When I think about every moment of every day, throughout my life where I have engaged in multiple actions to avoid negative sanctions; one of those actions would have been getting up early and getting ready before hand with time to spare before going to school to avoid being ridicule in front of my peers for being late and missing most of my lecture, not only does being early for school prevent me from being ridicule but it also helps me focus more on my work than trying to hide my embarrassment. Another action that prevents me from getting any negative sanction would be getting to work on time and doing my work efficiency to prevent being penalized by my employer.
I have made a few bad and/ or good decisions under pressure in order to conform to what other people expect from me. Since I was young I have always been the shadow of my older sister, my parents, peers, teachers, and family members always expected me to have followed her foot step regardless of what I wanted to do or made me feel good about myself. I started to change high school as my sister and I attended the
…show more content…
Society is trying to limit our growth by trying to shape all individuals to think, act, and behave alike, at the end of the day this will cause everyone to conform to the rules society has implemented, because they don’t want to think or use their voice to change the society around them, because they have been taught just to follow along and don’t question what they are been told to do, say, and/ or
Dystopia Government taking control over society for good. In the book Anthem by Ayn Rand the society is limiting everyone on what they can say and do, but there is one person named Equality that can change all of that. The Government made everyone equal by having everyone learn one thing if one person couldn’t learn it, they would stop teaching it. Ayn Rand made her book a dystopian society by using the literary element man vs. world.
As part of human nature, we’re accustomed to following a set of rules to have an orderly and peaceful lifestyle. Usually, if those rules are disobeyed, destruction and disorder are bound to come our way. This act is prevalent in two stories, Beowulf and The Lord of the Flies, that were written centuries apart, but yet the concept of how ignoring rules can lead to the downfall of societies is common in both. Usually, a well-built society derives from a strong leader who has the characteristics of guiding people to do the right actions. Such an example would be Beowulf who is viewed as a God-like hero and is highly respected.
Without any sort of resistance, people with power inevitably get carried away. In many cases, it is a governmental system that seems to have maintained obsessive control over citizens, so it appears that the citizens are the ones that need to initiate the balance necessary within society. Henry David Thoreau argues in his essay “On the Duty of Civil Disobedience,” that the “government is best which governs the least.” Thoreau believed that it is a citizen’s responsibility to oppose any law which is morally wrong even though it is law. He discusses the role of people in a very authoritative government and how they follow every single rule out of habit, like machines, only some people recognizing injustices and still not doing anything about
We are all told that there is a wrong and right way to live our lives. These people are referring to conforming and not conforming to society. Conformity is a noun that means, “compliance with standards, rules, or laws.” The degrees of conforming go from wearing clothes in public like everyone else to following everything everyone does. There are many pieces of literature on this topic.
In Langston Hughes short story Salvation, he reminiscences about his Auntie Reed’s churches attempt to “save” him at the age of twelve. The preacher holds a distinctive affair for the children which he calls “bringing the young lambs to the fold.” Each child sits on a mourner’s bench and slowly but surely each one stands, are received by the preacher, and subsequently saved by Jesus. Langston observes while all his peers stand up and are saved, while he sits and waits for Jesus to truly reveal himself; however, he is dumbfounded when another boy named Wesley blasphemes and is not subsequently struck dead. Langston had sat at the mourner’s bench for a considerable amount of time and was badgered by the grinning Wesley who sat proudly on the platform above.
This contributes to a regulatory state and controlling authoritative figures. The end result of this is a stagnated society, which is intolerant of the free expression of one’s individuality and ultimately limits the advancement of society. Blind acceptance of traditions and strict social conformity can lead to the
Conformity is is good or bad Conformity is something that can lead to a bad society. Conformity is good but most of the time it its bad because people think that a group of people is always smarter than one person. Conformity does not mean that all people who are a group are right. Unfortunaly conformity is not always right just like in the book The Crucible.
Conformity is something that humans have been doing for a long time. Such conformity has lead to negative outcomes. This idea is explored through “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut and “The Unknown Citizen” by W.H. Auden. In these two texts conformity eliminates individuality and causes the society to be weakened.
Obstacles of Advancement In Ayn Rand's Anthem, we encounter a very unstable future society. Totalitarianism has overtaken this culture. This means that one group of people rules over society and tolerates no variation of opinion. We find the people in Anthem's society to be slaves to the god "We" and individuality eliminated as much as possible.
Society is therefore the artificial barrier preventing the
Although you cant change the whole society as one. You might only be able to change some things here and there. I like the way things are right now, but it could be
We have to also not let the government or anyone else, decide how we live our lives. Disobedience has to be seen as a strong characteristic instead of a bad one. Those who are able to take a step back, and want to change the problems that they see, are those who will achieve at the end. Instead of hiding in the comfort of the dark, we need to take risks and do something. Disobedience is a part of us, and we have to accept it as it is.
Since all men are equal, everyone should be loyal to each other and if they are not they are committing great sin. Therefore in this society the government controls society by setting laws that forbidden individualism and also who the citizens socializes
As the Era of Conformity progressed and eventually died down, people began to realize the problem with the ideals pre-implemented in society. Although the overall social atmosphere has improved, there are still many works left to be done. As time moves on, new generations will replace the old as to dominating the society, the goal for everyone in this rising generation should be to create the equal, diverse, and accepting environment for the betterment of the
If people have no place to voice their will or take part in deciding their own destiny, the community might grow disinterested and passive in their relationship with their government. Mill believes this is problematic for society because history, as he sees it, has shown that more democratic societies have more ‘energetic, and ‘developed’ societies as well as more ‘go ahead characters’ not seen in more totalitarian societies. Yet, this criticism might fail to cover a deeper problem of disinterest; it might lead to a level of moral deficiency as well. Mill fears that a loss of ability and activity, leads to a society losing its sense of communal responsibility and social justice. In their aloofness, people might be less inclined to believe that they have any responsibility to society since society has ceased to have any rights or purpose under absolute authority.