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RAW FISHER

[1.3.08]

RFQ: What Have You Changed Your Mind About? (Plus: Last Chance on the Coin Contest)

...University of Virginia psychologist Jonathan Haidt says he used to consider sports and fraternities to be the height of American celebration of stupidity. "Primitive tribalism, I thought. Initiation rites, alcohol, sports, sexism, and baseball caps turn decent boys into knuckleheads. I'd have gladly voted to ban fraternities, ROTC, and most sports teams from my university." But Haidt has changed his mind: "I had too individualistic a view of human nature. I began to see us not just as chimpanzees with symbolic lives but also as bees without hives. When we made the transition over the last 200 years from tight communities (Gemeinschaft) to free and mobile societies (Gesellschaft), we escaped from bonds that were sometimes oppressive, yes, but into a world so free that it left many of us gasping for connection, purpose, and meaning. I began to think about the many ways that people, particularly young people, have found to combat this isolation. Rave parties and the Burning Man festival are spectacular examples of new ways to satisfy the ancient longing for communitas. But suddenly sports teams, fraternities, and even the military made a lot more sense." ...

RAW FISHER [1]

[2]

Related Content: 

WHAT HAVE YOU CHANGED YOUR MIND ABOUT? WHY? [3]

News From: 

WASHINGTON POST [4]
Marc Fisher
Read the full article → [4]
[ Thu. Jan. 3. 2008 ]

RFQ: What Have You Changed Your Mind About? (Plus: Last Chance on the Coin Contest) [4]

...University of Virginia psychologist Jonathan Haidt  [5]says he used to consider sports and fraternities to be the height of American celebration of stupidity. "Primitive tribalism, I thought. Initiation rites, alcohol, sports, sexism, and baseball caps turn decent boys into knuckleheads. I'd have gladly voted to ban fraternities, ROTC, and most sports teams from my university." But Haidt has changed his mind: "I had too individualistic a view of human nature. I began to see us not just as chimpanzees with symbolic lives but also as bees without hives. When we made the transition over the last 200 years from tight communities (Gemeinschaft) to free and mobile societies (Gesellschaft), we escaped from bonds that were sometimes oppressive, yes, but into a world so free that it left many of us gasping for connection, purpose, and meaning. I began to think about the many ways that people, particularly young people, have found to combat this isolation. Rave parties and the Burning Man festival are spectacular examples of new ways to satisfy the ancient longing for communitas. But suddenly sports teams, fraternities, and even the military made a lot more sense." ...

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Links:
[1] https://www.edge.org/news/raw-fisher
[2] http://tinyurl.com/bvk8u5k
[3] https://www.edge.org/annual-question/what-have-you-changed-your-mind-about-why
[4] http://blog.washingtonpost.com/rawfisher/2008/01/rfq_what_have_you_changed_your.html
[5] http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/bios/haidt.html