Is there some kind of psychological principle that makes us more inclined towards bad news? What explains the media law - if it bleeds, it leads? — TheMadFool
In my personal opinion (as influenced by personal experience and reading some authors), attraction to action is the result of idle hands. If we have leisure, and if we choose not devote our time to the arts, or others, or sleep, then we seek distraction. We can't just do nothing, or live in the now. So we seek to distract ourselves. Distraction is the key word here, and I'll return to it in a moment.
But I think 180 is correct about the false positives and you are correct about risk aversion. Seeing someone or something else get killed reminds us that it is not us that is getting killed. It also promotes planning on how to not be the one who gets killed. I'm sure there is more to it than that. (As a side note, 180 references "herd species". Our tendency to extend our sympathies to the prey, instead of the equally-deserving predator, may indicate that we are, originally, a prey/herd species. We are now predators, of course, but that alliance of the heart may be a residual thing from when we were not top dog.)
Back to "distraction." I pulled the following, amended, from an old paper I wrote:
"The result of this orgy of reason, caring and might, is a concept which justifies "progress" at the expense of all else. This concept is the supreme and overriding sanctity of human life. So sacred has this concept become that in some circles it even reigns over the quality of life itself, no thing withstanding.
"The sanctity of human life is shown in many ways, not the least of which is our preoccupation with "safety". Safety for our children who will not know the true essence of adventure; safety for ourselves so we lose our ability to deal with adversity; and safety for others so our insurance rates stay low enough that we can afford to pay for our safety. This preoccupation is epitomized by the statement "Lets all play safe to¬gether"27.
"An objective look at our condition would reveal a constant, overwhelming, unsolicited celebration of humanity. Life has been an unbroken exaltation of the accomplishments of man. It has been nothing but us walking around patting ourselves on the back, and raving about the qualities that we supposedly have by choice or by character. We give ourselves credit for breathing and existence deserves a medal. The examples are endless. From the "courageous" infant, born with a handicap, a warrior against the odds in a cold cruel world; to the resilient community bouncing back from a flood, as if they had a choice. Local T.V. news stations are famous for fostering this crap. Next to the last few seconds with Charles Curralt28 and a trip to the wilderness now and then, when do we ever do anything that is not absorbed in "us"? Even adulation for the natural world is usually tainted by anthropomorphism or artistic impression:
'In itself life is insipid, because it is a simple "being there." So, for man, existing becomes a poetic
task, like the playwright's or the novelist's: that of inventing a plot for his existence, giving it a character
which will make it both suggestive and appealing. ... ... serious examination should lead us to realize
how distasteful existence in the universe must be for a creature - man, for example - who finds it
essential to divert himself.' Jose Ortega yGasset 9
"In light of these circumstances it is no wonder that man has had the "progress" that he has experienced. As long as people pay at least superficial heed to the golden rule and avoid "unsociable conduct", they can do no wrong. If they can couch their actions in terms of their own or another's benefit then it will be acceptable.
"I've belabored this point both for explanation and to bring home the understanding of just how much baggage we have to leave behind in order to understand, and have a reverence for, the Earth.
Anyway, yGasset was not talking about hunting as the distraction; as if it was a sport. Hunting is living in the now. It is what we do. We are also hunted, and it is good for us to wander alone in predator country. It keeps us on our toes. It keeps us in the moment. There is no distraction or you're dead or hungry.
So, when we see the bleeding on T.V., it leads like porn. It is a reminder of what could be and what still is for the living. But we want all that from the safety of our couch. We die when we don't live.
I once said "Suicide is a leisure time activity." Everything except living and dying is a leisure time activity. We are attracted to life, so we watch it rather than risk living it. I also once said "If life bores you, risk it." Ah, but that couch is calling . . .
:worry: