Mysterious Goings On

We Before Me: How Identity Starts Thinking for Us

Informações:

Sinopse

In this episode, Alex reads his latest essay from All the Fits That's News — a piece that starts with a Star Trek argument and ends somewhere considerably less comfortable.The essay traces what happens when group membership stops being a background feature of how we live and starts running the cognitive show. Drawing on Henri Tajfel's social identity theory experiments from the 1970s, it looks at how we sort ourselves into groups, absorb those groups into our sense of self, and then quietly let them do our reasoning for us — in politics, in media, in workplaces, and yes, in fandom.Also: Sting, sunk cost fallacy, and at least one book Alex wishes he could take back.Referenced in this episode:Henri Tajfel and social identity theory — foundational research in social psychology on group behavior and in-group favoritismStar Trek: Deep Space Nine — still the best of the lotSting / The Police — inventive, worth your time, not above criticismSunk cost fallacy — the tendency to keep investing in something beca