For the last few years I've had an active interest in Human
Behaviour.
I've spent hundreds of hours hours reading books, watching
recorded uni lectures (in psychology, neuro-biology and the like), some awesome
TED talks, audiobooks, white papers, general social analysis and lots of
conversations. From all of that I've noticed there are a range of factors
affecting peoples behaviour.
In approximate order they are :
1. Situation [Role] -
The current situation the person is in. e.g being in a prison vs being at an
office, a pool party or walking past a house on fire. Special mention should be
given to 'normal' social situations and crisis situations.
2. Environment [Resources] -
Beyond just the situation, this is what resources someone has access to, e.g if
you can already hear the fire fighters sirens, if it is dark and the guards
aren't looking, or if there are nice windows with trees to look out at when
stressed.
3. Habits [Triggered/Automatic
Responses] - Habits are usually those things which you do without really
thinking about anymore. BJ Fogg lists this as the BluePath, doing a
familiar behaviour from now on. An example might be brushing your teeth before
you go to bed. At some point you had to learn the habit, but now you do the
behaviour almost instinctively.
4. History [Knowledge and
experience] - How/Have you been trained to deal with the situation? Have
you been in a similar situation, what did you do and did it work?
5. Perspective [Time, Beliefs]
- What is your Time Perspective (past positive/negative, present headonistic,
deterministic, future oriented, afterlife). What is your religious and moral
beliefs. Do you align yourself to an emo, punk, hippy, military or some other
stereotype? This is very similar to the cultural expectations, but regarding
the specific sub-group to the general culture.
6. Culture [Expectations]
- What the general expectations are for a person in that situation and
environment. If your sub-group hasn't specified what it's stance is, then what
is generally considered morally justified? Stopping CPR on the random homeless
guy on the street after 4mins might be seen as fine, whilst stopping CPR after
20mins on a child who's drowned in a pool might cause outrage.
7. Emotions [Mood] - Was
the person happy or sad at the time?
8. Hormones [Emotional
propensity] - If you are a teenage male you are likely to have a surge in
testosterone which will amplify the likelyhood of aggression (assuming the
situation is one that involves violence or aggression). This can be thought of
as shortening the 'fuse' so to speak. Pregnant women can be particularly
susceptible to stress and may become even more irritable due to lack of food
than normal... Drugs can also have a similar although usually more profound but
short lived effect.
9. Pre-natal [How birth
affected you] - Humans are far more susceptible to conditioning during
birth than most people realise. When your mother was pregnant with you, if she
was heavily stressed then it can have negative consequences. If she was obese
then you are more likely to be obese.
A child after birth also needs the right amount of care and attention. They
need to be held and touched and talked to.
10. Genetics [Physical
propensity] - There is barely a 0.5% difference in genetic material between
humans and we are only 4-6% genetically different from apes. Our DNA is 90%
similar to cats. Given such similarity it is generally said that genetics can
cause a propensity for a particular behaviour or physical attribute, but it is
the environment which which has the most impact.
Different
circumstances will mean the resulting behaviour is influenced by the factors
above in differing amounts. Whilst normally the situation and environment will
be the most influential a strong enough culture and belief can over-ride
that. If you want to change peoples behaviour you need to work out which are
the most important factors involved or which other factors can over-ride those
and you can try to change or at least deal with them.
An example is the
selfish-gene concept. That humans are simply a mechanism by which genes can
make a copy of themselves. Whilst this may be the default behaviour of people
it is not the absolute only factor which affects our behaviour. Another
important thing to note is that the concept of our 'kin' or family is very
important in many cases. Who are people that we should help and be around,
versus those that are against us. Our understanding of kin has grown larger
over time, from immediate family to village, group (e.g religious group or work
colleges) to nations and at the present rate will soon encompass the world.
Doing so helps reduce the violence within our species. We will likely need to
expand kin to include other animals and should we meet friendly alien entities
it may have to include even them.
I do have a question. Are
morals another factor which affect behaviour? Or are they a
product of a combination of the above factors?
Source: http://zeitgeist-info.com
No comments:
Post a Comment