"..abuses that long predated the pandemic suddenly received so much more attention during it. It’s a lesson, perhaps, about the relationship between speed and solidarity...moving at the velocity of pre-pandemic life, endlessly striving and climbing, frantically making sure that we do not fall behind, busyness... as a deadening agent... time to think about who makes our stuff or where our trash goes or what wars" #NaomiKlein sounds like #GoodSamaritanStudy #FasterSpeed
https://theintercept.com/2020/10/01/naomi-klein-message-from-future-covid/
A Message From the Future II: The Years of Repair

Can we imagine a better future? If we stop talking about what winning actually looks like, isn’t that the same as giving up?

The Intercept
'... when someone is kind to another, is that because he or she has some #innate qualities within that lead to #kindness—or because some situational factors simply...allow for kind behaviors... people.. religious for intrinsic reasons were no more likely than others.. to help...10% of participants in the “late” condition stopped to help the stranger...'
At least 10% tend to be decent even if they are running late...
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/darwins-subterranean-world/201703/my-favorite-psychology-study
#GoodSamaritanStudy #faster #speed #activityrhythm
My Favorite Psychology Study

The good samaritan is in the situation.

Psychology Today
About ten years ago I read of this #GoodSamaritanStudy in #PaulGoodman 's #GrowingUpAbsurd . His comments come to mind a lot and I finally remembered enough about the study for successful on-line searches. I wonder if the study is meaningful to me because I read of it in Growing Up Absurd, and kept coming back to in... If mentions of the study just flashed by with speed on the screen, I might not be thinking about it so much..
'... the vast majority of those who thought they were late did not stop to help. In other words, the perception of time pressure or “having limited time” resulted in behaviors incongruent to their education and career: the devotion to help others. Time pressure triggered these well-intentioned students to behave in ways that, upon reflection, they would find disgraceful. '
https://www.rightattitudes.com/2015/06/16/people-in-a-rush-are-less-likely-to-help-themselves/
#GoodSamaritanStudy #late #busy #hurried #faster #speed #TimePressure #activityrhythm
Lessons from the Princeton Seminary Experiment: People in a Rush are Less Likely to Help Others (and Themselves) - Right Attitudes

In the parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:29–37 in the New Testament,) a Samaritan helps a traveler assaulted by robbers and left half dead by the side of the road. Prior to the Samaritan, a priest and a Levite pass the injured traveler and fail to notice him. Conceivably, the priest and Levite’s contempt […]

Right Attitudes
The #GoodSamaritanStudy suggests (to me) that being busy, or hurried, makes us mean... or stupid... "cognition was narrowed" means being stupid: #inattentive , #inconsiderate ... Something to think about in the #attentioneconomy of #speed , #faster might not be better.
'The amount of "hurriness" induced in the subject had a major effect on helping behavior, but the task variable did not...Overall 40% offered some help to the victim. In low hurry situations, 63% helped, medium hurry 45% and high hurry 10%...a person in a hurry is less likely to help people..thinking about norms does not imply that one will act on them...Or maybe .. cognition was narrowed by the hurriedness.. '
'https://faculty.babson.edu/krollag/org_site/soc_psych/darley_samarit.html
#GoodSamaritan #busy #hurriness #speed #GoodSamaritanStudy
Darley and Batson: Good Samaritan Study