這所學院「被覺醒之風」嚇到了the college was intimidated “by the winds of wokeness.” 。hecontributed to the most recent Republican platform and helped establish the D.C. infrastructure for the MAGA-movement-in-waiting over the past four years.
In early February, Wheaton College, an evangelical school outside of Chicago, took to social media to give a shout-out to one of its own for getting a prestigious job. An alumnus, Russell Vought, had just been confirmed as the director of the U.S. Office of Management and Budget. Vought, who also served at the O.M.B. in Donald Trump’s first Administration, has been credited as one of the intellectual architects of the President’s comeback: he contributed to the most recent Republican platform and helped establish the D.C. infrastructure for the MAGA-movement-in-waiting over the past four years.
2 月初,位於芝加哥郊外的福音派學校惠頓學院在社群媒體上表彰了一名本院學生獲得了一份體面的工作。校友拉塞爾沃特剛被任命為美國管理和預算辦公室主任。沃特也曾在 O.M.B. 任職。在唐納德·川普的第一屆政府中,他被認為是總統復出的智力設計師之一:他為最新的共和黨綱領做出了貢獻,並在過去四年中幫助為即將舉行的“讓美國再次偉大”運動建立了華盛頓特區的基礎設施。
發言人向宗教新聞社表示,幾個小時內,該貼文就收到了一千多條回复,「主要是針對沃特先生的煽動性、非基督教的評論」。為了避免政治爭端並履行學院的無黨派承諾,該職位被刪除。 「由此,原本可能只是一場小規模的爭吵,卻演變成了一場全面戰爭,影響範圍遠遠超出了惠頓學院的學生和校友,」艾瑪·格林寫道。在社群媒體上,一位著名福音傳道者的兒子表示,這所學院「被覺醒之風」嚇到了。另一位福音電台主持人指責該學院引領「虛假的『美好』基督教」。儘管惠頓學院一直將自己標榜為神學保守派,但它從未公開表現出黨派傾向。格林報告了為何維持這種姿態變得越來越困難:https://newyorkermag.visitlink.me/yeXeZn
這所學院「被覺醒之風」嚇到了the college was intimidated “by the winds of wokeness.” 。hecontributed to the most recent Republican platform and helped establish the D.C. infrastructure for the MAGA-movement-in-waiting over the past four years.
In early February, Wheaton College, an evangelical school outside of Chicago, took to social media to give a shout-out to one of its own for getting a prestigious job. An alumnus, Russell Vought, had just been confirmed as the director of the U.S. Office of Management and Budget. Vought, who also served at the O.M.B. in Donald Trump’s first Administration, has been credited as one of the intellectual architects of the President’s comeback: he contributed to the most recent Republican platform and helped establish the D.C. infrastructure for the MAGA-movement-in-waiting over the past four years.
2 月初,位於芝加哥郊外的福音派學校惠頓學院在社群媒體上表彰了一名本院學生獲得了一份體面的工作。校友拉塞爾沃特剛被任命為美國管理和預算辦公室主任。沃特也曾在 O.M.B. 任職。在唐納德·川普的第一屆政府中,他被認為是總統復出的智力設計師之一:他為最新的共和黨綱領做出了貢獻,並在過去四年中幫助為即將舉行的“讓美國再次偉大”運動建立了華盛頓特區的基礎設施。
發言人向宗教新聞社表示,幾個小時內,該貼文就收到了一千多條回复,「主要是針對沃特先生的煽動性、非基督教的評論」。為了避免政治爭端並履行學院的無黨派承諾,該職位被刪除。 「由此,原本可能只是一場小規模的爭吵,卻演變成了一場全面戰爭,影響範圍遠遠超出了惠頓學院的學生和校友,」艾瑪·格林寫道。在社群媒體上,一位著名福音傳道者的兒子表示,這所學院「被覺醒之風」嚇到了。另一位福音電台主持人指責該學院引領「虛假的『美好』基督教」。儘管惠頓學院一直將自己標榜為神學保守派,但它從未公開表現出黨派傾向。格林報告了為何維持這種姿態變得越來越困難:https://newyorkermag.visitlink.me/yeXeZn
Robert Zajonc, Who Looked at Mind’s Ties to Actions, Is Dead at 85
Robert B. Zajonc, a distinguished psychologist who illuminated the mental processes that underpin social behavior and in so doing helped create the modern field of social psychology, died on Wednesday at his home in Stanford, Calif. He was 85.
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Robert B. Zajonc in 1996.
The cause was complications of pancreatic cancer, his son Michael said.
At his death, Professor Zajonc (pronounced ZYE-unts) was emeritus professor of psychology at Stanford University, where he had taught since 1994. He previously had a long association with the University of Michigan.
Until the mid-20th century, social scientists seeking the impetus for human behavior tended to look reflexively to people’s environments. That, in an era when behavioral psychology reigned supreme, was precisely what they had been trained to do. Professor Zajonc, by contrast, also looked to the mind.
Published widely in professional journals and cited often in the news media, Professor Zajonc’s work ranged across the mental and social landscape. Among the subjects he investigated over five decades were the effect of birth order on intellectual performance; whether the mere presence of spectators can influence a performer for good or ill; and whether smiling can be a cause, as well as a consequence, of a good mood.
What united his diverse output was an abiding concern with the relationship between feeling and thought. Professor Zajonc repeatedly explored the place in the human mental makeup where emotion butts up against cognition, partly in an effort to determine which influences which more strongly. (On balance, he came down on the side of emotion.)
He was also consumed with the tacit, half-hidden patterns — of words, images, experiences and much else — that unconsciously inform the ways in which everyone navigates the social world.
Professor Zajonc was perhaps best known for discovering what he called the “mere exposure” effect. In a seminal experiment, published in The Journal of Personality and Social Psychology in 1968, he showed subjects a series of random shapes in rapid succession. The shapes appeared and disappeared so quickly that it was impossible to discern that some of them were actually repeated. Nevertheless, when subjects were later asked which shapes they found most pleasing, they reliably chose the ones to which they had been exposed the most often, though they had no conscious awareness of the fact.
Familiarity, in other words, breeds a kind of affection, Professor Zajonc found. Even before he defined and named it, the effect was dear to the hearts of advertisers and other shapers of culture.
In another study, which attracted much attention in the popular media, Professor Zajonc found that the size of a family, and the birth order of the children, have implications for the I.Q. of each child. He found that the I.Q. score of each successive child decreases a little, partly because only the eldest receives undivided parental attention.
The difference in I.Q. between the eldest child and the next sibling in line averaged just three points, Professor Zajonc found. But the larger implication of his study was that I.Q., long thought to be the product of heredity alone, was at least in part socially determined.
Robert Boleslaw Zajonc, an only child, was born in Lodz, Poland, on Nov. 23, 1923. In 1939, after the Nazis invaded Poland and headed toward Lodz, he and his parents fled to Warsaw. There, the building in which they were staying was bombed, and Robert’s parents were killed. Robert woke up in a hospital, seriously injured.
He attended an underground university in Warsaw before being dispatched to a labor camp in Germany. He escaped and, recaptured, was sent to a political prison in France. Escaping again, he joined the French Resistance and studied at the University of Paris. Reaching England in 1944, he worked as a translator for American forces in the European campaign.
When the war ended, he worked for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration in Paris. He later studied psychology at the University of Tübingen before immigrating to the United States in 1948.
Professor Zajonc earned a Ph.D. in psychology from the University of Michigan in 1955. He remained on the faculty for the next four decades, directing the Research Center for Group Dynamics and the Institute for Social Research there.
Some of Professor Zajonc’s most influential work concerned “social facilitation” — the effect of the presence of others on a person’s performance of a specific task. Previous research on the subject appeared contradictory, suggesting that spectators helped performers in some cases but not in others. But in which cases?
What Professor Zajonc found was that when performers have mastered a skill at a high level, they are helped by the presence of an audience. (Think of professional musicians or athletes.) But he also found that when a performer has mastered a skill only imperfectly, the existence of onlookers is a hindrance. (Think of Sunday duffers in any arena.)
Elsewhere in his work, Professor Zajonc explored the nexus between psychology and physiology. In one widely reported study, he found that smiling or frowning can alter blood flow to the brain as facial muscles relax or contract. This in turn affects the parts of the brain that regulate feelings, helping induce happy or sad emotional states.
In recent years, Professor Zajonc also studied the psychology of racism, terrorism and genocide.
Professor Zajonc’s first marriage, to Donna Benson, ended in divorce. He is survived by his second wife, Hazel Rose Markus, a professor of social psychology at Stanford; their daughter, Krysia; three children from his first marriage, Peter, Michael and Joseph; and four grandchildren.
His books include “Social Psychology: An Experimental Approach” (Wadsworth, 1966) and “The Selected Works of R. B. Zajonc” (Wiley, 2004).
In a 2005 interview with The Observer, a publication of the Association for Psychological Science, Professor Zajonc explained his reasons for choosing the career he did. They harked back to the work he did for the United Nations in Paris.
“I had contact with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization,” he said. “The Unesco motto is: ‘Since wars begin in the minds of men, it is in the minds of men that the defenses of peace must be constructed,’ and having just been through a war, the motto was a sufficient incentive for me to get engaged in scientific initiatives that might make a contribution toward preventing future wars.”
He added, “I am still waiting for that contribution to be made by psychology.”
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