One of the bitter lessons I have learnt is that those of us who are excited by new ideas are few in number.
Many people feel deeply threatened by them, regardless of their merits or faults.
A common response to ideas I suggest for improving the way we might live is: "so you want to dictate to us", followed by invective about being a Marxist/Maoist/fascist/Nazi (sometimes all four in the same sentence).
Engaging with new ideas requires cognitive effort, which we experience as a form of pain. It& #39;s a bit like the pain barrier we must breach when we exercise hard. I suspect this is why some people associate novelty with coercion: you’re forcing me to run all that way!
This barrier is compounded by what psychologists call "system justification": a tendency to support and rationalise the status quo, even if it& #39;s harmful.
What these tendencies mean is that we will always struggle against conservatism. Any idea for making our lives better will hit a wall of hostility, that has to be climbed even before we can explain them. Long before we are understood, we& #39;ll be dismissed as mad.
None of this to say we should stop proposing new ideas. But we should be prepared for the likely response, and should recognise that it doesn& #39;t necessarily relate to whether or not the idea is a good one.
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