Their discovery is not quite as momentous as the researchers
think, but Melissa Dahl asks the right questions about it in her New York
Magazine report.
The topic is embarrassment. Researchers wanted to figure out
whether you can be embarrassed by something that occurs in private. You see,
embarrassment involves the way you look to other people. If you do something
that would, in the eyes of other people, look embarrassing, do you still feel
embarrassment when no one else is looking? Apparently, the study avoided the question of how you look to yourself.
We note in passing that embarrassment is a lesser degree of shame.
The question of private embarrassment reminds one of an old problem: if a tree falls in the woods
and no one hears it, does it still make a sound?
Aside from the fact that one is hard put to imagine a world
where there is no living creature in the woods that can hear, the philosopher’s
answer, which we apparently owe to Bishop Berkeley, is that Yes, it does make a sound, because God
hears it.
Dahl summarizes the current social psychological definition
of embarrassment:
Embarrassment
has long been thought of as a social emotion,
one that depends on your having an audience to witness whatever ridiculous
thing you’ve just done. It’s long
been theorized that the feeling of embarrassment alerts you to the
fact that you’ve violated some social norm, so that you can course-correct and
apologize if necessary, without losing your standing in the group. The social
nature of embarrassment has been thought to
explain the feeling's physiological response, too – in particular, blushing –
in that it alerts others to your emotional state. You know you messed up, and
you are feeling properly awkward about it.
One is happy to see the terms defined so well.
Dahl is correct to be slightly dismayed at the way the latest
research has been conceptualized. The researchers base their study on the
notion that there is such a thing as a perfectly private experience, or better,
that people cease to be social beings when they are out of everyone’s sight.
The example given concerns a twenty-one year old college
student who still wets his bed:
He has
a private room; no one will ever know about his nocturnal bladder-control
issues. And yet the very thought of it still embarrasses him.
No kidding.
To this Dahl astutely responds that, after all, the man’s experience
is not exactly private, since he reported it to the researchers.
In Dahl’s words:
Still,
speaking of private embarrassment, you have to feel for the study volunteer who
confided in the researchers about the bed-wetting. His identity wasn’t used,
true, but you imagine he might nonetheless be experiencing some private
embarrassment if he ever sees the resulting paper, as his predicament was used
as its title: “Wetting the bed at twenty-one: Embarrassment as a private
emotion.”
Dare we also mention that the man will undoubtedly need to
report the problem to a physician? It is not normal to wet your bed at
twenty-one and it undoubtedly will require medical or psychiatric attention. The
researchers are wrong to say that the man is suffering from a purely private
emotion.
We will not speculate about the possibilities for exposure
that arise when said young man sets about to clean up. This suggests, again,
that such an action will be very difficult to keep totally private. And also, how does he look to himself when he does such a thing?
One suspects that this has happened to him
before. If it happened at home or when he did not have a
private room, other people knew about it. Thus, his current feeling of
embarrassment might very well have been a recollection of a past trauma.
I have not read the study, but one likes to remain
optimistic and hope that the authors have considered it. If they did they would
understand that embarrassment is rarely, if ever, a private emotion. It is always a social emotion, an emotion that designates you as a social being.
It’s not the experiment that is wrong as much as the manner
of conceptualizing the issue. Why not consider the reaction of a teenager who
sexts? Let’s say that she sends a picture to someone who is near and dear. Or
let’s imagine that she takes a picture merely to look at it herself.
As long as the picture is on her iPhone or on the iPhone of
someone she loves, the risk for exposure, in her mind, has diminished
considerably. In both cases, we can say that the image is, for all intents and purposes, private.
But, what happens when her true love decides to share the
image with the hockey team, so that now it is exhibited in public? Would you
say, merely on the basis of what you know about human experience, that there is
no difference between exposing yourself to someone you love and exposing
yourself to everyone you know?
Or else, take the example of the twenty-one year old bed
wetter. Let’s say that he gets over his problem and gets up at night to relieve
himself as other people do. In principle his action is private. One suspects
that he was not doing it in front of an audience. And let’s imagine that he
discovers one day that it was all being filmed, without his knowledge.
Unfortunately, we know that such things happen. Do you think that his level of
embarrassment about using the facilities normally and his level of embarrassment at knowing that the image of
his doing so has been put up on the internet would be the same?
Common sense tells us otherwise.
The researchers use the example of a man filling a
prescription for Viagra at a pharmacy.
Dahl summarizes:
In
another experiment, they asked a group of men to imagine that they were
purchasing Viagra because they were struggling with impotence; some were asked
to consider how they’d feel if they purchased it in public, and others were
asked to think about buying it online. Both groups independently predicted
feeling similar levels of embarrassment.
Perhaps we should ask former Sen. Bob Dole about this, but
hasn’t Viagra become something of a mainstream drug, used by people who have ED
and also by people who do not have ED?
Be that as it may, buying the drug online does open the risk
for exposure. As for buying it in a pharmacy, it does depend on whether you
know or do not know the pharmacist, whether you have a relationship with him,
etc.
And we know-- some people have learned it the hard way—that online
information is not perfectly secure. Unless the online pharmacy is run by
robots, a human being will be processing the order and will know your name. Admittedly,
he will be much further away from you than will the local pharmacist, but still,
the act of purchasing medication cannot really be completely private.
Again, I do not find this example to be especially useful.
One wonders whether there is such a thing as a completely
private experience? Admittedly, we all have private parts, but, their being
private means that they are not exposed in public, not that no one but
ourselves sees them or knows anything about them.
Human beings are social beings. They are social beings even
if they are not surrounded by people. Even if they do strange things in private
they still calculate the possibility that someone might at some point learn
about what they are doing.
An old Chinese adage, perhaps Confucian, suggests that a
sincere man does not take advantage of a darkened room. The sage was not
suggesting that we are always exposed, always on stage, living in a Truman
show, but that you should not use the expectation of privacy to justify
indulging in bad habits. If you act one way in private and another way in
public, it is almost inevitable that the bad private behavior will seep over
into the public domain. If you want to act well in public, the best way to
ensure it is to act well in private, consistently.
If you are learning table manners, for example, and you
choose to use one set in public and another in private, the chances are better
that you will slip up in public and indulge some bad manners. When you have two
possible sets of table manners—one for you when alone and one for you with
other people-- you will need to think, when you are eating with other people,
about which set to use, which gesture to use. Your behavior will then become
awkward and constricted, undermining dinner table harmony.
I'd agree that embarressment can't easily be a private emotion, although imagination can make it so as a sort of a preemptive-embarressment, doing whatever is necessary to keep something hidden.
ReplyDeleteThe philosopher's tree-falling alone in the forest sound question is annoying, even if the idea that at least God will hear it is an interesting one.
And the idea of God always watching all your private moments certainly opens an uncomfortable thought, and takes us all the way back to the Garden of Eden, and original sin, where Adam and Eve didn't become self-conscious about their nakedness until after they ate from the tree of good and evil. And we also remember that not only did they put on clothes after that, but they hid from God, perhaps equally as endearing as a young child who closes his eyes and thinks no one can see him, or at least there's some discovery moment where the power of the eyes is recognized.
I can see self-consciousness doesn't need an audience, but the treat of future audience also changes us. So like in public speaking, if I write out my speech first and then if I practice it aloud, all alone, I'm suddenly aware of my voice, and find myself against my will as speaker and listener, and then perhaps an inner critic also comes out and challenges what had previously sounded good now seems half-cooked, or incomplete or undefendable, and all of that mental doubt, if heeded makes presentation impossible.
And strangely, when I have a real audience, where I can't just stop mid-sentence in my doubt, but have to keep going, perhaps I do better to keep that critic quiet, at least long enough to get used to my voice, and perhaps there's equally there's a defense mechanism that blinds us to self-awareness when we're projecting outward?
Having our voices or appearance video or audio recorded is also a strange experience, whether an action is intended to be private or public. My experience is that I can "forget" about things like security cameras, but if I do remember, my imagination will open again and wonder what might be seen, liking nose-picking perhaps the easiest one. But still, most security recordings will be written over soon enough and never seen by human eyes, or maybe the NSA?! (Or thinking like how they reconstructed so much after the Boston marathon bombing videos.)
Feeling watched can be a very disturbing threat. My sister has mental illness and had times where she believed people on TV or Radio could hear what she was saying since they seemed to respond to her, even if other times she accepts it as hard to believe.
And at one point she also believed there were cameras behind our bathroom mirror, and I thought about taking it down to prove otherwise, but my thought experiment won out, and I realized I'd prove nothing, and she'd just rationalize they were removed or something.
So perhaps all that suggests "feeling watched" often contains some sort of psychosis, probably representing psychic splitting where a person is unaware of parts of themselves, which get projected as outward observers when they're really inward ones.
But also "not feeling watched" might be a different sort of psychosis, of the more adaptive kind of the unconscious, where we are unaware that we are unaware of parts of ourselves. And whatever the unconscious is, its fair to say it is watching us, and perhaps it is like a child in ways, or like if we're a parent, and don't realize our real child is watching us, internalizing our attitudes, the same goes for ourselves.
So it all seems a delicate problem. In order to be moral beings, we need to have ways to experience ourselves as object and subject, which is learned through actual relationships, but then we can apply on ourselves, see our own "good and evil" from our own motives, and how we'd see as if someone else.
So this ability of reflection makes us very adaptable, but also very vulnerable confusions in the feedback loops of awareness and fear.
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