July 22, 2018

"Thinking deeply exhausts us, and we instinctively avoid considering ideas that might complicate our lives and our relationships."

"'The person who wants to think,' Jacobs claims, 'will have to practice patience and master fear.' He cites Marilynne Robinson to explain the agita of our frantic life in the cloud, which accelerates our 'hypertrophic instinct for consensus.' We are hard-wired to be clannish, and our online habits exacerbate these penchants—for inclusion, for status, for affirmation—and strengthen their hold on us. Jacobs coins several terms to explain how this works. Whenever we hear something we disagree with we are tempted to enter 'Refutation Mode,' in which we stop listening because we have determined that 'no further information or reflection is required' on that subject. He draws our attention to what he calls the 'RCO,' short for 'Repugnant Cultural Other.' This phenomenon is so familiar to us as to be instinctive—Evangelical Christians are the RCO of secular academics and vice versa—and life online has enabled RCOs to shout at each other 'from two rooms away.' Other mental gymnastics include 'lumping' and 'splitting' people and ideas into 'Instant Taxonomies,' and 'in-other-wordsing' our RCO’s statements into reductive parodies that suit our purposes. Jacobs quotes psychologist Jonathan Haidt to argue that our tribes function as 'moral matrices' that 'bind people together and blind them to the coherence, or even existence, of other matrices.' Altogether, our instincts and our habits work to ensure that good thinking remains difficult."

From "To Think or Not to Think?" by Mike St. Thomas in The American Interest (via A&L Daily), reviewing "How to Think: A Survival Guide for a World at Odds" by Alan Jacobs.

St. Thomas is a little annoyed by all the terms Jacobs coins — does it help us think to have little nicknames for everything? — but I can see (at the Amazon link) that the book has gotten a lot of excellent reviews).

29 comments:

rhhardin said...

Psychology Today gruel.

rhhardin said...

Anything that explains what "we" do isn't thought through.

Replace every "we" with "I" and it reads more accurately.

"Thinking deeply exhauses me, and I instinctively avoid considering ideas that might complicate my life and my relationships."

Darrell said...

Think again.

rhhardin said...

Anybody who doesn't know what instrospection is ought to take a long hard look at himself. - Armstrong and Getty

rhhardin said...

In space, doggy style and reverse cowgirl are the same.

- Topology Today

Darrell said...

In space, people could hear you scream because, in order to be alive to be able to scream, you'd have to be in a space suit. With a microphone system and transmitter built into the helmet.

narciso said...

Robinson is the opposite of rigorous thinking, she is who Chesterton was speaking of

Fernandinande said...

rhhardin said...
Replace every "we" with "I" and it reads more accurately.


OK: 'Replace every "I" with "I" and it reads more accurately.'

Darrell said...

I wouldn't have accepted that manuscript for publication. It is gibberish.

Tommy Duncan said...

"Whenever we hear something we disagree with we are tempted to enter 'Refutation Mode,' in which we stop listening because we have determined that 'no further information or reflection is required' on that subject."

Why does Inga come to mind? (In more ways than one...)

Paco Wové said...

Repugnant Cultural Other would be a great commenter name.

Sebastian said...

Thinking is overrated. My plumber thinks more and better than most thinkers. Andrew Wiles thought well, and long, and patiently. Others, meh.

The book and review are a little too blandly apolitical. Thinking is power, as Bacon or Foucault may or may not have said. Today, some thinkers want to destroy the RCOs, and some RCOs are now playing defense, trying to survive the onslaught. For progs, it's not about the thinking, it's about the thoughts thought. Clannishness + cultural hegemony + state power.

narciso said...

Or the great name for a band.

Fernandinande said...

Andrew Wiles thought well, and long, and patiently.

Integers don't exist in nature.

Shouting Thomas said...

This thread's meme is strikingly familiar to the most popular meme on Facebook:

Everybody but me is an indoctrinated sheeple.

Wince said...

Whenever we hear something we disagree with we are tempted to enter 'Refutation Mode,' in which we stop listening because we have determined that 'no further information or reflection is required' on that subject.

Jacobs needs to carve out of his theory a corollary where we stop believing after we do listen to a collective Orwellian flipping of viewpoints where the speaker disagrees with his or her earlier self depending on who is the subject of the assertion now.

See, for example, Democrats and Russian diplomacy, or the "rule of law" as applied to Deep State actors.

mockturtle said...

It certainly describes leftists I know. The term 'knee-jerk' liberal didn't arise for nothing. I'm sure we are all guilty of some of these mechanisms but I don't ascribe them to clannishness, just stubbornness, closed-mindedness.

tim in vermont said...

which accelerates our 'hypertrophic instinct for consensus.' We are hard-wired to be clannish, and our online habits exacerbate these penchants—for inclusion, for status, for affirmation—and strengthen their hold on us.

Says a lot about the writer, I guess. I don’t feel that way, but that goes back to my definition of conservative, a person who is insufficiently sensitive to social disapprobation.

Gahrie said...

Jacobs quotes psychologist Jonathan Haidt to argue that our tribes function as 'moral matrices' that 'bind people together and blind them to the coherence, or even existence, of other matrices.'

True to a point. But the Right works to reduce tribalism and its effects on society, culture and politics while the Left works to reinforce the effects of tribalism on them.

tim in vermont said...

But the Right works to reduce tribalism and its effects on society, culture and politics while the Left works to reinforce the effects of tribalism on them.

Any lefty who comes on to “rebut” this, please address the Democratic Party’s relentless pursuit of “identity politics.”

Francisco D said...

"'The person who wants to think,' Jacobs claims, 'will have to practice patience and master fear.'

The fear part sounds overblown. It is more like mild anxiety that is cured with more thinking, exploratory action or more alcohol.

People struggle to master tolerance for ambiguity. Many decision makers fail because they wait for the perfect solution (which never comes) instead of going with their best decision and making adjustments along the way.

Communism failed for a variety of reasons. One is the rigid adherence to 5 Year Plans. They have little tolerance for ambiguity because that threatens their intense need for power and control..

Robert Cook said...

"It certainly describes leftists I know. The term 'knee-jerk' liberal didn't arise for nothing. I'm sure we are all guilty of some of these mechanisms but I don't ascribe them to clannishness, just stubbornness, closed-mindedness."

It describes many on the right, as well. It is a universal human trait. It is demonstrated amply by many commenters here. Clannishness breeds closed-mindedness, and closed-mindedness feeds clannishness.

Robert Cook said...

"But the Right works to reduce tribalism and its effects on society, culture and politics...."


Hahahaha!

Really? How? Pictures or it didn't happen.

n.n said...

Semantic spaces full of euphemisms and conflation of logical domains at the Twilight fringe (a.k.a. penumbra).

rcocean said...

Labeling everything an "-ist" or an "-ism" or "hate speech" is the Establishment's way of avoiding thought.

Don't discuss the issue, just insult.

Howard said...

Jordan Peterson frames this topic in terms of the ideological straightjackets people freely wear which eliminates the need for thought analysis creating a cancer on society.

Howard said...

The msm (cnn, fox, msnbc, npr, WaPo, NYT, WSJ) press are by far the worst offender. The whole gravitas meme in the run up to bush v gore is the type locality for me

tim in vermont said...

Robert, you didn’t address identity politics. This is my shocked face. 8^O

Birkel said...

Royal ass Inga would now know why she has so much energy, if she could.