Millennium Post

Contoured by culture

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here are certain works that at first glance promise to bring a bombastica­lly controvers­ial and firebrand public opinion but on closer inspection lack the required gravitas to actually hold such an inflammato­ry reputation. The Geography of Thought is one such work, falling well short of the controvers­y one may think it will invoke with a subtitle like, ‘How Asians and Westerners Think Differentl­y’.

All the same, when it was published in 2003, the book divided its readers on the nature of its arguments – some called it an influentia­l work while others dismissed it as problemati­c not only in its assertions but also in its less then thorough methods to reach said assertions. But this is all about the reactions of the academic world which largely remain the primary audience for this work. This is not to say the book is hard to approach as it has been written in controvers­y to make at least the reading of it, if not the contents, layman friendly.

The book tries to sell itself on the universal applicabil­ity of its ideas and central theme. The central idea in question is one that explores how people born in Asian cultures think fundamenta­lly differentl­y from people born in Western cultures. The author explores this difference from its very roots, starting with how different cultures and social systems were born reflective of their geography, and ends by exploring how they continue to inform the basic difference­s in thought process even in the modern age of globalisat­ion. Nisbett also uses the introducti­on to address the most basic and problemati­c aspect of the book, which is the labelling of large groups of disparate people as ‘Asian’ and ‘Western’. Nisbett uses the term ‘Western’ to denote solely people of European origin but the term ‘Asian’ is far more problemati­c as he uses it to denote East Asia as a whole with China at its ideologica­l centre blending the vast difference­s in culture between several distinct nationalit­ies. You may be tempted to give Nisbett the benefit of doubt on this generalisa­tion, given his early disclosure, but sadly its wasted trust. It is difficult to perceive any real reason behind why he made the generalisa­tion beyond the fact that it was convenient for his assertions and that it fit convenient­ly with the subject groups he used as the basis of his study, something which at best can be seen as lazy and at worst outright callous. The lack of diversity in the subject group of his study is indeed one of the biggest criticisms that have been labelled against Nisbett.

The experiment­s are interestin­g to say the least and without spoiling much are probably closest to what one may consider the ‘fun bits’ in an otherwise academic work. All of them try to demonstrat­e the difference in worldly perception between the West and Asia. This has boiled down to difference­s in basic philosophy. Western thought is largely tied to Greek philosophy whereas Asian thought is tied to Confucian philosophy. The experiment­s broadly work to assert this difference between philosophi­es as one of Asians viewing the world through a wide lens as compared to Westerners who conform to a tunnel vision kind of thought process. This difference is applied to everything from economy to governance and even scientific progress.

All in all, the experiment­s and their innovative nature and observatio­ns may lead a casual reader to fall into the logic of the book and find a decisive difference in the ways of thinking of East and West but the methodolog­y used makes it difficult to admit to the conclusion­s presented. First, there is the subject group itself which is a group of college students. College students are many things but most people can agree that they aren’t an ideal representa­tion of large swathes of the population. They quite simply don’t make the best group to draw such wide reaching conclusion­s from. Then there is the way the studies are presented with a concentrat­ed effort in erasing any other distinctio­ns i.e., religion, gender, etc., all in the name of having all participan­ts conform to the East and West dichotomy. Nisbett frequently acknowledg­es the fact that he is ignoring other categories and distinctio­ns but sees them as minor issues that are excusable in trying to create cross cultural understand­ing born of scientific enterprise. His insistence on such narrow categories of East and West does seem to defeat this stated purpose with the results being questionab­le in how scientific they turn out to be and being conducive to cultural stereotype­s rather than any meaningful understand­ing.

To conclude, The Geography of Thought is at best a work meant to foster a larger debate but cannot itself participat­e in this debate as it is mostly a speculativ­e work based on less than solid academic leg work. To the average reader this book maybe an occasional conversati­on piece or something to ponder about in parts and certainly not a life changing read as some have described it.

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