Paul Bloom: Can prejudice ever be a good thing?

184,833 views ・ 2014-07-03

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00:12
When we think about prejudice and bias,
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we tend to think about stupid and evil people
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doing stupid and evil things.
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And this idea is nicely summarized
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by the British critic William Hazlitt,
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who wrote, "Prejudice is the child of ignorance."
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I want to try to convince you here
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that this is mistaken.
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I want to try to convince you
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that prejudice and bias
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are natural, they're often rational,
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and they're often even moral,
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and I think that once we understand this,
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we're in a better position to make sense of them
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when they go wrong,
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when they have horrible consequences,
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and we're in a better position to know what to do
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when this happens.
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So, start with stereotypes. You look at me,
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you know my name, you know certain facts about me,
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and you could make certain judgments.
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You could make guesses about my ethnicity,
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my political affiliation, my religious beliefs.
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And the thing is, these judgments tend to be accurate.
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We're very good at this sort of thing.
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And we're very good at this sort of thing
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because our ability to stereotype people
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is not some sort of arbitrary quirk of the mind,
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but rather it's a specific instance
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of a more general process,
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which is that we have experience
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with things and people in the world
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that fall into categories,
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and we can use our experience to make generalizations
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about novel instances of these categories.
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So everybody here has a lot of experience
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with chairs and apples and dogs,
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and based on this, you could see
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unfamiliar examples and you could guess,
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you could sit on the chair,
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you could eat the apple, the dog will bark.
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Now we might be wrong.
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The chair could collapse if you sit on it,
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the apple might be poison, the dog might not bark,
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and in fact, this is my dog Tessie, who doesn't bark.
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But for the most part, we're good at this.
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For the most part, we make good guesses
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both in the social domain and the non-social domain,
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and if we weren't able to do so,
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if we weren't able to make guesses about new instances that we encounter,
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we wouldn't survive.
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And in fact, Hazlitt later on in his wonderful essay
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concedes this.
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He writes, "Without the aid of prejudice and custom,
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I should not be able to find my way my across the room;
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nor know how to conduct myself in any circumstances,
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nor what to feel in any relation of life."
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Or take bias.
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Now sometimes, we break the world up into
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us versus them, into in-group versus out-group,
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and sometimes when we do this,
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we know we're doing something wrong,
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and we're kind of ashamed of it.
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But other times we're proud of it.
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We openly acknowledge it.
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And my favorite example of this
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is a question that came from the audience
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in a Republican debate prior to the last election.
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(Video) Anderson Cooper: Gets to your question,
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the question in the hall, on foreign aid? Yes, ma'am.
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Woman: The American people are suffering
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in our country right now.
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Why do we continue to send foreign aid
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to other countries
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when we need all the help we can get for ourselves?
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AC: Governor Perry, what about that?
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(Applause)
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Rick Perry: Absolutely, I think it's—
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Paul Bloom: Each of the people onstage
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agreed with the premise of her question,
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which is as Americans, we should care more
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about Americans than about other people.
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And in fact, in general, people are often swayed
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by feelings of solidarity, loyalty, pride, patriotism,
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towards their country or towards their ethnic group.
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Regardless of your politics, many people feel proud to be American,
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and they favor Americans over other countries.
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Residents of other countries feel the same about their nation,
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and we feel the same about our ethnicities.
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Now some of you may reject this.
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Some of you may be so cosmopolitan
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that you think that ethnicity and nationality
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should hold no moral sway.
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But even you sophisticates accept
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that there should be some pull
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towards the in-group in the domain of friends and family,
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of people you're close to,
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and so even you make a distinction
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between us versus them.
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Now, this distinction is natural enough
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and often moral enough, but it can go awry,
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and this was part of the research
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of the great social psychologist Henri Tajfel.
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Tajfel was born in Poland in 1919.
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He left to go to university in France,
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because as a Jew, he couldn't go to university in Poland,
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and then he enlisted in the French military
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in World War II.
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He was captured and ended up
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in a prisoner of war camp,
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and it was a terrifying time for him,
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because if it was discovered that he was a Jew,
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he could have been moved to a concentration camp,
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where he most likely would not have survived.
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And in fact, when the war ended and he was released,
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most of his friends and family were dead.
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He got involved in different pursuits.
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He helped out the war orphans.
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But he had a long-lasting interest
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in the science of prejudice,
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and so when a prestigious British scholarship
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on stereotypes opened up, he applied for it,
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and he won it,
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and then he began this amazing career.
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And what started his career is an insight
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that the way most people were thinking
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about the Holocaust was wrong.
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Many people, most people at the time,
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viewed the Holocaust as sort of representing
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some tragic flaw on the part of the Germans,
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some genetic taint, some authoritarian personality.
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And Tajfel rejected this.
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Tajfel said what we see in the Holocaust
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is just an exaggeration
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of normal psychological processes
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that exist in every one of us.
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And to explore this, he did a series of classic studies
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with British adolescents.
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And in one of his studies, what he did was he asked
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the British adolescents all sorts of questions,
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and then based on their answers, he said,
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"I've looked at your answers, and based on the answers,
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I have determined that you are either" —
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he told half of them —
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"a Kandinsky lover, you love the work of Kandinsky,
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or a Klee lover, you love the work of Klee."
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It was entirely bogus.
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Their answers had nothing to do with Kandinsky or Klee.
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They probably hadn't heard of the artists.
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He just arbitrarily divided them up.
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But what he found was, these categories mattered,
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so when he later gave the subjects money,
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they would prefer to give the money
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to members of their own group
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than members of the other group.
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Worse, they were actually most interested
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in establishing a difference
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between their group and other groups,
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so they would give up money for their own group
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if by doing so they could give the other group even less.
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This bias seems to show up very early.
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So my colleague and wife, Karen Wynn, at Yale
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has done a series of studies with babies
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where she exposes babies to puppets,
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and the puppets have certain food preferences.
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So one of the puppets might like green beans.
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The other puppet might like graham crackers.
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They test the babies own food preferences,
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and babies typically prefer the graham crackers.
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But the question is, does this matter to babies
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in how they treat the puppets? And it matters a lot.
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They tend to prefer the puppet
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who has the same food tastes that they have,
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and worse, they actually prefer puppets
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who punish the puppet with the different food taste.
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(Laughter)
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We see this sort of in-group, out-group psychology all the time.
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We see it in political clashes
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within groups with different ideologies.
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We see it in its extreme in cases of war,
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where the out-group isn't merely given less,
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but dehumanized,
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as in the Nazi perspective of Jews
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as vermin or lice,
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or the American perspective of Japanese as rats.
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Stereotypes can also go awry.
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So often they're rational and useful,
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but sometimes they're irrational,
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they give the wrong answers,
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and other times
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they lead to plainly immoral consequences.
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And the case that's been most studied
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is the case of race.
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There was a fascinating study
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prior to the 2008 election
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where social psychologists looked at the extent
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to which the candidates were associated with America,
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as in an unconscious association with the American flag.
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And in one of their studies they compared
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Obama and McCain, and they found McCain
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is thought of as more American than Obama,
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and to some extent, people aren't that surprised by hearing that.
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McCain is a celebrated war hero,
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and many people would explicitly say
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he has more of an American story than Obama.
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But they also compared Obama
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to British Prime Minister Tony Blair,
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and they found that Blair was also thought of
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as more American than Obama,
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even though subjects explicitly understood
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that he's not American at all.
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But they were responding, of course,
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to the color of his skin.
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These stereotypes and biases
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have real-world consequences,
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both subtle and very important.
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In one recent study, researchers
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put ads on eBay for the sale of baseball cards.
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Some of them were held by white hands,
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others by black hands.
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They were the same baseball cards.
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The ones held by black hands
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got substantially smaller bids
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than the ones held by white hands.
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In research done at Stanford,
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psychologists explored the case of people
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sentenced for the murder of a white person.
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It turns out, holding everything else constant,
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you are considerably more likely to be executed
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if you look like the man on the right
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than the man on the left,
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and this is in large part because
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the man on the right looks more prototypically black,
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more prototypically African-American,
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and this apparently influences people's decisions
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over what to do about him.
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So now that we know about this,
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how do we combat it?
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And there are different avenues.
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One avenue is to appeal
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to people's emotional responses,
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to appeal to people's empathy,
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and we often do that through stories.
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So if you are a liberal parent
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and you want to encourage your children
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to believe in the merits of nontraditional families,
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you might give them a book like this. ["Heather Has Two Mommies"]
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If you are conservative and have a different attitude,
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you might give them a book like this.
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(Laughter) ["Help! Mom! There Are Liberals under My Bed!"]
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But in general, stories can turn
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anonymous strangers into people who matter,
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and the idea that we care about people
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when we focus on them as individuals
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is an idea which has shown up across history.
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So Stalin apocryphally said,
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"A single death is a tragedy,
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a million deaths is a statistic,"
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and Mother Teresa said,
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"If I look at the mass, I will never act.
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If I look at the one, I will."
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Psychologists have explored this.
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For instance, in one study,
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people were given a list of facts about a crisis,
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and it was seen how much they would donate
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to solve this crisis,
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and another group was given no facts at all
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but they were told of an individual
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and given a name and given a face,
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and it turns out that they gave far more.
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None of this I think is a secret
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to the people who are engaged in charity work.
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People don't tend to deluge people
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with facts and statistics.
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Rather, you show them faces,
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you show them people.
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It's possible that by extending our sympathies
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to an individual, they can spread
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to the group that the individual belongs to.
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This is Harriet Beecher Stowe.
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The story, perhaps apocryphal,
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is that President Lincoln invited her
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to the White House in the middle of the Civil War
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and said to her,
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"So you're the little lady who started this great war."
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And he was talking about "Uncle Tom's Cabin."
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"Uncle Tom's Cabin" is not a great book of philosophy
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or of theology or perhaps not even literature,
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but it does a great job
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of getting people to put themselves in the shoes
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of people they wouldn't otherwise be in the shoes of,
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put themselves in the shoes of slaves.
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And that could well have been a catalyst
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for great social change.
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More recently, looking at America
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in the last several decades,
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there's some reason to believe that shows like "The Cosby Show"
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radically changed American attitudes towards African-Americans,
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while shows like "Will and Grace" and "Modern Family"
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changed American attitudes
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towards gay men and women.
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I don't think it's an exaggeration to say
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that the major catalyst in America for moral change
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has been a situation comedy.
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But it's not all emotions,
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and I want to end by appealing
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to the power of reason.
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At some point in his wonderful book
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"The Better Angels of Our Nature,"
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Steven Pinker says,
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the Old Testament says love thy neighbor,
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and the New Testament says love thy enemy,
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but I don't love either one of them, not really,
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but I don't want to kill them.
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I know I have obligations to them,
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but my moral feelings to them, my moral beliefs
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about how I should behave towards them,
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aren't grounded in love.
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What they're grounded in is the understanding of human rights,
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a belief that their life is as valuable to them
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as my life is to me,
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and to support this, he tells a story
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by the great philosopher Adam Smith,
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and I want to tell this story too,
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though I'm going to modify it a little bit
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for modern times.
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So Adam Smith starts by asking you to imagine
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the death of thousands of people,
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and imagine that the thousands of people
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are in a country you are not familiar with.
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It could be China or India or a country in Africa.
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And Smith says, how would you respond?
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And you would say, well that's too bad,
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and you'd go on to the rest of your life.
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If you were to open up The New York Times online or something,
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and discover this, and in fact this happens to us all the time,
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we go about our lives.
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But imagine instead, Smith says,
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you were to learn that tomorrow
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you were to have your little finger chopped off.
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Smith says, that would matter a lot.
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You would not sleep that night
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wondering about that.
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So this raises the question:
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Would you sacrifice thousands of lives
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to save your little finger?
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Now answer this in the privacy of your own head,
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but Smith says, absolutely not,
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what a horrid thought.
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And so this raises the question,
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and so, as Smith puts it,
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"When our passive feelings are almost always
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so sordid and so selfish,
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how comes it that our active principles
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should often be so generous and so noble?"
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And Smith's answer is, "It is reason,
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principle, conscience.
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[This] calls to us,
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with a voice capable of astonishing the most presumptuous of our passions,
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that we are but one of the multitude,
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in no respect better than any other in it."
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And this last part is what is often described
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as the principle of impartiality.
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And this principle of impartiality manifests itself
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in all of the world's religions,
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in all of the different versions of the golden rule,
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and in all of the world's moral philosophies,
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which differ in many ways
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but share the presupposition that we should judge morality
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from sort of an impartial point of view.
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The best articulation of this view
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is actually, for me, it's not from a theologian or from a philosopher,
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but from Humphrey Bogart
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at the end of "Casablanca."
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So, spoiler alert, he's telling his lover
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that they have to separate
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14:12
for the more general good,
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14:14
and he says to her, and I won't do the accent,
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14:16
but he says to her, "It doesn't take much to see
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14:17
that the problems of three little people
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14:19
don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world."
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14:22
Our reason could cause us to override our passions.
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Our reason could motivate us
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14:27
to extend our empathy,
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could motivate us to write a book like "Uncle Tom's Cabin,"
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or read a book like "Uncle Tom's Cabin,"
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and our reason can motivate us to create
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14:35
customs and taboos and laws
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that will constrain us
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from acting upon our impulses
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when, as rational beings, we feel
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we should be constrained.
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This is what a constitution is.
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A constitution is something which was set up in the past
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that applies now in the present,
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and what it says is,
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no matter how much we might to reelect
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14:53
a popular president for a third term,
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no matter how much white Americans might choose
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14:57
to feel that they want to reinstate the institution of slavery, we can't.
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We have bound ourselves.
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And we bind ourselves in other ways as well.
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We know that when it comes to choosing somebody
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for a job, for an award,
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we are strongly biased by their race,
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we are biased by their gender,
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we are biased by how attractive they are,
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and sometimes we might say, "Well fine, that's the way it should be."
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But other times we say, "This is wrong."
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And so to combat this,
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we don't just try harder,
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but rather what we do is we set up situations
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where these other sources of information can't bias us,
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which is why many orchestras
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audition musicians behind screens,
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so the only information they have
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is the information they believe should matter.
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I think prejudice and bias
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illustrate a fundamental duality of human nature.
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We have gut feelings, instincts, emotions,
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and they affect our judgments and our actions
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for good and for evil,
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but we are also capable of rational deliberation
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and intelligent planning,
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and we can use these to, in some cases,
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accelerate and nourish our emotions,
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and in other cases staunch them.
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And it's in this way
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that reason helps us create a better world.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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About this website

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