analectnoun
a fragment or passage selected from a literary work;
Analects
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Successful Prophets — On how movements form
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[article]
Sacrificing the Self
— 4 Apr 2025
When we want to identify with a group, we <em>bias</em> ourselves to filter out all theother ways we could be. It helps us cut down all our competing priorities to the group. The trade-off is the benefit in diversity of thought. -
[article]
When groups go bad
— 3 Jan 2025
Without more tasteful social behaviours to sample from, we’re liable to attach very strongly to the behaviours of our group. Add a hostile environment, normalised physical and emotional violence, and a lack of mental and physical resources, and you have the ingredients for atrocity. -
[article]
Useful groups are biased groups
— 27 Dec 2024
The strength of our attraction to a group is a function of how different a group is from other groups in ways that we feel like we are, or like we want to be. Our participation in the group depends on how we see it benefitting us, and see us benefitting the group. The stronger both are, the stronger our biases to stay engaged. -
[article]
Mob mentality is fine
— 20 Dec 2024
You could think of a collection of group dynamics like ‘groupthink’ or ‘deindividuation’ or whatever are bad. Or you could consider that our social identity is formed by making the distinctions between in- and out- groups clear. Then it all makes sense. -
[article]
Catastrophic leadership is actually really hard
— 13 Dec 2024
For group dynamics to produce really bad behaviour, you really need to work at it. You have to train your authority figures to be cruel, prevent dissent or disengagement, and intervene all the time to stop people fixing things. It’s <em>hard</em>. -
[article]
Leadership consulting is usually more 'feel good' than 'do good'
— 17 Aug 2023
Leadership consulting proposes to fix leaders, but because we can confuse ‘making leaders feel good’ with ‘making leaders better’ it usually fails. It doesn’t have to though: just take the extra step from ‘collective vision’ to ‘collective norms’. -
[article]
Mundane Cults
— 27 Feb 2023
We’ve been taught that cults are dark and scary things. But we have been fooled. The cult is a prominent building block of modern community. If you’re not in one, you’re probably doing something wrong. The question is, is the cult you’re in a cult you chose? -
[article]
Everything is Choice Architecture
— 12 Jan 2023
Nudging doesn’t work because people aren’t thinking hard enough. Everything is choice architecture, so look to the way you build things in the first place or turn to our deepest motivations—our communities. -
[article]
Explaining group dynamics
— 29 Mar 2022
Group dynamics are often thought to be a complicated thing to explore. But a 50-year-old model explains much of it with only three things: a need for Belonging, for Affection, and for Control. -
[article]
In praise of the sage
— 19 Jul 2021
Our culture spurns the ‘guru’ as a charletan and the traditionalist as a relic. Legitimate knowledge comes from reasoned observation, not intuition. Except that this is a lie that we tell ourselves and which blinds us to how useful the sage can be. -
[article]
Female zealots
— 19 Oct 2020
A popular academic fact claims that females are the most zealous religious adherents, despite being marginalised in their own religious communities. We are told this is because they are uneducated and submissive. But a quick look at most of recorded history shows us this was not always the case. Once, female zealots formed the core of what is possibly our most universal religious tradition. -
[article]
The true meaning of family ties
— 24 Sep 2020
It’s no secret that we are lonelier than ever. We have many complaints of modern society, but our growing isolation is a common one. There are two reasons for this unhappy accident—the difficulty of finding people in ever more crowded cities, and the fact that we have lost sight of what a community is really made of. This article is about the latter. -
[article]
Successful Prophets
— 11 Sep 2020
We think of cults as the product of dangerously charismatic leaders but on examination this narrative falls apart. Really, the most successful prophets are not a person, but the followers, who use the leader as an emblem. -
[article]
Folie à deux: the madness of two
— 10 Sep 2020
Folie à deux is a striking phenomenon, but poorly understood. It seems to me that it might be just one misleading face of social isolation. -
[article]
Weber's 'charismatic leader' is misleading
— 24 Aug 2020
The ‘charismatic leader’ can be traced back at least to Weber. But it’s a misleading title.