to the desired behaviors and the victim will follow suit. However, the critical phase remains that the victim actually commit to actions that simply cannot be reconciled with his prior identity. Once the critical threshold is past, the victim is compelled to accept the ideology that he once opposed because it now comforts him and justifies his actions.
Having proposed that systematic brainwashing is possible, I in no way condone it. I would suggest that closed in-groups facilitate the natural mechanisms that brainwashing exploits, however, in most cases this is not systematic and premeditated enough to regard as brainwashing.10 As for military and intelligence applications, I believe brainwashing simply is not feasible in regards to the cost/benefits ratio in most instances—ethics aside. Finally, if successful, the brainwashed person will likely exhibit moderate to severe symptoms of posttraumatic stress and will always be in danger of self-destruction or retribution because of the dissonance created in betraying their former identity—though in ideal circumstances guilt is alleviated and processed by further commitment to the implanted ideology.
For those who want case studies of actual occurrences, I consider the strip search prank scam an interesting possibility. 11
The author condemns the oppression of individual liberty and offers his opinion as a hypothetical explanation of possibility that could help explain extreme and abnormal conformance.
Notes
1 Cialdini, Robert. Influence, Science and Practice. Needham Heights: Allyn & Bacon, 2001.
2 Sargant, William. Battle for the Mind. New York: Doubleday, 1997, 1st ed. published 1957.
3 Pratkanis, Anthony, and Elliot Aronson. Age of Propaganda. W.H. Freeman and Company, 2001, 1st ed. 1992.
4 Singer, Margaret Thaler. Cults in Our Midst. Jossey-Bass, 1996.
5 See the Wikipedia article on conformity– special emphasis on internalization (relevant 03-17-10)
6 This follows Cialdini’s commitment and consistency heuristics, which are well documented elsewhere. This tactic is also based on the speculation that the cognitive dissonance of committed behavior will force attitude adjustments.
7 I am proposing that the need for structure is its own heuristic, especially in an uncertain environment. Cialdini’s social proof heuristic also applies.
8 An interesting phenomena to consider is false memory syndrome and while its radical descriptions often cause controversy, more benign experiments have demonstrated that false memories are easily implanted. Interested persons can research this further themselves. My purpose in mentioning this is that extreme stress reduces cognitive functionality and I believe false memory syndrome and memory bias are more likely to occur in such a state, and as such can be used to facilitate the brainwashing process.
9 Psychological conformance to ‘social others’ and to ‘authority’ is a well documented dynamic– research the Asch Conformity Experiment and the Stanford Prison Experiment for an introduction.
10 Research in-group (ingroup) bias for further information
11 See Wikipedia article for “Strip Search Prank Scam”
Academic Bias
April 19th, 2010When most people talk about academic bias they are talking about the presupposed leftist orientation of academia. While that might be a form of academic bias, my conception of academic bias is much broader. Bias is a predisposition rather than a well-reasoned position (though bias often pretends to be reasoned). One form of academic bias might be to hold that a position is correct because of the position of an advocate rather than the argument itself, Dawkins on atheism for example. Another form of academic bias is to give more weight to credentials or the status of those credentials than to knowledge itself. I also believe academia encourages a significant in-group bias. Essentially, I believe many of the same cognitive biases that affect everybody are sometimes intensified in academia. This is particularly problematic because education is about truth, professors are supposed to be reasonable, and bias clouds reason and slants the truth. I hope to test my hypothesis with several experiments after concluding a seminar on psychological methods in the fall.
VENDETTA
April 15th, 2010The vendetta and blood feud are an interesting phenomena that have the potential to reveal many particularities about human nature. I know that’s a pretty abstract declaration but consider that the blood feud may be the most primal form of warfare—a window into the evolution of war and man. Feuds are a universal phenomena that regulate ideals of honor, which are also nearly as universal–being informal conceptions regulating social interactions, status, justice, and injustice. Understanding individual human violence is one thing—but relating individual violence to civilization’s wars is another thing—and is particularly problematic. However, the feud has a potential to bridge the sociological-psychological gap that exist in understanding the shared and interrelated dynamics between individual violence and group violence. While a feud might only exist between two individuals, very often, it involves whole families and familial alliances and these can translate into whole clans, villages, tribes, towns, and organizations.
Here is a list of things I find interesting about feuds.
Accordingly, feuds can help us understand the evolution of human violence and warfare, the pyschology of justice—natural law (as in our innate sense of justice), the role and evolution of ritual and tradition in regulating social order, the most innate and universal ethical conceptions collectively shared by the human species, and lend insight into the dynamics of alpha dominance and status preservation—these being a few possibilities for a dynamically rich behavior.
Mythification: 5 Guidelines for Creating a Legend.
April 8th, 2010There has been a lot of talk about the mythic brand but little discussion on how to create it. Here’s one perspective on how. BTW, these rules apply to people as much as they do to organizations.
1. Persevere – Life stories are about hardship and challenges—legends are about heroes who overcome insurmountable hardships. I realize “persevere” is an abstract term but if your business has never had a significant obstacle to overcome then you are an opportunist not a hero.
2. Take up challenges and push the boundaries—Myths are stories that have a super-real quality to them and are worth being retold. Super-real is an extraordinary feat—something that the competition either won’t or can’t do because of fear or risks. Such a feat is something people will want to talk about—something that must be retold. However, don’t mistake extraordinary feats that create legends with mere publicity stunts—legendary feats possess real risks, real consequences, and real rewards other than aggrandizement. If there are no significant risks or sacrifices then it’s not mythic. The more challenges you live up to the more likely you’ll be recognized for it.
3. Have an audience but be careful about calling the press—It goes without saying that if nobody witnesses your mythic feats then nobody will talk about them. Once again, you need to be careful about the line that exist between myth and publicity and use the later cautiously as promotion is secondary to the mythic feat.
4. Know your story—Story narration is how we process and explain the events that happen to us. All people, organizations, and businesses have a story, and stories. What is yours—is it inspiring, interesting, or noteworthy? Make sure that the challenges and boundaries you seek to push will contribute to your story, coherently and positively.
5. Be afraid of failure but do not let it dictate you—remember that trying is sometimes as notable as succeeding. The bottom line is if you don’t try you won’t succeed.
Voila—Mythification!
More discussion about legend-making coming soon.
The Surrealist Writer
April 3rd, 2010Many of the post here at The Blog Post have been written rather spontaneously and published without a second glance. It’s not uncommon for me to add to or edit articles well after I’ve published them…I’ve always regarded this website as an exercise in self-actuation. However, that doesn’t mean that I’m not critical of myself, and, well, frankly I’m a little curious about what five minutes of truly spontaneous writing would yield. If you haven’t guessed yet, I’m psyching myself up for a surrealist writing spell—that means I must write continuously for five minutes without preconception (if that is possible), without critical constraint (if that is possible), and without any editing….
It is 10:34 AM
Here, the white screen pervades….I’m writing without reason…without perspective..writing but I do have something to say, this is an experiment. Here there is something to confront, something to watch out for—can we ever really be free of our critical self…I don’t know…even now my critical faculties are on guard…there is something to protect…but what? I guess I can …arghhh, what am I trying to say? I just don’t know.. has it been five minute yet? No barely beeen one minute….this is unbearable…what is the purpose? I think I think I think I think….no I won’t be redundant….I must say something……….there is a door….the water is running….my wife is taking a shower…but there is light coming through my window..there are two empty coca cola cans on my desk and I’m thinking Freud is a smuck…I had a dream the other night that I was I was diagnosed as a sociopath but that was really nothing compared to my dreams of being a devil—in those dreams I’m an assassin that can sneak up on anybody and snatch their souls—they never see me coming….Is that my animus? Oh well, so be it…and what do I have left to say…I am a shadow…no…that’s not true…it’s 10:38, yes- about one more minute….my daughter just told me she seen a spider but I said nothing to her…..I am concentrating but I still hear everyything…I am unresponsive but I still see everything….I am almost done…but even now I’m not sure I would trust this to be published..would I really allow that…would I…maybe I would maybe I won’t—frankly I don’t care—yea, but I’m still smart enough to care …..the time to stop is approaching…now….no, it is NOW
DONE
Nonsense or deep psychological truths?
After Thought #1 11:16 AM
Time definitely biased my cognition during this exercise.
After Thought #2 11:56 AM
Obviously, I was trying not to be critical—perhaps that made me more critical (or at least concerned). Interestingly, if I could change anything it wouldn’t be the content but the fluidity of the writing, especially towards the end.
After Thought #3 12:10 PM
My daughter did come into my office and told me that she seen a spider. The experience of this was near oblivious until she left the room at which point I felt a moment of guilt mixed with curiosity and excitement because I was capturing a thought process that often puzzled me. My wife has, on several occasions, accused me of not paying attention, and she is usually right, but when challenged I am often able to recall the details to my own surprise. In this particular situation, I know that I blocked out my daughter because I was highly focused on a specific thought process—nevertheless I heard and processed her communication.
After Thought #4 12:29 PM
I am wondering what the primary narrative is—is it just me questioning my thoughts or has another emerged?
After Thought #5 2:10 PM
My dream of being labeled a sociopath is complex and I can recognize several influences. First, I am an extremely independent thinker and a bit adventurous so I occasionally endure both the harmless tease, authentic concern, and an occasional malicious attack on my mentality. As mentioned—I have occasional dreams that would fit the sociopath and therefore identify with those aspects of my personality. Those dreams are rarely in the realm of nightmares, leaving me feeling empowered, though sometimes concerned. I would actually say I take a certain pride in identifying with my dark side—we all have it and I respect it. The idea of labels touches on an impulse I have for evading self-definition—something I will explore later. Finally, I have long-standing criticisms of mental health practices because of the disproportionate balance of power between patient and practitioner—labels can be very destructive and abusive.
There is actually a classic experiment were the researcher had people pretend to have mild one-time hallucinations. The actors checked themselves in at various hospitals throughout several states and then later claimed the symptoms were gone and insisted to be let go. All the actors were retained and labeled—the mental health practitioners continued to identify neurotic symptoms despite the fact that they were in-fact normal. I can’t remember the researcher or the experiment’s name and for this brief mention I won’t delve into any further—but if somebody really wants to know I’ll find it for them.
After Thought #6 3:33 PM, 2 Days Later
I believe the most significant information is in the middle as the beginning was an attempt to overcome self-consciousness and the end was dictated by time. In the beginning I exhibited a reluctance, and I got to tell you that this kind of exercise is challenging for me because I am an introvert and I don’t regularly feel the need to reveal the full depths of my reasoning–it’s nobody’s business unless I make it so. I’m not sure what kind of value I place on such an exercise but it’s worth further investigation.
Reassessing Kitsch Culture
April 2nd, 2010Doesn’t a belief in poor taste also signify a belief in cultural superiority, and isn’t that what we call culture-centric? For the longest time I have regarded anything touristy as kitschy but for one reason or another I found myself devoured by the billboards of souvenir shops and roadside attractions on the way back from Florida this last week. I wondered how much it cost to put up a billboard and I assume it’s not particularly cheap—I wondered how many billboards it would take to make a mom and pop shop commercial (many of these places had a dozen or more billboards before you actually reached the exit). The relevance of this is that kitsch is something that we regard as being unauthentic.
Nevertheless, I was pleasantly surprised when one such souvenir shop, which was also operated by the owner, claimed to grow their own oranges. The carnival swindle of cheap authentic Florida mementos was actually hosted by a real farmer—he wasn’t a commercial grower, he was a tourist grower, but that didn’t change his status as small farmer. I suddenly had to reassess my perceptions—could this man be following an authentic farmer tradition? Had he in fact survived the mega-producers as an entrepreneur? I had to entertain the possibility that the villain was in fact the hero.
Cultural taste and values are nothing simple to access and these few words certainly do little justice to a broad and overlooked cultural phenomenon. As for my own taste, I still prefer to get off the beaten path but I have developed a fascination, if not an appreciation, for touristy kitschy stuff and their consuming culture.
Academic Snobbery
March 31st, 2010I comment regularly on several academic forums and blogs, often incognito, and I have to tell you that I am too often amazed at the academic snobbery that regularly surfaces in discussion.
I’m not saying that I have no vanity for academic credentials—but my contentions are usually a matter of utility. You can always bet that when I discuss somebody and their credentials—I mention those credentials because I know you are impressed with them—I am not.
However, it’s only natural that we appeal to authority—it is classic rhetoric, and it is psychologically founded as we appear to have an innate bias (cognitive-heuristic) for perceived authority. Nevertheless, I find it intellectually disgraceful for “academics” (with an emphasis on the quote, unquote) to pillar their status on their degree. Now, I’m not saying it’s wrong to affirm one’s background—I am talking about those people who cling to the blogs of popular writers seeking an in-group affinity and equal standing with an idolization based on supposed credentials rather than on contribution (precisely the reason I often prefer to be anonymous).
I have seen individuals (themselves subtly claiming genius) insist on a point of view merely because of the credentials of an advocate. I have argued perspectives and been told I need to “respect” the source because of their credentials—and, of course, the rhetorically minded will know these are fallacious arguments. Nonetheless, academic bias never seizes to amaze me, especially since academic to me is synonymous with truth and honesty and bias is neither of those.
My experience is that those who are actually passionate about knowledge and are doing something with their curiosity are usually not snobs—but around them, the wannabe abounds. The wannabe wants the respect of an idolized class—and if they strive to make a contribution it is for acceptance rather than out of passion. I respect ideas not titles and I certainly don’t hold academic culture to moral superiority (but I have the highest respect for scholarly idealism, curiosity, and honest enquiry).
Do you have the sincere respect of your professors?
Treating Saltwater Catfish Sting
March 31st, 2010A public service announcement about catfish stings that other websites don’t tell you.
I am back from vacation! It was a great vacation other than my wife getting spined through the foot by a saltwater catfish while fishing the Gulf of Mexico. The night prior (1 AM) to the incident, I had spotted a frenzy of small sharks around the pier so I convinced Luiza that we had an opportunity for shark if we fished late at night with cut baits. The next night we walked out to the pier at about ten PM and I cast out while Luiza and her mother rigged their lines, and to my surprise, I had a bite that resulted in a bullish fight almost immediately—I caught a five-pound catfish. Before Luiza would get her line in the water I would catch another, and another, and even though I wasn’t fishing for catfish it was still fun to have something give fight (for the first half hour). For the next hour we caught these catfish left and right and was beginning become weary—but as luck would have it, Luiza was seriously spined before we decided to give it a rest.
While trying to remove a hard lodged hook, Luiza used her foot to try to hold the catfish still on the floor of the pier (need I say more?)—the spine went through the sole of her sandal, her foot, and out the other side. She calmly told me the catfish was stuck to her foot and I advised her to remove her foot from the sandal (trying to get her to come off the spine) while holding the catfish still. She was scared to pull off the spine but then she realized she had to, and did—it was about like pulling a dagger slowly out of the foot. The doctor later told us that that point had been a critical operation on our part that might have saved Luiza from the surgical removal of the barb, which would have likely broken off (being such a deep penetration) into her foot had she not been so calm and precise in removing it.
As it goes, catfish have a venomous slime coating and their stings are very painful—some have claimed it to be the worst pain (a nurse that treated Luiza claimed catfish injuries tend to be worse than stingrays). Luiza’s situation was different than most because the spine didn’t merely prick her but went clear through the foot. We determined through the internet that Luiza was in for a painful night but that the injury wasn’t critical—we were on a remote island with no stores, no doctors, no boat—and the water taxi didn’t start operating until the morning.
Though we read plenty on saltwater catfish injuries, Luiza was in intense pain and convinced she needed to see a doctor—at sunrise we called for the water taxi and took Luiza to a mainland walk-in clinic. The doctor had treated “several” catfish injuries as well as stingray injuries, which he regarded as being very similar—he thought Luiza’s injury was the worst he had seen. After a hot water bath, antibiotics, a prescription for oxycodeine, a tetanus shot, and X-rays to ascertain that no part of the spine remained in the wound, Luiza is convinced that the hot water bath did the most.
While we had read on the internet that we should soak the wound in warm water, nobody offered an explanation, so we failed to see the significance. It turns out that the venom is heat sensitive and its enzymes break down with high temperatures. “Warm” water is really a misnomer as the doctor insisted the water “be is hot as she can take it”. Had Luiza known the significance of the “warm water” treatment and its proper use (use hot water)—she believes the pain would have subsided faster and we might have avoided a day at the doctor’s office and hospital. Nevertheless, I am thoroughly impressed with the consideration given to us by the medical establishment at Englewood, Florida.
Luiza has asked me to write about this incident because better information wasn’t available when we searched for it. Here is what I can tell you: use hot water (but don’t scold yourself) and despite what some websites say, it seems rather rare for the spine (or fragments) to actually become dislodged in you. However, if the spine is removed with stress or from an awkward angle, then consider it with greater probability. We recommend soaking the wound in really really warm water for several hours and holding out for a good day—but hey, if you’re in pain see a doctor! We are not medical professionals and assume no responsibility.
Good luck and best regards,
Kevin
For the next 12 days
March 19th, 2010I am somewhere where it doesn’t matter.
Spies Like Us 2.0
March 16th, 2010Yahoo ran a story today, titled– When Tweets can make you a Jaibird—the article claims that government agents are increasingly using social media to capture their suspects, confirm alibis, gather incriminating evidence, so on and so forth. According to the article, the Justice Department has acclaimed the virtues of online investigations in a recently surfaced document that sets forth the possibilities, including the potential for covert operations.
Of course, so much of the world is wired, communication is happening and a lot of it is public…online spying is nothing to be surprised about. In fact, online communications can certainly make certain covert operations easier. I had once pondered the idea of a private intelligence company that would utilize this advantage for a business plan while in business school—that idea gave way to a business plan for a communications consultancy. Later, inspired by the Anti-Defamation League, I considered the prospect of a non-profit version of my original idea in the form of a wiki that would allow anonymous descriptive submissions of radical individuals, webpages, and recruiting efforts on social media sites. The wikisite would contain information on how to carry out an investigation, protect your own identity, and critically access information—ever heard of citizen journalism? Well, I have conceived the citizen spy!
However, I am perplexed with the ethics, how do we keep this from abuse? Furthermore, I am generally opposed to social engineering… which is a really vague thing to say, and probably contrary to my situationalist psychology (no not really). Finally, I have a lot of respect for individual liberty—the right to privacy, and have not yet conceived the philosophic (moral)cost-(moral)benefits analysis yet. I am really just saying that it was a novel idea but now the utility is somewhat proven or at least federally acclaimed. Who am I kidding? – It is a great idea, but I’m not prepared to be Nixomatized!
Update
March 2nd, 2010I’m hoping to take blogging to a new level by writing a regular column on persuasion, dominance, status and related phenomena. I’m taking some time out to prepare a few articles in advance and find a venue…..stay tuned.
Dust clouds in space may be alive.
February 25th, 2010It’s still a jump (I think), but some physicists have discovered that dust clouds in plasma exhibit life like patterns – including interaction with neighboring dust clouds and reproduction by cloning. This isn’t news—it’s three years old. What I find interesting about this is that it comes closer to a question I’ve often asked: why can’t the universe be alive? Not to say that I advocate such a thought—but I will entertain the possibility. We have a tendency to think of life as something mystical (not to say that it isn’t as matter of semantics) but even organic life exists by the same cosmic laws as the inorganic—an organized system of matter bound by, and dictated by the laws physics.
The Red Flag
February 22nd, 2010Socialism is an interesting creature, seemingly always on the fringes, ready to burst into global revolution. My strongest criticism of socialism is that it emerged as a philosophy from various sociologists in the nineteenth century—a time when human behavior had not yet been quantified or mapped. My contention is that socialism is fundamentally posited against human nature. Status, dominance, competitiveness, territorial perceptions, and the acquisition and hoarding of objects that are perceived as valuable or status enhancing are innate, natural, and universal traits of the human animal—as they are self regulating functions of the species. Socialism’s critique is that wealth is socially wrong if it is not collectively shared, and supposedly, once the evil capitalists are overturned and wealth is redistributed, everybody will conform to a new behavior and everything will be fine and dandy.
The problem with this is that it is an ideology that requires everybody to accept its terms—much more so than democratic-capitalism. Essentially you are bound to the community, belong to the community, and what you possess belongs to the community—status is bad so excess is bad. In theory, everybody abides by this utopian ideology, everybody is equal, everybody benefits equally, and there is little need for a corruptible government. In truth, this utopian vision is against human nature and so much so that it simply cannot work—and is to the point of denying human nature, that it is dangerous.
If socialism prevailed, there would ultimately be individuals—status driven individuals, who make themselves symbols of socialism and revolution. The mechanisms of status and dominance become monopolized and the concentration of socialized power with charismatic leaders becomes extreme. Furthermore, this is bound to happen because status, dominance, and the acquisition of status objects and excess resources are natural impulses of alpha individuals and arise from group dynamics. Not only will status driven individuals monopolize socialism’s standards but socialism needs status driven champions because there will be plenty of status driven dissent for them to combat—and they (socialism’s champions) are the icons—demigods well beyond Hollywood actors, CEOs, and politicians.
The lure to impose one’s righteousness onto an entire community is bound to attract the most authoritarian and charismatic alpha types. Marx, Engels and other socialist zoomed in on something they didn’t like (class differentiation) and then became so obsessed with this that they could never step away and look at the larger picture. More importantly, they failed to consider human nature or else believed they could engineer an entire civilization into homogeneous conceptualizations—and while their intentions were good—for the underclass—their sociological construction sets the psychological stages for an even greater totalitarianism, social dissent, repression, conflict, and status monopolization.
Meanwhile, the charismatics and prophets promise that utopia is around the corner— but before this can occur they insists on the assassination of Ronald McDonald, Mickey Mouse, and the Scarecrow of Oz.
Motivation
February 18th, 2010After reading how Dr. Bissutti ended up owing $555,000 in student loans, I’ve decided to add consulting practicums to my curriculum.
The Semiotics of Vulgarity: Part 1
February 1st, 2010Distortion signifies???
What makes a Laborghini tasteful or not?
Vulgarity is an interesting concept because its perception undoes the power of perceived wealth. I think it is more interesting that it’s rarely used by poor and lower middle classes to describe the wealthy – but by the wealthy to describe other wealthy people who flaunt their wealth, because, presumably they must have once been poor themselves to want to impress their wealth upon an average society, and are therefore a false upper class. But what is acceptable and why should it matter? It seems that artists often openly rebel against upper class society to become openly embraced by it (or parts of it). The irony makes sense because poking fun at one’s self (high society) helps diffuse the threat of class differentiation – but doing so creates the need to embrace the antagonist (artist), and so – vulgarity becomes tasteful……..rebels seem to succeed without want while desirous imposters ultimately don’t stand a chance.
My Hardy Cacti
January 29th, 2010Did you Know?
January 25th, 2010British research degrees are ‘unstructured’ and earned, mostly, on the thesis or dissertation alone. I’ve seen on forums, where someone is contemplating a thesis only degree, American academics (presumed) insist that coursework is necessary. I presume they are ignorant of the greater world… I say, you British produce fine scholars…Kudos
Anyhow, a British bachelor’s degree is generally a three-year degree - before pursuing a research degree (M.Phil or PhD) British academics must first earn a one year honors degree, which is based on coursework. British graduate students will work closely with an advisor in their research and learning – but course work is usually not part of the requirement (after the honor’s degree). In contrast a U.S. PhD student will likely complete another ninety credit hours (or more) of course work (3-4 years full time and then some). The important distinction is that learning doesn’t end with classes in the British system – it’s just unstructured. Of course, the nice thing about courses is that they go on your transcripts and validate that you at least participated in a seminar on a particular subject.
Australia and South Africa have similar systems…
Dominate the conversation and prevail….
January 19th, 2010I just read an interesting study published in the Journal of Nonverbal Behavior by Sally D Farely that presents experimental evidence that conversation interrupters are perceived as possessing higher status than the interrupted. Otherwise, if you interrupt somebody in conversation you will decrease their status and increase your own. Farely notes that this also results in the interrupted person liking the interpreter less and therefore there is a cost to pay for the status acquired. Farely’s research is published in volume 32, number 4 of the December, 2008 edition of the Journal of Nonverbal Behavior. This research is consistent with other research, which suggests status is attained by imposing oneself and dominating others.
What interests me is the implication that manners are for the weak. However, etiquette is a status symbol for the cultural and political elite. Manners in this context would indicate a sort of ascribed status whereas the dominant personality is an actualized status. My own thesis is that such ascribed status will dominate over the merely imposing personality when their (the ‘proper’ person) authority is explicitly asserted. However, when we talk about etiquette in behavior we are talking about the social fabric of society and the semiotics of cognition, so this is complex issue. At any rate, I think it would be interesting to conduct similar research that test status perceptions in association with manners and cultured behavior in contrast with the merely imposing.
Note: Farely does suggest that leaders who have perceived “legitimacy” will be liked more or tolerated in their interruptions than a less respected leader who will be disliked more. Farely does not define legitimacy for us and my own interest in this is in the perception of the cultured or mannered person…
Night Terror Desire.
January 17th, 2010I am awake under the serpents gaze,
she had deceived me or was it – it,
it must be that under these covers – prey
devils, demons and hideous feelings.
A creature of skin and silk, Hedone,
I am motionless, my arms stretched out,
a scarecrow in an empty field – sorrows.
A breeze carries past, but not the vague doubt
What is this desolation? I am bliss
bliss, blistered - Walking on wretched desire,
dragging feet, bleeding, thirsty, and this
somehow delights me – we are eye to eye.
Martyrdom and the sacrificial dance
my mask – Theseus, the bull and the trance.
Note: I composed this poem last year and my wife was terrified by it – for her I sake, I must say that she had nothing to do with it. This poem was the condensation of sound bites and images from a much longer piece (I could barely call it a poem), written over ten years ago. It is appropriate to publish Night Terror Desire today because I am in the middle of a seminar on labyrinths.



