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  • Things don't go smoothly when you're around people like this,

  • they shake things up.

  • So you need to ask yourself, what is it you want from your society?

  • Are you happy being... Are things good enough?

  • Is the status quo satisfactory enough

  • that you can all sit back and privilege agreeableness,

  • and say, "let's just all abide by the rules of civility,

  • and everything will be fine"?

  • Or do you think, actually,

  • there's much to be gained, as a society,

  • if we do change up the status quo,

  • and introduce an element of friction into the way we all behave.

  • What can we do as a society

  • that allows people to express their disagreeableness?

  • Are there ways in which we could make dissents, deviation, disagreement

  • just more palatable, more easier to do?

  • In the workplace, what do we think of as the role of a manager?

  • Is the role of a manager to tolerate dissent?

  • Or find a safe place for dissent?

  • Or to obliterate dissent?

  • A lot of managers actually try very, very hard to obliterate dissent.

  • They think that that's how their success ought to be measured.

  • Whereas this would suggest actually no,

  • maybe what we want from managers

  • is that people who ought to be managers

  • ought to be the people who have the thickest skins.

  • Ones who are just more...

  • Who are the most comfortable with some degree of friction

  • in those who are under their control.

  • And I think that's about how do you structure education

  • so that children are taught that it's OK sometimes to be rebellious

  • or questioning or sceptical?

  • Or that our willingness to tolerate disruptive behaviour

  • in people of our own kind,

  • is far greater than our willingness to tolerate in minorities.

  • In those who are powerless.

  • And what that leads to

  • is not just higher levels of punitive action

  • towards people in disadvantaged groups,

  • but also disadvantaged groups themselves

  • changing their behaviour to meet those different norms.

  • So you see among, for example,

  • in this country, African-American parents,

  • who privilege good behaviour in their own children as the most...

  • As kind of the primary end-point of childhood,

  • Whereas you see parents who are in the majority,

  • who will privilege achievements, good performance,

  • as the primary end-point.

  • You're going to privilege performance over behaviour,

  • if you're in the group that is allowed to behave

  • in unusual, disruptive, disagreeable ways.

  • And I think that is an unacknowledged source

  • of a great deal of inequity in modern life.

  • That we just have these different standards

  • for people on the inside and people on the outside.

Things don't go smoothly when you're around people like this,

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Why the world needs disagreeable people | Malcolm Gladwell | BBC Ideas

  • 9 1
    Summer 發佈於 2021 年 10 月 28 日
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