Social:Collective cognitive imperative
The collective cognitive imperative is an internal command or obligation felt by suggestible people that often drives their joining some group. Besides requiring the person accept the group’s belief system, it outlines culturally agreed on behavioral constraints and roles to be acted out. While the group is usually thought of as a formally well-defined one such as a tribe, church, cult, or commune, this imperative can be less rigorously connected to peer pressure—in which case it can apply to ill-defined groups like being “a cool person”. It can likewise be related to joining the “winners” through “The Bandwagon Effect”.
The “collective cognitive” part of its name connects it to group decision-making. Rather than an individual internally and analytically weighing the merits of believing in something or acting a certain way, this imperative requires that he or she trust an external authority accepted by the group. The authority can be a person such as preacher, shaman, hypnotist, or celebrity, or something else such as voice from a speaker, TV image, drum, sacred book, magic charm, etc. Often a period of indoctrination must occur before both the suggestible person and other members feel the person now belongs to the group.
Depending upon the group they join, those who succumb to the collective cognitive imperative may be ridiculed by others as failing to do their own thinking, undermining their own individuality or giving up certain rights. In that sense such suggestible people can be likened to dumb herd animals such as sheep (see Sheeple). Such ridicule typically won’t occur after a religious conversion brings a previous non-conformist into the fold of the culture’s dominant religion.
History and current relevance
The term collective cognitive imperative was first used by Princeton University psychology professor Julian Jaynes in his 1976 book 1 The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind. Jaynes viewed it as the first part of “The General Bicameral Paradigm” which he used to characterize various phenomena involving the diminished consciousness supposedly linked to an ancient mentality called “The Bicameral Mind.” According to his highly speculative but thought provoking theory, such people supposedly lacked left-brain centered analytical thinking skills and were unable to introspect.
See also
- Crowd psychology
- Groupthink
- Mind control
- Suggestibility
References
- Jaynes, Julian The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. 1990
- Wilkinson, Heward "Schizophrenic Process and The Emergence of Consciousness in Recent History: The Significance for Psychotherapy of Julian Jaynes"
- Casiglia, Edoardo "Hypnosis in the Theory of the Bicameral Mind" in The Jaynesian, vol.2, #1, 2008
- Sandoz, Jeff, "Julian Jaynes's Bicameral Mind Theory as a Metaphor for Alcoholism" in The Jaynesian, vol.1, #2, 2007
- Cook, Stephen P. and Meadows, Donella H.,Coming of Age in the Global Village AR: Parthenon Books, 1990 see pp 188–207
External links