The Power of Social Influence

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My views and opinions can change, and those that are expressed in this post may not necessarily reflect the ones I hold today.
 

While I was reading today, I came across this interesting diagram in a book about the psychology of influence.

Here’s what’s happening in the picture in case you can’t tell.

In the first frame, one man is staring up into the sky. In the second frame, two more people join him, wondering what’s up in the sky. In the third frame, even more people join the man, and someone is looking down from a window. In the fourth frame, even the person on the second-floor window is looking up along with even more people on the ground, and they see an angel. In the fifth and final frame, the social influence of the people on the ground is so great that even the angel looks up to see what’s in the sky.

I’ll be having a review of this book in the very near future as soon as I finish reading it.

 

Quote of the Day

Parkzer: brb, heading out for a little bit
Ash: how long will it take?
Parkzer: Not that long, I’m not going far
Ash: how far is not far?
Parkzer: Only a few miles
Ash: are you going to walk?
Parkzer: No, I’m driving
Ash: you should walk instead, it’s healthier
Parkzer: That sort of defeats the purpose of my trip, I’m going to fill up my dad’s car with gas…
Ash: oh -.-

 

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Counterproductive Clue

This post is over 14 years old and may contain information that is incorrect, outdated, or no longer relevant.
My views and opinions can change, and those that are expressed in this post may not necessarily reflect the ones I hold today.
 

I’ve been getting a handful of questions about this mysterious extra work that I’ve been doing at least once a week for long periods of time. I decided to take this picture to give you a slight clue, but also to confuse you even more.

No, that is not my house.

On a slightly related note, when I looked through my iPod Touch’s camera roll to upload the photo shown above, I also found the following picture.

This is what happens when you let Ed Lam try to take video with your iPod Touch. He’ll take a picture of your car and the tip of your knee instead.

(If you don’t know who Ed Lam is, he’s in a lot of my vlogs.)

 

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Technology and Starbucks

This post is over 14 years old and may contain information that is incorrect, outdated, or no longer relevant.
My views and opinions can change, and those that are expressed in this post may not necessarily reflect the ones I hold today.
 

 

The Daily Post at WordPress.com

Topic #196: People are too dependent on technology: agree or disagree? Explain.

I agree that people are too dependent on technology, but I don’t really see this as that much of a bad thing. Of course, technology can go wrong and we might be left in the dark (figuratively and literally), but it’s not like our entire race is going to die if we don’t have the proper technology. This dependency on technology is helping us live more efficient lives, and if the technology were to ever be taken away from us, we would most likely be able to develop different technologies to get back to normal.

 

What I’m Reading

Following the suggestion of Benjamin Chow, I recently read How Starbucks Saved My Life: A Son of Privilege Learns to Live Like Everyone Else by Michael Gates Gill.

How Starbucks Saved My Life: A Son of Privilege Learns to Live Like Everyone Else

This book is a memoir of Michael Gates Gill, a fortunate man who managed to get a job in an advertising company immediately after graduating from Yale University. After working at this company for over 25 years, he was asked to leave because he was getting too old. Unfortunately, he has five children who need to be taken care of, and he is rapidly running out of money.

One random day, he is offered a job at a local Starbucks by a young, African-American woman. After much determination, Mike gets the position and tells the story of how he went from someone who enjoyed the luxury of coffee to someone who cleaned the bathroom of the coffee place.

I thought this was an okay book that was overall worth reading. A good portion of the book involves recollections of past events that sometimes do not have an obvious or apparent connection to the main idea of the book. Otherwise, I think this book teaches a valuable lesson about the importance of family and back-up plans.

 

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Top Ten List Fail

This post is over 14 years old and may contain information that is incorrect, outdated, or no longer relevant.
My views and opinions can change, and those that are expressed in this post may not necessarily reflect the ones I hold today.
 

 

The Daily Post at WordPress.com

Topic #195: Make a top ten list of the reasons why top ten lists are often so disappointing.

  1. Most people who write top ten lists don’t have the proper expertise to rank what they’re ranking.
  2. The items on the top ten list are blatantly obvious and can be guessed easily.
  3. On the contrary, some top ten lists leave out important elements that everyone would expect.
  4. Or, some top ten lists are lists of personal preference rather than objective judgments.
  5. People leave some positions blank to fill in later, then forget to fill them in later.
  6.  
  7. When people run out of top ten items, they start rephrasing previous items.
  8. Sometimes the same item appears twice, but worded differently.
  9. Top ten lists sometimes don’t even have ten items in them.

 

What I’m Reading

A few days ago, I finally got a chance to finish reading the last book in a series that I started reading over five years ago – Scorpia Rising in the Alex Rider series by Anthony Horowitz.

Scorpia Rising

In this final installment of the series, Alex is sent on yet again another mission for MI6, even though he promised himself and his guardian that he would never get involved with MI6 again. This mission takes him to Egypt where all he must do is keep an eye out for a suspicious individual. What Alex and MI6 didn’t know is that this entire mission was set up by Scorpia, the criminal organization responsible for the death of Alex’s parents.

Like all the other books in the series, this one is filled with high levels of action, and Alex continues to show exceptional amounts of luck and intelligence. A main character dies in this book, but as a result, Alex gains the opportunity to start living a normal fifteen-year-old’s life when the mission is over. This book is a must-read for everyone who has read all the previous books in this series. I’m disappointed that the Alex Rider series is now over, because it was probably some of my favorite books that I’ve ever read.

 

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Throwing Food

This post is over 14 years old and may contain information that is incorrect, outdated, or no longer relevant.
My views and opinions can change, and those that are expressed in this post may not necessarily reflect the ones I hold today.
 

I need some interesting topics for my extra credit papers for my psychology class, so if you have any suggestions, feel free to send them to me until August 10, 2011 (that’s my last day of summer classes).

I already did one on the ultimatum game, which you can read in my blog post from July 09, 2011.

 

The Daily Post at WordPress.com

Topic #194: Recently Rupert Murdoch, as part of investigation into corruption at one of his newspapers, was attacked in courtroom by someone wielding a custard pie. Historically, people used to throw food at other people as a sign of protest, particularly eggs and tomatoes. Would you ever throw food at anyone? Perhaps in a college dorm food fight? Or have you ever had food thrown at you? Tell the first story that comes to mind.

I don’t think that I would ever throw food at anyone in protest or rebellion. It’s obviously wasteful to throw food, but regardless, it doesn’t seem like something that I would do unless I was in a life-threatening or harming situation and throwing something at my attacker’s face would give me a good-enough opportunity to avoid pain, injury, or death.

I (fortunately) do not live in a dormitory at my university, but if the members of my apartment randomly chose one day to have a food fight, I would not participate and instead would try to encourage the management to cancel the event.

I don’t think I’ve had food thrown directly at me before with harmful intent, but I have been hit by food when I was in high school because the people I used to sit by in the cafeteria during lunch liked to argue with each other, and thought it was a good idea to throw food at each other to prove their point. Once in a while, I would be in the line of fire, but when that happened, I usually shifted my seat and started eating my friends’ food so they wouldn’t have anything left to throw.

 

My Homework for Your Reading Pleasure

This is a very short paper I wrote for my Shakespeare class about my favorite quote from Much Ado About Nothing.

I’ve been slacking on putting up good blog posts lately because I’ve been busy, so I decided to put this up in today’s post, even though it might only make real sense to people who have already read Much Ado About Nothing. It does, however, slightly touch on psychology, which I know I’ve written about a lot before, and I know a lot of you seem to enjoy, based on your responses to my work.

A line in Shakespeare’s Much Ado About Nothing that I found particularly memorable was in Act 2, Scene 3 when Benedick says “Ha! ‘Against my will, I’ve been told to bring you in to dinner.’ There’s a double meaning in that.” This was said after Benedick overhears a set-up conversation among Don Pedro, Leonato, and Claudio about how much Beatrice loves him, and then Beatrice comes out to get him for dinner because she was sent out against her will. Relative to the remainder of the play, this line is at the end of the event that marks the beginning of Benedick’s change in attitude that ultimately leads to his marriage with Beatrice. This is immediately before Beatrice falls for the same trick and starts believing that Benedick loves her.

The fact that Benedick believes the conversation and believes that there is a double meaning in what Beatrice says is what started the remainder of the plot between Benedick and Beatrice. If Benedick had not believed what he had heard and knew that it was a set-up, he would not have changed his attitude towards Beatrice. However, because he believed that Beatrice loved him, he adjusted his behavior such that he acted in a manner a loved man would. I think this is extremely effective at getting the point across to the reader because it gives insight into Benedick’s mind and opens up an opportunity for us to relate to Benedick’s situation with a situation of our own where our attitude made a difference in our actions.

Benedick’s change in attitude also emphasizes the importance of preliminary attitudes when approaching a new or unfamiliar situation. Benedick and Beatrice had a history of making fun of each other and arguing at every chance they had, and if they had continued living with that attitude, they would have never seen the positive sides of each other. However, because of the deception and the change in attitude, Benedick and Beatrice were able to see through each other’s covers and realize that they had enough in common to become good friends, and later, spouses.

 

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I Don’t Like Traveling

This post is over 14 years old and may contain information that is incorrect, outdated, or no longer relevant.
My views and opinions can change, and those that are expressed in this post may not necessarily reflect the ones I hold today.
 

As I said yesterday, I don’t really have time today to write a blog post, but the Daily Post topic from yesterday was nice and simple so I decided to do that while I’m taking a break from writing Shakespeare essays.

 

The Daily Post at WordPress.com

Topic #192: Planes, trains, or automobiles? What is your favorite way to travel 500 miles?

If I’m traveling 500 miles, I would prefer to use a plane. I don’t like traveling very much, so I would much rather have the trip over with as quickly as possible so I can move on to my destination and do whatever I need to do there. I definitely don’t want to travel 500 miles by automobile because I get carsick very easily and would not enjoy the trip.

 

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