Retaliation,
retribution and revenge: He who cast the first stone
probably didn'tBy Daniel Gilbert, The New York Times, Monday, July 24, 2006
He who cast the first stone probably
didn't
Daniel
Gilbert, The New York Times, Monday, July 24, 2006
Retaliation,
retribution and revenge
Long before seat belts or common sense
were particularly widespread, my family made annual trips to New York in our
1963 Valiant station wagon. Mom and Dad took the front seat, my infant sister
sat in my mother's lap and my brother and I had what we called "the
wayback" all to ourselves.
In
the wayback, we'd lounge around doing puzzles, reading comics and counting
license plates. Eventually we'd fight. When our fight had finally escalated to
the point of tears, our mother would turn around to chastise us, and my brother
and I would start to plead our cases.
"But
he hit me first," one of us would say, to which the other would inevitably
add, "But he hit me harder."
It
turns out that my brother and I were not alone in believing that these two
claims can get a puncher off the hook. In virtually every human society,
"He hit me first" provides an acceptable rationale for doing that
which is otherwise forbidden. Both civil and religious law provide long lists
of behaviors that are illegal or immoral - unless they are responses in kind,
in which case they are perfectly fine.
After
all, it is wrong to punch anyone except a puncher, and our language even has
special words - like "retaliation" and "retribution" and
"revenge" - whose common prefix is meant to remind us that a punch
thrown second is legally and morally different than a punch thrown first.
That's
why participants in every one of the globe's intractable conflicts - from
Ireland to the Middle East - offer the even-numberedness of their punches as
grounds for exculpation.
The
problem with the principle of even-numberedness is that people count
differently. Every action has a cause and a consequence: Something that led to
it and something that followed from it. But research shows that while people
think of their own actions as the consequences of what came before, they think
of other people's actions as the causes of what came later.
In a
study conducted by William Swann and colleagues at the University of Texas,
pairs of volunteers played the roles of world leaders who were trying to decide
whether to initiate a nuclear strike. The first volunteer was asked to make an
opening statement, the second volunteer was asked to respond, the first
volunteer was asked to respond to the second, and so on. At the end of the
conversation, the volunteers were shown several of the statements that had been
made and were asked to recall what had been said just before and just after
each of them.
The
results revealed an intriguing asymmetry: When volunteers were shown one of
their own statements, they naturally remembered what had led them to say it.
But when they were shown one of their conversation partner's statements, they
naturally remembered how they had responded to it. In other words, volunteers
remembered the causes of their own statements and the consequences of their
partner's statements.
What
seems like a grossly self- serving pattern of remembering is actually the
product of two innocent facts. First, because our senses point outward, we can
observe other people's actions but not our own.
Second,
because mental life is a private affair, we can observe our own thoughts but
not the thoughts of others. Together, these facts suggest that our reasons for
punching will always be more salient to us than the punches themselves - but
that the opposite will be true of other people's reasons and other people's
punches.
Examples
aren't hard to come by. Shiites seek revenge on Sunnis for the revenge they
sought on Shiites; Irish Catholics retaliate against the Protestants who
retaliated against them; and since 1948, it's hard to think of any partisan in
the Middle East who has done anything but play defense. In each of these instances,
people on one side claim that they are merely responding to provocation and
dismiss the other side's identical claim as disingenuous spin. But research
suggests that these claims reflect genuinely different perceptions of the same
bloody conversation.
If
the first principle of legitimate punching is that punches must be
even-numbered, the second principle is that an even-numbered punch may be no
more forceful than the odd- numbered punch that preceded it.
Legitimate
retribution is meant to restore balance, and thus an eye for an eye is fair,
but an eye for an eyelash is not. When the European Union condemned Israel for
bombing Lebanon in retaliation for the kidnapping of two Israeli soldiers, it
did not question Israel's right to respond, but rather, its
"disproportionate use of force." It is O.K. to hit back, just not too
hard.
Research
shows that people have as much trouble applying the second principle as the
first. In a study conducted by Sukhwinder Shergill and colleagues at University
College London, pairs of volunteers were hooked up to a mechanical device that
allowed each of them to exert pressure on the other volunteer's fingers.
The
researcher began the game by exerting a fixed amount of pressure on the first
volunteer's finger. The first volunteer was then asked to exert precisely the
same amount of pressure on the second volunteer's finger. The second volunteer
was then asked to exert the same amount of pressure on the first volunteer's
finger. And so on.
The
two volunteers took turns applying equal amounts of pressure to each other's
fingers while the researchers measured the actual amount of pressure they
applied.
The
results were striking. Although volunteers tried to respond to each other's
touches with equal force, they typically responded with about 40 percent more
force than they had just experienced. Each time a volunteer was touched, he
touched back harder, which led the other volunteer to touch back even harder.
What began as a game of soft touches quickly became a game of moderate pokes
and then hard prods, even though both volunteers were doing their level best to
respond in kind.
Each
volunteer was convinced that he was responding with equal force and that for
some reason the other volunteer was escalating.
Neither
realized that the escalation was the natural byproduct of a neurological quirk
that causes the pain we receive to seem more painful than the pain we produce,
so we usually give more pain than we have received.
Research
teaches us that our reasons and our pains are more palpable, more obvious and
real, than are the reasons and pains of others. This leads to the escalation of
mutual harm, to the illusion that others are solely responsible for it and to
the belief that our actions are justifiable responses to theirs.
None
of this is to deny the roles that hatred, intolerance, avarice and deceit play
in human conflict. It is simply to say that basic principles of human
psychology are important ingredients in this miserable stew. Until we learn to
stop trusting everything our brains tell us about others - and to start
trusting others themselves - there will continue to be tears and recriminations
in the wayback.
Daniel Gilbert, a professor of
psychology at Harvard, is the author of "Stumbling on Happiness."
For related articles see: Free Will, Peace on
Earth, Oneness, Spirituality and Science |