The other day, someone did something I didn't expect. It was something many people have done before; something that I thought of as very normal, but that I in no way understood and had not predicted.
As I said, this had happened many time before, so I wrote it off as "me not understanding people" or "people are weird" for a second, like I usually do, before realizing that "bad at" really means "lacking basic knowledge", which I had never realized before.
And then I thought "I should ask someone who is different from me why people do that, and eventually someone will have an answer."
But many people will have many more questions like this. So, what have you observed people doing time and time again, but never understood? Or something that you only understood after a long time or asking someone about it?
And can Less Wrong tell us, not necessarily why (I for one can make up evolutionary psychology fairy tales all day if I want) but what conscious thought process occurs behind these events?
What age group are we talking about?
I read some long livejournal comment discussions (hundreds of comments, and sorry, I can't place it more accurately than that it was probably more than four years ago and might have been in theferrett's journal) about bullying by girls in school, and there was a lot of it. Almost all of it was social rather than physical.
One of the classics was pretending to be someone's friend, and then laughing at them for believing it. That can apparently cause longterm (possibly permanent) damage to the victim's ability to trust people.
The only incident from the threads that I remember in detail was from someone in a school where a particular pin was the thing the popular girls wore. She begged her parents for the pin, and eventually got one. When the other girls saw her wearing it, they took off their pins and threw them on the floor.
I suppose adults (around 20 years and onward) are the most productively discussable age group, as by then the mind has completed most of its development.
I can only think sadism the reason for why one would pretend to be someone's friend, unless affirming the "absurdity" of the concept itself reinforces a status divide.
The pin incident points to in-groups using exclusionary measures to define themselves from everyone out-group.
Just conceived theory:
In school settings, groups of girls that signal unavailability and attract the majority of their cla... (read more)