Kryachkov 2!indd
Английский язык для магистратуры T
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! DAKryachkov
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Английский язык для магистратуры T he –ism Schism But perhaps the most disturbing theory is simply that prejudice is part of our very nature as hu- man beings. One of the earliest attempts to try and understand the nature of prejudice, stated that prejudice was something hidden deep within each of us and ingrained in all of our personalities. Prejudice is the natural reaction of fear and suspicion automatically stimulated in the brain by the appearance of someone physically different from ourselves. This explains why humans naturally feel more comfortable around people of the same skin color. So to be human is to be prone to prejudice. In the 60s and 70s, a social psychologist with the good old American name of Henri Tajfel, con- ducted a series of experiments that seemed to show the inevitability of human prejudice. Tajfel would divide people into entirely arbitrary groups. There were groups formed on the basis of whether you preferred one painting over another or, when you had to make a rough guess of how many dots were on a page, whether you overestimated or underestimated. Why anyone would care about a distinction so trivial is beyond comprehension. Yet, in experi- ment after experiment, Tajfel found that such distinctions were sufficient to trigger prejudiced be- havior. Prejudice in favor of people like you — that is, dot over-estimators. And prejudice against the Evil Empire of under-estimators. Such prejudices, formed in a laboratory experiment lasting only a few hours were in fact sufficient to overwhelm any impact of prior positive real life experiences with the person now viewed as belonging to the foreign group. It doesn’t exactly make you feel good about the human capacity for intelligence. Perhaps another way of dividing people, however, is into those who perpetually see the glass half empty vs. those who are bound and determined to see the glass half full. I suspect I fall into the latter category, because I actually find cause for hope in Tajfel’s seemingly damning experiments. Yes, Tajfel’s experiments point to the human propensity for preju- diced behavior. But they also point to human malleability. For an experience as artificial and trivial as dot counting to have such a profound effect on our behavior, we must be mutable creatures indeed. Prejudice so easily formed cannot help but be vulnerable to corrective experience. A sense of oneself and to what one belongs that is so easily contracted, cannot, I believe, resist being expanded. We have sometimes seemed, in our brief history on this planet, to heap one disgraceful act on top of another. But our saving grace as a species has always been our capacity for change. We have seen how easily we can change for the worse. I have not stopped believing, however, in the pos- sibility of our changing for the better. I believe, our large capacity for prejudice is well-matched by a generous capacity for change. Download 2.42 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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