What is it about?

In primatology, when we talk about primates, almost everything is viewed through a perspective of a hierarchy in the group. In social sciences, when we talk about humans, hierarchy is rarely ever mentioned🏅🏅🏅 ~ Frans de Wall

Book takes many of our contemporary institutions and tries to reinterpret it through that lens of Hierarchy bias 🎨 (This is my own name). The book is both speculative and fascinating. The reason why this is “elephant in our brain” is that it is some defining feature of our psyche, yet we don’t see it ourselves.

Excerpts

“Our species, for reasons that aren’t entirely clear, is wired to form social bonds when we move in lockstep with each other. This can mean marching together, singing or chanting in unison, clapping hands to a beat, or even just wearing the same clothes.”

Why people really vote?

"During the 2008 race, for example, voters in “battleground” or “swing” states, like Colorado and New Hampshire, had relatively high odds of deciding the election, at 1 in 10 million. But in states like Oklahoma and New York, where one party is all but guaranteed to win, the odds were closer to 1 in 10 billion. That’s an astonishing 1,000-fold difference"

"Faced with these realities, pragmatic Do-Rights should be considerably more eager to vote when they find themselves in a swing state. Real voters, however, show remarkably little concern for whether their votes are likely to make a difference. Swing states see only a modest uptick in turnout, somewhere between one and four percentage points. In other words, decisiveness seems to matter to less than 4 out of every 100 eligible voters. Equally surprising is the fact that so many people bother to vote in non–swing states.”

“Real voters, however, show more interest in the status, personalities, and election drama of politicians than in their track records or policy positions.”