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University of Portsmouth’s Dr. Fleischman says disgust is holding back humanity

University of Portsmouth’s Dr. Fleischman says disgust is holding back humanity.png

Dr. Diana Fleischman, a comparative and evolutionary psychologist at the University of Portsmouth, has proposed that disgust — feeling feeling revolted by something unpleasant or offensive — is holding back humanity.

The emotion of disgust is thought to have evolved to help prevent disease, but it’s being used instead to discriminate against people and things which pose no danger, holding the human race back in social and evolutionary terms, Dr. Fleischman argued.

She said: “Humans use disgust to protect the status quo, and it has become a default response to anything alien or strange, including new technologies, especially those which involve food or altering nature or the human body.

“Disgust prevents us from embracing many new technologies that could make the world better.”

She cites, as an example, revulsion at genetically modified foods. “By describing golden rice – rice enriched with vitamin A – as ‘frankenfood’, and therefore disgusting, is an example of emotional propaganda being used to stop an attempt to help save the lives of hundreds of thousands of children.”

Another example of disgust being misappropriated is a reluctance to be on an organ donor list, Dr. Fleischman said.

Disgust is a comparatively new emotion, at only hundreds of thousands of years old — anger and fear are thought to be millions of years old.

She said: “Disgust is a promiscuous emotion, because it is relatively new. New adaptations tend to be less well-honed than old ones, and so are applied to more problems.

 

“Children don’t consistently recognise the disgust facial expression or use the word ‘disgusting’ appropriately, and they don’t recognise contagion, the idea that disease can be passed on to you, until the ripe old age of nine.

“They have taste aversions, but it’s been shown small children are happy to eat an exact replica of poop if their parents nod approvingly.

“Because it is such a new emotion and because it makes people feel a strong aversion towards something, it has been co-opted to distinguish your group from other groups, to, in effect, morally police others.

“I’m arguing that we shouldn’t always trust our emotions.”

Scientists are confident that disgust is a relatively new emotion because it is not seen in other primates, and it doesn’t appear in humans until comparatively late.

Dr. Fleischman continued: “We should evaluate policies, technology, and all possible advances to our world by how much they can help society. Disgust is no longer a useful guide to what is good and socially acceptable.”

She cited racists who express disgust at those of the ‘wrong’ race and homophobes who use disgust to express their disapproval of homosexuality as two examples of common uses of the emotion which don’t help us to survive and prosper in modern times.

“In evolutionary terms, repugnance has had its day.”

Experts haven’t agreed on the definitive list of emotions humans experience, but they are thought ti include love, fear, sadness, anger, pride, joy, envy, and disgust. All except disgust are also seen in our primate cousins.

Dr. Fleischman presented her research at Congreso Futuro in Chile, and at the Adam Smith Institute in London.

Charley Whitmore