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utsfl:classroom:seminars:pbh310 [2024/03/27 07:39] – wrote Part III section with at least a rough first draft for today, and a conclusion balleyneutsfl:classroom:seminars:pbh310 [2024/04/11 21:42] (current) – hive switch with audience choir balleyne
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 For a guide through the field of moral psychology, I'm going to turn to Jonathan Haidt - whose name you'll see all over the Wikipedia article on [[wp>Moral Psychology]] - and his landmark 2012 book //The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided By Politics and Religion,// which draws on 25 years of groundbreaking research and which, I think, is full of wisdom for pro-life activists as a sort of textbook for a 300-level course in heart apologetics. For a guide through the field of moral psychology, I'm going to turn to Jonathan Haidt - whose name you'll see all over the Wikipedia article on [[wp>Moral Psychology]] - and his landmark 2012 book //The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided By Politics and Religion,// which draws on 25 years of groundbreaking research and which, I think, is full of wisdom for pro-life activists as a sort of textbook for a 300-level course in heart apologetics.
  
-(I first encountered Jonathan Haidt's concepts from the book in late 2020in the midst of pandemic and 2020 presidential election debates and conspiracy thinking, and then my friend Katie bought me the book a year later at the end of 2021, and I read it slowly in 2022, 2023, and early 2024. I knew there were deep insights into heart apologetics from my first encounter, but as I worked my way through the book, I became more and more convinced that it would be helpful to run a seminar on this.)+(Share some of my 2020-2024 journey in thinking about this.)
  
-I'm going to pull out the core insights from Haidt's work that apply to pro-life activism, and leave aside philosophical bones to pick and worldview differences. In the first half, we'll look at the Elephant and the Rider; in the second half, the six taste receptors and the hive switch.+I'm going to pull out the core insights from Haidt's work that apply to pro-life activism, and leave aside philosophical bones to pick and worldview differences. We'll go through Jonathan Haidt's three principles of moral psychology, and apply them to pro-life activism: The Elephant and the Rider, the Six Taste Receptors, and the Hive Switch.
  
 ===== Part 1: The Elephant and the Rider ===== ===== Part 1: The Elephant and the Rider =====
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 And this leads into the second half, on how we can apply further lessons from moral psychology on how to be persuasive to other people's elephants. And this leads into the second half, on how we can apply further lessons from moral psychology on how to be persuasive to other people's elephants.
  
-===== Part 2: Developing Empathy for Elephants =====+===== Part 2: Six Taste Receptors =====
 The first principle in moral psychology is that "intuitions come first, strategic reasoning second" - the elephant and the rider. Now, we'll take a look at the second principle to better understand other people, and the third principle for guidance on how to be effective at reaching them. The first principle in moral psychology is that "intuitions come first, strategic reasoning second" - the elephant and the rider. Now, we'll take a look at the second principle to better understand other people, and the third principle for guidance on how to be effective at reaching them.
  
 <del>(Jonathon Haidt is writing as a secular liberal who went on a journey from breaking out of the matrix, becoming more aware of his own biases, and broadening his understanding of moral psychology to better understand and appreciate people with different ideological perspectives. The journey for most of us is a bit of the reverse, so I won't be following exactly his journey in the book, but the lessons he learned applied in reverse.(</del> <del>(Jonathon Haidt is writing as a secular liberal who went on a journey from breaking out of the matrix, becoming more aware of his own biases, and broadening his understanding of moral psychology to better understand and appreciate people with different ideological perspectives. The journey for most of us is a bit of the reverse, so I won't be following exactly his journey in the book, but the lessons he learned applied in reverse.(</del>
  
-==== The Six Taste Receptors ==== +==== Beyond WEIRD Morality ====
-=== Beyond WEIRD Morality ===+
 Jonathan Haidt rights as a secular liberal, breaking out of his liberal university bubbles and broadening his understanding of moral psychology by developing a better understanding of the broad range of human moral reasoning, rather than only the narrow range he was accustomed to and familiar with before. Jonathan Haidt rights as a secular liberal, breaking out of his liberal university bubbles and broadening his understanding of moral psychology by developing a better understanding of the broad range of human moral reasoning, rather than only the narrow range he was accustomed to and familiar with before.
  
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 **The second principle in moral psychology is that there's more to morality than harm and fairness.** This is more of a lesson for WEIRD people, but it's also critical to understand the differences in how the left and the right think about morality. **The second principle in moral psychology is that there's more to morality than harm and fairness.** This is more of a lesson for WEIRD people, but it's also critical to understand the differences in how the left and the right think about morality.
  
-=== Moral Foundations Theory ===+==== Moral Foundations Theory ====
 After breaking out of the WEIRD matrix, Haidt and his team starting doing a ton of research on what came to be known as [[wp>Moral Foundations Theory]], especially through their project YourMorals.org. Haidt says **the righteous mind is like a tongue with six taste receptors** - and what values by culture and especially by political ideology is how many taste receptors people are using as foundations of their moral intuitions. After breaking out of the WEIRD matrix, Haidt and his team starting doing a ton of research on what came to be known as [[wp>Moral Foundations Theory]], especially through their project YourMorals.org. Haidt says **the righteous mind is like a tongue with six taste receptors** - and what values by culture and especially by political ideology is how many taste receptors people are using as foundations of their moral intuitions.
  
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     * e.g. Chastity as a virtue of purity, vs "your body may be a temple, but mine's an amusement park" bumper sticker      * e.g. Chastity as a virtue of purity, vs "your body may be a temple, but mine's an amusement park" bumper sticker 
  
-=== Three vs Six ===+==== Three vs Six ====
  
 Conclusion((p. 212-214)) - maybe just read the bolded part, but use the matrices image to visualize while explaining: Conclusion((p. 212-214)) - maybe just read the bolded part, but use the matrices image to visualize while explaining:
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 This is the second principle in moral psychology: **there's more to morality than harm and fairness.** This is the second principle in moral psychology: **there's more to morality than harm and fairness.**
  
-So what do we do then with these findings to be more effective pro-life activists? **We need to keep these taste receptors in mind as we speak to elephants** (e.g. why do we focus so much in the pro-life message on care/harm and liberty/oppression? And not on sanctity or loyalty?Before we answer that question, we need to turn to the Hive Switch and look at the third principle in moral psychology.+So what do we do then with these findings to be more effective pro-life activists? **We need to keep these taste receptors in mind as we speak to elephants** (e.g. why do we focus so much in the pro-life message on care/harm and liberty/oppression? And not on sanctity or loyalty?), and we need to **speak in a language that will be received by //their// elephant, not that will simply satisfy //ours.//**
  
-==== The Hive Switch ====+Finally, we turn to the third principle in moral psychology to develop deeper empathy, and learn a few more lessons that are relevant for heart apologetics and for the pro-life movement more broadly. 
 + 
 +===== Part 3: The Hive Switch =====
 <note warning>This section needs a lot more work to smooth out the narrative. This isn't a script, but is very chunky and may need to be refactored/reorganized.</note> <note warning>This section needs a lot more work to smooth out the narrative. This isn't a script, but is very chunky and may need to be refactored/reorganized.</note>
  
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   * a rock concert   * a rock concert
   * a meaningful and challenging experience that builds community (like a summer internship or tour)   * a meaningful and challenging experience that builds community (like a summer internship or tour)
 +
 +FIXME example: https://www.instagram.com/p/C3x_fI_s4SV/
  
 Collective ritual - Haidt says that human beings are //conditional hive creatures.// We exist on an individual level, but also as part of the larger society, as part of a community. Collective ritual - Haidt says that human beings are //conditional hive creatures.// We exist on an individual level, but also as part of the larger society, as part of a community.
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 When this hive switch is activated, this leads to the third principle in moral psychology: **morality binds and blinds.** That is, the Hive Switch //binds// us together in community. But, it also //blinds// us beyond the in-group. When this hive switch is activated, this leads to the third principle in moral psychology: **morality binds and blinds.** That is, the Hive Switch //binds// us together in community. But, it also //blinds// us beyond the in-group.
  
-=== Binding ===+==== Binding ====
 <note>This is a side note, could skip</note> <note>This is a side note, could skip</note>
 On community-building On community-building
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   * Ways to nudge everyone's "hive switch" sliders a bit: (p. 277)   * Ways to nudge everyone's "hive switch" sliders a bit: (p. 277)
     * **Increase similarity, not diversity.** [connect with religious idea bundling] To make a human hive, you want to make everyone feel like a family. So don't call attention to racial and ethnic differences; make them less relevant by ramping up similarity and celebrating the group's shared values and common identity.     * **Increase similarity, not diversity.** [connect with religious idea bundling] To make a human hive, you want to make everyone feel like a family. So don't call attention to racial and ethnic differences; make them less relevant by ramping up similarity and celebrating the group's shared values and common identity.
-    * **Exploit synchrony:** People who move together are saying, "We are one, we are a team; just look how perfectly we are able to do that Tomasello shared-intention thing." Japanese corporations such as Toyota begin their days with synchronous companywide exercises. Groups prepare for battle - in war and sports - with group chants and ritualized movements. ([Example given of rugby haka](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiKFYTFJ_kw)) If you ask people to sing a song together, or to march in step, or just to tap out some beats together on a table, it makes them trust each other more and be more willing to help each other out, in part because it makes people feel more similar to each other. If it's too creepy to ask your employees or fellow group members to do synchronized calisthenics, perhaps you can just try to have more parties with dancing or karaoke. **Synchrony builds trust.**+    * **Exploit synchrony:** People who move together are saying, "We are one, we are a team; just look how perfectly we are able to do that Tomasello shared-intention thing." Japanese corporations such as Toyota begin their days with synchronous companywide exercises. Groups prepare for battle - in war and sports - with group chants and ritualized movements. ([[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yiKFYTFJ_kw|Example given of rugby haka]]) If you ask people to sing a song together, or to march in step, or just to tap out some beats together on a table, it makes them trust each other more and be more willing to help each other out, in part because it makes people feel more similar to each other. If it's too creepy to ask your employees or fellow group members to do synchronized calisthenics, perhaps you can just try to have more parties with dancing or karaoke. **Synchrony builds trust.**
     * **Create healthy competition among teams, not individuals.** As McNeill said, soldiers don't risk their lives for their country or for the army; they do so for their buddies in the same squad or platoon. Studies show that intergroup competition increases love of the in-group far more than it increases dislike of the out-group. Intergroup competitions, such as friendly rivalries between corporate divisions, or intramural sports competitions, should have a net positive effect on hivishness and social capital. But pitting individuals against each other in a competition for scarce resources (such as bonuses) will destroy hivishness, trust, and morale.     * **Create healthy competition among teams, not individuals.** As McNeill said, soldiers don't risk their lives for their country or for the army; they do so for their buddies in the same squad or platoon. Studies show that intergroup competition increases love of the in-group far more than it increases dislike of the out-group. Intergroup competitions, such as friendly rivalries between corporate divisions, or intramural sports competitions, should have a net positive effect on hivishness and social capital. But pitting individuals against each other in a competition for scarce resources (such as bonuses) will destroy hivishness, trust, and morale.
  
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 FIXME idea bundling... binds and blinds is idea bundling... right? FIXME idea bundling... binds and blinds is idea bundling... right?
  
-=== Blinding ===+==== Blinding ====
 FIXME :!: BLINDING to the other side, e.g. FIXME :!: BLINDING to the other side, e.g.
  
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 > Republicans don't believe in the imagination, partly because so few of them have one, but mostly because it gets in the way of their chosen work, which is to destroy the human race and the planet. Human beings, who have imaginations, can see a recpie for disaster in the making; Republicans, whose goal in life is to profit from disaster and who don't give a hoot about human beings, either can't or won't. WHich is why I personally think they should be exterminated before they cause any more harm. > Republicans don't believe in the imagination, partly because so few of them have one, but mostly because it gets in the way of their chosen work, which is to destroy the human race and the planet. Human beings, who have imaginations, can see a recpie for disaster in the making; Republicans, whose goal in life is to profit from disaster and who don't give a hoot about human beings, either can't or won't. WHich is why I personally think they should be exterminated before they cause any more harm.
  
-=== Lessons ===+==== Lessons ====
 So, we can learn how teams form, and how people gravitate to the left or right. And we can learn wisdom for building strong communities. So, we can learn how teams form, and how people gravitate to the left or right. And we can learn wisdom for building strong communities.
  
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     * (ie. people don't hold different beliefs and worldviews because they're evil terrible people, let's take the time to understand their elephants and their taste receptors, and speak to them effectively)     * (ie. people don't hold different beliefs and worldviews because they're evil terrible people, let's take the time to understand their elephants and their taste receptors, and speak to them effectively)
   * We also need to understand how abortion advocates may see //us// if they misunderstand our moral foundations, and be prepared to speak to the elephant in order to build connection and help lower their defences, etc - all the more reason to speak effective to their elephants and be sensitive and adapt our communication so that it's effective   * We also need to understand how abortion advocates may see //us// if they misunderstand our moral foundations, and be prepared to speak to the elephant in order to build connection and help lower their defences, etc - all the more reason to speak effective to their elephants and be sensitive and adapt our communication so that it's effective
 +
 +Dale Carnegie uses a quotation from Henry Ford:
 +>> If there is one secret of success it lies in the ability to get the other person's point of view and see things from their angle as well as your own.
 +>
 +> It's such an obvious point, yet few of us apply it in moral and political arguments because our righteous minds so readily shift into combat mode. The rider and elephant work together smoothly to fend off attacks and lob rhetorical grenades of our own. The performance may impress our friends and show our allies that we are committed members of the team, but no matter how good our logic, it's not going to change the minds of our opponents if they are in combat mode too. If you really want to change someone's mind on a moral or political matter, you'll need to see things from that person's angle as well as your own. And if you do truly see it from the other person's way - deeply and intuitively - you might even find your own mind opening in response. Empathy is an antidote to righteousness, although it's very difficult to empathize across a moral divide.
  
 ===== Conclusion ===== ===== Conclusion =====
 +
 The three principles of moral psychology: The three principles of moral psychology:
   - Intuitions come first, strategic reasoning second - the elephant and the rider   - Intuitions come first, strategic reasoning second - the elephant and the rider