~ Jonathon Haidt
Actions that Indians and Americans agreed were wrong:
• While walking, a man saw a dog sleeping on the road. He walked up to it and kicked it.
• A father said to his son, “If you do well on the exam, I will buy you a pen.” The son did well on the exam, but the father did not give him anything.
Actions that Americans said were wrong but Indians said were acceptable:
• A young married woman went alone to see a movie without informing her husband. When she returned home her husband said, “If you do it again, I will beat you black and blue.” She did it again; he beat her black and blue. (Judge the husband.)
• A man had a married son and a married daughter. After his death his son claimed most of the property. His daughter got little. (Judge the son.)
Actions that Indians said were wrong but Americans said were acceptable:
• In a family, a twenty-five-year-old son addresses his father by his first name.
• A woman cooked rice and wanted to eat with her husband and his elder brother. Then she ate with them. (Judge the woman.)
• A widow in your community eats fish two or threetimes a week.
• After defecation a woman did not change her clothes before cooking.
Haidt, Jonathan (2012). The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion
Beautiful.
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