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Theresa Brown's avatar

I quite like this post--the invitation to openness. My number one value is probably caring--people like that are drawn to the helping professions, like nursing. What really struck with me while reading this, though, is how many schools of nursing embrace, tacitly or not, authority as the highest value. Nursing professors are supposed to be teaching care vs. harm--a literal proposition in health care. But the unspoken curriculum is obedience vs. disobedience, or authority and its evil twin, power. This is true of the history of nursing and it really needs to change, in part because it creates toxic work environments, but also because that focus keeps nurses from banding together to make the profession better for all. I don't think that care and authority are intrinsically in conflict, but in some nursing schools they are, even though "caring" is held up as ostensibly the highest value. That is a very bad paradox in terms of creating a mentally healthy health care system.

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flipshod's avatar

I think it was Robert Sapolsky in "Behave" (if it wasn't from there I apologize, but I always like to recommend this book) looking at the part of the brain that registers disgust. He noted that people sensitive to disgust tend to be conservative. Seems intuitive.

He described a study of participants taking a quiz that rated how conservative they were. Then they put rotten food in a nearby garbage and it raised the levels of everyone.

I take these kind of studies with a grain of salt, but it seemed helpful to me in imagining how my conservative friends experience the world.

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