578
Prologue
A Gift of Life
Ten weeks pregnant, Katie Purdom had just picked up daughter
Victoria Leigh, 4, from preschool in Lebanon, Ky., on a misty
afternoon . . . when a neighbor’s dog ran in front of her SUV. She
swerved to avoid it, causing the car to fl ip over and land in a
4-ft.-deep creek; her seat belt locked, Katie was pinned, as was
Victoria, who was belted into her booster seat in back. “The water
was coming in everywhere,” says Katie, 31, a nonswimmer who
works in the bakery at a local Wal-Mart. “Tori kept saying, ‘I’m
cold, Momma, help!’ It was terrifying.” As she tried to reach back
to hold her child’s face above the rising water, Katie heard a man’s
voice: It was Perry Bland, 52, who had spotted them while driving
on the route he’s covered for 27 years. With calming words, he
pulled out his plastic letter opener and started to saw away at the
seat belts. Ten minutes later both mother and daughter were free,
having escaped with only minor scratches. Now seven months
along with a baby boy, Katie says, “I owe Perry our lives.” Perry,
who has become something of a local celebrity, is just thankful it
all worked out. “I still get choked up,” he says. “I know how close
it could have been.” (Mascia & Servis, 2009, p. 109)
Looking
Ahead
What led Perry Bland to behave so heroically? Was it simply the
circumstances, or was it something about the kind of person
Bland was? What, in general, drives some people to help others—
and conversely, why do other people show no concern for the
welfare of others? More broadly, how can we improve social
conditions so that people can live together in harmony?
We can fully answer these questions only by taking into
account fi ndings from the fi eld of social psychology, the branch
of psychology that focuses on the aspects of human behavior
that unite—and separate—us from one another.
Social psychology
is the scientifi c study of how people’s thoughts, feelings, and
actions are aff ected by others. Social psychologists consider the
kinds and causes of the individual’s behavior in social situations.
They examine how the nature of situations in which we fi nd
ourselves infl uences our behavior in important ways.
The broad scope of social psychology is conveyed by the kinds
of questions social psychologists ask, such as: How can we
convince people to change their attitudes or adopt new ideas
and values? In what ways do we come to understand what others
are like? How are we infl uenced by what others do and think?
Why do some people display so much violence, aggression, and
cruelty toward others that people throughout the world live in
fear of annihilation at their hands? And why, in comparison, do
some people place their own lives at risk to help others? In
exploring these and other questions, we also discuss strategies
for confronting and solving a variety of problems and issues that
all of us face—ranging from achieving a better understanding of
persuasive tactics to forming more accurate impressions of
others.
We begin with a look at how our attitudes shape our behavior
and how we form judgments about others. We’ll discuss how we
are infl uenced by others, and we will consider prejudice and
discrimination by focusing on their roots and the ways we can
reduce them. After examining what social psychologists have
learned about the ways people form friendships and relation-
ships, we’ll conclude with a look at the determinants of aggres-
sion and helping—two opposing sides of human behavior.
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: