Ch. 13 - The Context of Our Character, Part I
Posted: Fri May 28, 2010 6:01 pm
Ch. 13 - The Context of Our Character, Part I
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It's been a while now since I read the chapter. I recall that in at least one condition the difference in cheating was not just significant but dramatic. Ariely says that when he reports a difference it is always statistically significant. We don't see his raw data, so we have to trust him on this. I thought this chapter and the other one on character have some wide implications. Basically, we are prone to cheat and lose our moral bearings without strong social controls. It might be true that we are naturally good when it comes to interacting with our kin and group members, but when we are free from the threat of censure, when we know we can get away with things and we don't seem to be hurting anyone close to us, we are often willing to take advantage. Where I don't agree with Ariely is in seeing anything irrational about this tendency. If anything, it is quite rational. Morality is not itself strictly rational.seespotrun2008 wrote:I did not totally buy these tests that he ran on the students. Why would one assume that students were cheating based on the fact that there was a tiny rise in right answers? I am not saying that there were not students who cheated, but I am wondering why we should just assume the rise was because students were cheating. I mean, it seems reasonable to me that if you bring in different people the scores may be slightly different. Different people know different information and some people are smarter than others, etc. I just do not think that these tests were a good way to prove that people were cheating.
Yes, there was one instance where that happened, but most of the differences were a few percentage points. I don’t know maybe that is a huge difference. It just did not seem like it was a big deal. But maybe those percentages in number of people make a huge difference.It's been a while now since I read the chapter. I recall that in at least one condition the difference in cheating was not just significant but dramatic.