Environmental Factors

No man is an island entire of itself; every man 
is a piece of the continent, a part of the main; 
if a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe 
is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as 
well as any manner of thy friends or of thine 
own were; any man's death diminishes me, 
because I am involved in mankind. 
And therefore never send to know for whom 
the bell tolls; it tolls for thee. 

John Donne

Growing up, who did you parents vote for? Which news programs did they watch and what comments did they make? What kind of neighborhood did you live in? All of these contributed to how you view the world. When people are exposed over and over again to what their parents and friends say, to the way news and media they watch presents information, to the way people are living in their town or city, our brain wiring gets reinforced in particular ways. Most of us go through life unaware that the reality we experience is subjectively our own and is based on how environmental factors as well as genetics shape how our brains interpret the stimuli around us. In a certain sense, the idea that each of us is a discreet individual with complete autonomy of will is false. Each of us is an open system both being influenced by and influencing others.

Reality as a negotiated social construct

We each think we have a privileged, objective view of reality, i.e., we think our own reality is the only correct one, because our reality is all we know.

Groupthink

Our own individual thoughts can sometimes be abandoned in favor of the group’s.

We are a lot like fish. If you ask a fish, “How’s the water?” it will ask in turn, “What water?” The fish simply cannot conceive of any other environment.

Neuroplasticity and Environmental Factors

Our brains are not static. Over time, neuronal connections in the brain can change because our brains have plasticity. Like paths in a forest, those used most become clearer and more likely to be traveled while those used less frequently become less clear and less likely to be traveled.

Our real hope: Meta-cognition

The good news, the thing that separates us fromsheep, is our ability to think about how we think, a.k.a. meta-cognition. We humans have the ability to surface the unconscious processes that drive many of our behaviors such that we become less susceptible to the environmental forces influencing us. With practice, we can make ourselves aware of the ways in which we are channeled into adopting narrowly defined viewpoints. With some effort, meta-cognition and neuroplasticity gives us the ability to actually rewire our brains. In other words, we can habituate new ways of perceiving the world such that we can consciously evolve into a less tribal and more empathic society.