首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Evil Genius [A] A few years ago I found myself teaching a university class on evil. It was for third-year criminology stude
Evil Genius [A] A few years ago I found myself teaching a university class on evil. It was for third-year criminology stude
admin
2023-02-10
22
问题
Evil Genius
[A] A few years ago I found myself teaching a university class on evil. It was for third-year criminology students to help them contextualize theory and research within controversial current topics. It was a huge success. The debates were heated and interesting. I could see people’s views change within the course of a single lecture. Over the past 13 years, as a student, lecturer and researcher, I’ve enjoyed discussing the science of evil with anyone willing to listen. What I like most is destroying the cliche (陈词滥调 ) of good and evil, and replacing them with scientific insight. We need a more informed way of discussing behavior that at first we cannot, or should not, begin to understand.
[B] Without understanding, we risk dehumanizing others, writing off human beings simply because we don’t comprehend them. We must try to understand what we have labeled evil. We tend to think evil is something that other people are. We think of ourselves as "good people", and even when we do morally wrong things, we understand the context of our decisions. With others, however, it is far easier to write them off. If their actions deviate (偏离) substantially from what we consider acceptable, we may label them evil. We need to be careful with this. Calling someone evil is often similar to saying they cannot change, and perhaps aren’t even a human at all. However, when you actually go monster-hunting, and you look deeply at the people behind shocking behavior, you may be surprised.
[C] As a child I used to love the Scooby-Doo cartoons. Arriving in their "Mystery Machine", the gang would have to find a monster who was terrorizing a neighborhood. They would run around looking for clues and at the end unmask the bad guy. It was always a normal person in a costume. There were no monsters. Like the Scooby crew, we may find ourselves hunting for an easy fix, one word for people who do bad things. But if we take a good look, the word ’evil’ is insufficient—there are no simple explanations for why humans do bad things: instead there are many, and they are all marvelously different.
[D] Evil is typically referred to when there is deviance from social norms: formal deviance is the violation of laws, like theft, murder, and attacks, while informal deviance involves violations of social norms, like lying. Evil behavior is typically thought to embrace one or both forms. However, deviance can also describe a behavior that simply differs from the norm.
[E] Perhaps this is where we can find the good side of our bad side. Deviating from the norm can make us villains (恶棍), but it can also make us heroes. A child deviates from social pressures when they stand up for another child being bullied in school. A soldier deviates when they choose not to follow orders to kill an innocent civilian. An employee in a big tech company deviates when they expose its wrongdoings.
[F] Creativity is also a deviation. Here, too, things are complex. Thinking creatively has given us modern medicine, technology and modern political structures, but it has also given us poison and nuclear weapons. Great benefit and great harm can come from the same human tendency.
[G] In a research paper, Evil Genius, published in 2014, the behavioral scientists Francesca Gino and Scott Wiltermuth wanted to examine whether people who behave unethically in one task are more creative than others on a subsequent task, even after controlling for differences in baseline creative skills. The unethical behavior they chose was dishonesty.
[H] Over five experiments researchers gave participants tasks in which they could cheat. In one study, they were given matrixes (矩阵) and had to find two numbers that added up to 10. Participants were asked to self-report how well they did at the end of the study: 59% cheated by saying that they solved more matrixes than they actually had.
[I] After each task, the researchers measured participants’ performance on the Remote Associates Test. This shows participants three words at a time that appear to be unrelated, and the person has to think of a fourth word that is associated with all of them. For example, you might get "Fox, Man, Peep", or "Dust, Cereal, Fish". In order to find the linking words ("Hole" for the first, "Bowl" for the second) you need to be creative. The more you get right, the more creative you are thought to be because you have come up with uncommon associations.
[J] For every one of the five studies, they found the same thing—participants who cheated in the first task did better on the creativity task. Why? Like other forms of unethical behavior, lying means breaking rules. It involves being deviant, going against the social principle that people should tell the truth. Similarly, being creative involves "thinking outside the box", deviating from expectations. They involve similar thought patterns, so stimulating one stimulates the other. Can we learn from this? Perhaps. To be more creative, we could try lying in a controlled environment. Find online logic games and cheat at them, play Scrabble (拼字游戏) with a dictionary, or write a story about something that is untrue? Such tasks can get our brains thinking flexibly, beyond our normal comfort zone. This is not a call to become a compulsive (强迫性的) liar, but a controlled liar.
[K] In addition to benefits for creativity, deviance can be a good thing in other ways. Even Philip Zimbardo, the author of the Stanford prison experiment, who showed how easily we can be led to behave badly, believes that the future of deviance research may lie more in understanding extreme pro-social behavior, such as heroism. Like evil, we often view heroism as only a possibility for outliers—for people who are abnormal. But Zimbardo asks: "What if the capability to act heroically is also fundamentally ordinary and available to all of us?" Some say we should never meet our heroes, lest they disappoint us when we find out how normal they are. But this should be liberating, not disappointing. We are all capable of behaving like outliers. It’s time for us to understand deviance, and realize its potential for good as well as for harm.
People may be simply considered evil if their behaviors are morally unacceptable to us.
选项
答案
B
解析
根据题干中的considered evil和morally unacceptable可定位至B段倒数第3句。倒数第3句指出,如果行为大幅度偏离我们认可的范围,就会被贴上恶的标签。题目信息与此相符,其中may be considered evil通过变换主被动形式对应文中label them evil,而morally unacceptable是对文中substantially from what we consider acceptable的概括,故B段为本题信息出处。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/KIqD777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
Thereweretwowidelydivergentinfluencesontheearlydevelopmentofstatisticalmethods.
Ofthe500milliondifferentspeciesfromlivingcreaturesthathaveappearedonearth,nearly99percenthavevanished.
Andbythethirdyearoftraining,mostresidentshavehaddidacticteachingaboutpsychodynamicpsychotherapy,butmanyhaveno
Earlystudiesoftenconcludedthatthepublicwassusceptibletotheinfluenceofmasscommunication.However,arecentstudyin
ThecultureoftheUnitedStatesisaWesterncultureoriginallyinfluencedbyEuropeancultures.Ithasbeendevelopedsincel
ThecultureoftheUnitedStatesisaWesterncultureoriginallyinfluencedbyEuropeancultures.Ithasbeendevelopedsincel
ThecultureoftheUnitedStatesisaWesterncultureoriginallyinfluencedbyEuropeancultures.Ithasbeendevelopedsincel
(1)Aconventionalteacher’slicenseusuallyrequiresauniversitydegreeineducationplusanunpaidtermofpracticeteaching.
(1)Aconventionalteacher’slicenseusuallyrequiresauniversitydegreeineducationplusanunpaidtermofpracticeteaching.
随机试题
给定资料: 1.阆中的乡村学校大都依山而建,地形狭长而起伏。在经过若干年的撤点并校之后,形成了以九年一贯制的中心学校为主体的格局。校园都有相似之处,但又会让来访者耳目一新,其中有许多教育局要求的“标配",比如用学生们的彩色大头照拼成的“笑脸墙",师生共同
贮气囊的作用不包括
表面有食物残屑、炎性渗出物及坏死组织覆盖,深部为肉芽组织的病变见于
自由度为1的χ2检验是
患者,女,26岁,诊断为艾滋病。该病Ⅰ期的临床表现应该是()
与盐酸溴己新的性质相符的是
对于受要约人超过承诺期限发出的承诺,该承诺( )。
某工程施工期间发生工程变更,导致措施项目费用调整,下列调整措施正确的有()。
TheCommunicativeApproachTheCommunicativeApproachemphasizesthatthegoaloflanguagelearningiscommunicativecompetence
TheInternationalMonetaryFund(IMF)saysitexpectstheworldeconomytogrowmorethan4%boththisyearandnext.Itschief
最新回复
(
0
)