The Daily - The Sunday Read: ‘How Disgust Explains Everything’
Episode Date: January 23, 2022What is “disgust”? Molly Young, a journalist with The New York Times, considers the evolutionary and social uses of this “universal aspect of life” to identify the impact of disgust in its phy...sical, psychological and linguistic manifestations.Young explains the different forms of disgust, analyzing how the reactions they elicit play out in the body and mind, and why it is in many ways cultural. She explains how disgust shapes our behavior, technology, relationships and even political leanings. It’s behind everyday purity rites; the reason we use toilet paper, wash our hands and hold cutlery; it has shadowed the rules that have governed emotion in every culture throughout time.Charles Darwin, the scholar William Ian Miller, the research psychologist Paul Rozin and the philosopher Aurel Kolnai, among the many others who felt compelled, Young explained, to investigate this most primal emotion.This story was written by Molly Young and recorded by Audm. To hear more audio stories from publications like The New York Times, download Audm for iPhone or Android.
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Hi, my name is Molly Young. I'm a book critic for the New York Times and a contributing writer to
the magazine. About six months ago, I was reading a book by a German scholar named
Winfried Menninghaus, and the book was called Disgust. I was midway through a section titled
Torture, Truth, and Disemboweled Pigs when my husband
happened to glance over and he quite reasonably asked, why are you reading that? And I was like,
because disgust is universally interesting. Everybody's interested in this emotion.
And he said, I'm not interested. I, on the other hand, became obsessed with the topic of disgust.
And the name that kept coming up over and over and everything I read was Paul Rosen. I, on the other hand, became obsessed with the topic of disgust.
And the name that kept coming up over and over in everything I read was Paul Rosen.
Rosen's research was really the foundation of what would become the explosive area of disgust in academia.
So disgust is defined as an emotional response. It's marked by certain facial movements, and it's often accompanied by nausea or queasiness
and a desire to put distance between yourself and the thing that is disgusting. With Rosen,
his initial theory was that disgust was a food-oriented emotion, and that every expression
of it tied back in some way to the omnivore's dilemma. That is to say, coming upon a piece of
food and wondering whether or not it was too spoiled to eat. Inore's dilemma. That is to say, coming upon a piece of food and wondering whether
or not it was too spoiled to eat. In that instance, disgust is the emotion that keeps you alive.
But far beyond food, Rosen found that this emotion can encompass a whole range of phenomena.
We can get disgusted by stepping in dog poop on the street, looking at hair in the bathtub drain,
or learning about how a presidential candidate once ate airport salad with a hair comb,
as you might remember Senator Amy Klobuchar once famously did.
They're very different things, but your response might be similar.
So Rosen's further papers were an attempt to theorize why that might be.
All of us have some kind of baseline level of disgust sensitivity. I have a
low sensitivity, and one thing I like to do is read the FDA's Food Defect Levels Handbook. It's
an online guide for food manufacturers about what is an acceptable amount of adulteration to exist
in a given food product. For example, when it comes to popcorn, up to two rodent hairs
per pound is considered an acceptable amount. My guilty pleasure is to ruin cantaloupe for people,
which is something I do all the time, and it's very easy to do because cantaloupe is the most
popular melon in America. What I learned from the FDA is that, like any melon, cantaloupe grows
on vines that are near the ground,
and agricultural practices being what they are, fecal matter of animals or people may come into
contact with things that grow on the ground. Cantaloupes have a creviced skin that makes
them difficult to wash. And I'll leave the rest up to your imagination.
So here's my article, How Disgust Explains Everything, read by Gabra Zachman.
This was recorded by Autumn.
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Two distinguished academics walk into a restaurant in Manhattan.
It is their first meeting, their first date, in fact. and the year is 2015. The man wears a down jacket against the icy winter evening. The woman has a shock of glossy white hair. The restaurant is on
a cozy corner of the West Village and has foie gras on the menu. What the man doesn't know is
that the interior of his down jacket has suffered a structural failure, and the filling has massed along the
bottom hem, forming a conspicuous bulge at his waist. As they greet each other,
the woman perceives the bulge and asks herself,
Is my date wearing a colostomy bag?
They sit down to eat, but the woman is distracted. As they chat about their lives,
former spouses, work, interests,
the woman has colostomy bag on her mind.
Is it or isn't it?
The two academics are of an age where such an intervention is,
well, not exactly common, but not out of the realm of possibility.
At the end of their dinner, the man takes the train back to Philadelphia,
where he lives, and the woman returns to her apartment on the Upper West Side.
Despite the enigma of the man's midsection, the date is a success.
It wasn't until their third date that the question got resolved. No colostomy bag.
I was testing her, Paul Rosen, one of the academics, later joked, to see if she would put
up with me. He wasn't testing her. He was unaware of the bulge. I was worried, said Virginia Valiant,
the other academic. It was fitting that an imaginary colostomy bag played a starring role
in the couple's first encounter. Paul Rosin is known for many things. He is an eminent psychologist
who taught at the University of Pennsylvania for 52 years, and he has gathered honors and fellowships and published hundreds
of influential papers and served on editorial boards and as chairman of the university's
Department of Psychology. But he is best known for his work on the topic of disgust.
In the early 1980s, Rosen noticed that there was surprisingly little data available on
this universal aspect of life. Odd, he thought, that of the six so-called basic emotions—anger,
surprise, fear, enjoyment, sadness—disgust, the last had hardly been studied.
Once you are attuned to disgust, it is everywhere. On your morning commute, you may observe a tragic smear of roadkill on the highway
or shudder at the sight of a rat browsing garbage on the subway tracks.
At work, you glance with suspicion at the person who neglects to wash his filthy hands after a trip to the toilet.
At home, you change your child's diaper, unclog the shower drain, empty your cat's litter box,
pop a zit, throw out the fuzzy leftovers in the fridge.
If you manage to complete a single day without experiencing any form of disgust, you are either a baby or in a coma.
Disgust shapes our behavior, our technology, our relationships.
It is the reason we wear deodorant, use the bathroom in private, and wield forks instead of eating with our bare hands.
I've lost my teeth as an adult because a dentist once told me as a teenager that
brushing your teeth without flossing is like taking a shower without removing your shoes.
Do they teach that line in dentistry school, or did he come up with it on his own?
Either way, 14 words accomplished what a decade of parental nagging hadn't.
Unpeel most etiquette guidelines
and you'll find a web of disgust avoidance techniques. Rules governing the emotion have
existed in every culture at every time in history. And although the input of disgust,
that is what exactly is considered disgusting, varies from place to place, its output is narrow.
With a characteristic facial expression called
the gape face that includes a lowered jaw and often an extended tongue. Sometimes it's a wrinkled
nose and a retraction of the upper lip. Jerry does it about once per episode of Seinfeld.
The gape face is often accompanied by nausea and a desire to run away or otherwise gain
distance from the offensive thing, as well as the urge to clean oneself.
The more you read about the history of the emotion,
the more convinced you might be that disgust is the energy
powering a whole host of seemingly unrelated phenomena,
from our never-ending culture wars to the existence of kosher laws to 4chan to mermaids.
Disgust is a bodily experience that creeps into every corner of
our social lives, a piece of evolutionary hardware designed to protect our stomachs
that expanded into a system for protecting our souls.
Darwin was the first modern observer to drop a pebble into the scummy pond of disgust studies.
In The Expression of the Emotions in Man and
Animals, he describes a personal encounter that took place in Tierra del Fuego, where Darwin was
dining on a portion of cold, preserved meat at a campsite. As he ate, a naked savage came over
and poked Darwin's meat with a finger, showing utter disgust at its softness. Darwin, in turn,
was disgusted at having his snack fingered by a
stranger. Darwin inferred that the other man was repelled by the unusual texture of the meat,
but he was less confident about the origins of his own response. The hands of the savage,
after all, did not appear to be dirty. What was it about the poking that rendered Darwin's food
inedible? Was it the man's nakedness? His foreignness?
And why, Darwin wondered,
moving on to a remembered scenario,
was the sight of soup smeared in a man's beard disgusting?
Even though there was, of course,
nothing disgusting in the soup itself.
The most important disgust accounts
following Darwin
come from a pair of Hungarian men
born two years apart,
Oral Kolnai,
born in 1900, and András Anjal, 1902. I haven't found any evidence that they knew each other,
but it seems improbable that Anjal, whose disgust paper came out in 1941, didn't draw from his countryman's paper, which appeared in 1929. Strangely enough, the Anjal paper contains no
reference to Kolnai. One possibility is that Anjal failed to cite his sources. A second possibility
is that he was truly unaware of the earlier paper, in which case you have to wonder whether there was
something so abnormally disgusting about Central Europe of the early 20th century that two strangers
born there were driven to lengthy investigations of a subject no one else took seriously. A third possibility is that Angel
started reading Colnay's paper and gave up midway through in frustration. While brilliant, Colnay's
writing has the density of osmium. His paper is rife with scare quotes and clauses layered in
baklava-like profusion. Nonetheless, Kolnai was
the first to arrive at a number of insights that are now commonly accepted in the field.
He pointed to the paradox that disgusting things often hold a curious enticement. Think of the
Q-tip you inspect after withdrawing it from a waxy ear canal, or the existence of reality TV
shows about plastic surgery, or fear factor.
He identified the senses of smell, taste, sight, and touch as the primary sites of entry,
and pointed out that hearing isn't a strong vector for disgust.
One would search in vain for any even approximately equivalent parallel in the oral sphere to something like a putrid smell, the feel of a flabby body, or of a belly ripped open.
like a putrid smell, the feel of a flabby body, or of a belly ripped open.
For Colnay, the exemplary disgust object was the decomposing corpse, which illustrated to him that disgust originated not in the fact of decay, but the process of it. Think of the difference between
a corpse and a skeleton. Although both present evidence that death has occurred, a corpse is disgusting, where a skeleton is, at worst, highly spooky.
Hamlet wouldn't pick up a jester's rotting head and talk to it.
Kolnay argued that the difference had to do with the dynamic nature of a decomposing corpse.
The fact that it changed color and form, produced a shifting array of odors, and in other ways suggested the presence of life within death.
shifting array of odors and in other ways suggested the presence of life within death.
Anshal argued that disgust wasn't strictly sensory. We might experience colors and sounds and tastes and odors as unpleasant, but they could never be disgusting on their own.
As an illustration, he related a story about walking through a field and passing a shack
from which a pungent smell, which he took for that of a decaying animal,
pierced his nostrils. His first reaction was intense disgust. In the next moment,
he discovered that he had made a mistake, and the smell was actually glue.
The feeling of disgust immediately disappeared, and the odor now seemed quite agreeable,
he wrote, probably because of some rather pleasant associations with carpentry.
he wrote, probably because of some rather pleasant associations with carpentry.
Of course, glue back then probably did come from dead animals, but the affront had been neutralized by nothing more than Anjal's shifting mental associations.
Disgust, Anjal contended, wasn't merely smelling a bad smell. It was a visceral fear of being
soiled by the smell. The closer the contact, the stronger the reaction.
Angel's study is even more delightful when viewed in the context of its preface,
which explains that the material is based on observations and conversations,
not collected in any formal manner,
and that the method, if it may be called such, lacked objectivity and control.
Reading the paper 80 years later, as a replication
crisis in the sciences continues to unfold, Angel's humility takes on a refreshing flavor.
I'm just a guy noticing some stuff, he seems to say. Let's see where this leads.
I first met Razen at a Vietnamese restaurant on the Upper West Side in midsummer.
He arrived in a bucket hat the color of tang and a navy shirt with pinstripes.
After ordering, we sat at a blonde wood table and ate rice crepes piled with diverse vegetable elements.
Razan had ordered a green papaya salad to share,
and while spearing papaya, he noted that this,
right now, is a form of social bonding, eating from the same bowl. He and a team did a study on it.
A fun thing about hanging out with a research psychologist is that he can usefully annotate
all sorts of immediate lived phenomena. And in the case of Rosen, he may even have hypothesized
the explanations himself. Our crepes, to take an example, were the width of Rosen, he may even have hypothesized the explanations himself.
Our crepes, to take an example, were the width of basketballs, enough to feed six easily.
And yet, we each polished off the jumbo portion.
Unit bias is the heuristic that Rosen and his co-authors coined to describe the effect back in 2006.
The idea is that humans tend to assume a provided unit of some entity
is the proper and optimal amount to consume. This is why movie popcorn and king-size candy bars are
treacherous, and possibly one reason French people, with their traditionally small portions,
remain thin. Rosen, who is now 85, was born in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn to Jewish parents who, though they hadn't attended college themselves, were cultured and artistic and pleased to discover that their son was a brainiac.
He tested into a public school for gifted children, left high school early, and received a full scholarship to the University of Chicago, where he matriculated just after his 16th birthday.
University of Chicago, where he matriculated just after his 16th birthday. Upon graduating,
he took a joint Ph.D. at Harvard in biology and psychology, completed a postdoc at the Harvard School of Public Health, and in 1963 joined the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania,
where his initial experiment centered on behavior in rats and goldfish. As he quickly worked his
way up from assistant professor to associate professor to
full professor, Rosen decided that he was tired of animal studies and wanted to focus on bigger game.
Around 1970, he turned his attention to the acquisition of reading. In Philadelphia,
as in many American cities, there was a problem with kids learning to read.
Eager to discover why, Rosen parked himself in elementary
school classes and observed something strange. A large number of children were unable to read
by second grade, but those same children were always fluent in spoken English. They could name
thousands of objects, and they could point to Rosen and ask, why is this strange man lurking
in my classroom? Compared with the vast dictionary of words filed neatly in their brains,
mastering an alphabet of 26 letters would seem to be a piece of cake.
Instead, it was a crisis.
With a collaborator, Rosen devised an experimental curriculum
that moved children through degrees of linguistic abstraction
by teaching them Chinese logographs followed by a Japanese syllabary,
and only then applying the same logic to English. Rosen says the system worked like a dream,
but the school's response was tepid. The bureaucracy, the politics. I was overwhelmed,
he said. Nothing about the process of pitching and marketing and lobbying appealed to him.
He calculated that it
would take years to sell administrators on the curriculum and train teachers to deliver it.
Instead, he and a colleague wrote several papers with the findings and walked away.
It's the right way to teach reading, he said nearly 50 years later with a shrug.
As far as I know, nothing happened with it. At the time, he wondered if maybe some other researchers would run with the idea.
But Rosen was done.
His mind was elsewhere, percolating on the subject he would become best known for.
Rosen's interest in disgust, he said, started with meat.
Although he is now pescatarian with some exceptions, bacon,
he was still a full-spectrum omnivore when he started puzzling
over meat. Despite being one of the world's favorite food categories, both nutritionally
complete and widely considered tasty, meat is also the most tabooed food across many cultures.
Rosen wasn't interested in the health implications of meat or in its economic or environmental
significance. That stuff had been studied. What he zeroed in on
was a kind of effective negativity around meat. When people disliked it, they really disliked it.
A rotten cut of beef evoked an entirely different reaction than a rotten apple.
Why? Or rather, what? What was the difference between accidentally biting into a moldy Granny
Smith and a moldy steak?
A bad apple might be icky and distasteful, but befouled meat caused a related but totally distinct sensation cluster of contamination, queasiness, and defilement. It was the Anjal
paper that really got Rosen's neurons firing, and on its foundation he began to construct the
theory that would go on to inform,
and this is no exaggeration, every subsequent attempt at defining and understanding disgust over the following decades. In Rosen's view, the emotion was all about food. It began with the fact
that humans have immense dietary flexibility. Unlike koalas, who eat almost nothing but
eucalyptus leaves, humans must gaze at a vast range of eating options
and figure out what to put in our mouths.
The phrase omnivore's dilemma is one of Rosen's many coinages.
Michael Pollan later borrowed it.
Disgust, he argued, evolved as one of the great determinants of what to eat.
If a person had zero sense of disgust,
she would probably eat something gross and die.
On the other hand, if a person was too easily disgusted, she would probably fail to consume
enough calories and would also die. It was best to be somewhere in the middle, approaching food
with a healthful blend of neophobia, fear of the new, and neophilia, love of the new.
It was Rosen's contention that all forms of disgust grew from our revulsion
at the prospect of ingesting substances that we shouldn't, like worms or feces.
The focus on food makes intuitive sense. After all, we register disgust in the form of nausea
or vomiting. Nausea being the body's cue to stop eating, and vomiting our way of hitting the undo button on whatever we
just ate. But if disgust were solely a biological phenomenon, it would look the same across all
cultures. And it does not. Nor does it explain why we experience disgust when confronted with
topics like bestiality or incest, or the smell of a stinky armpit, or the idea of being submerged
in a pit of cockroaches.
None of these have anything to do with food.
Rosen's next project was to figure out what linked all of these disgust elicitors.
What could they possibly have in common
that caused a unified response? To be continued... Rosen and two colleagues published a landmark paper called Operation of the Laws of Sympathetic
Magic in Disgust and Other Domains, which argued that the emotion was a more complicated phenomenon
than Darwin or the Hungarians or even Rosen himself had ventured. The paper was based on
a series of simple but illuminating experiments. In one, a participant was invited to sit at a table in a tidy lab room.
The experimenter, seated next to the participant, unwrapped brand new disposable cups and placed
them in front of the subject. The experimenter then opened a new carton of juice and poured a
bit into the two cups. The participant was asked to sip from each cup. So far, so good. Next,
the experimenter produced a tray with a sterilized dead cockroach in a plastic cup. So far, so good. Next, the experimenter produced a tray with a sterilized dead cockroach
in a plastic cup. Now I'm going to take this sterilized dead cockroach, it's perfectly safe,
and drop it in this juice glass, the experimenter told the participant. The roach was dropped into
one cup of juice, stirred with a forceps, and then removed. As a control, the experimenter did the
same with a piece of plastic, dipping it into
the other cup. Now the participants were asked which cup they'd rather sip from. The results
were overwhelming and, frankly, predictable. Almost nobody wanted the roached juice. A brief
moment of contact with an offensive, but not technically harmful, object had ruined it.
In another experiment, participants were asked to eat a square of chocolate fudge
presented on a paper plate. Soon after, two additional pieces of the same fudge were produced,
one in the form of a disc or muffin, and the other shaped like a surprisingly realistic piece
of dog feces. The subjects were asked to take a bite of their preferred piece. Again, nearly no one wanted the aversive
stimuli, which is how psychologists refer to nasty stuff. When asked about the outliers who
opted for the nasty stuff, Rosen waved a hand and said, there's always a macho person.
These results might seem obvious, but the experiments were designed rather craftily
to elicit a disgust response rather than any of the other typical food rejection responses,
which include distaste, rejecting something because it looks or smells bad, like broccoli, if you're a broccoli hater,
or danger, rejecting something because it might harm you, like a poisonous mushroom or a non-sterilized cockroach,
or inappropriateness, rejecting something because it is not considered food, like tree bark or sand.
Disgust was unlike the other three responses in one peculiar fashion. It could be motivated
primarily by ideational factors, by what a person knew or thought she knew about the object at hand.
Until this point, sympathetic magic had been a term psychologists used to account for magical belief systems in traditional cultures, such as hunter-gatherer societies.
Sympathetic magic features a handful of iron laws.
One is the law of contagion, or once in contact, always in contact.
The sterilized roach juice demonstrated this law.
always in contact. The sterilized roach juice demonstrated this law. If you stuck the roached juice in a freezer and offered it to participants a year later, they still wouldn't drink it.
A second is the law of similarity, or things that appear similar are similar.
Appearance equals reality. That would be the dog-do fudge.
Rosen and his colleagues went on to invent other scenarios to test their theories.
Would people drink apple juice if it was served in a brand new bedpan?
Would they sip a favorite soup if it had been stirred by a used but thoroughly washed fly swatter?
Would they touch a new unused tampon to their lips?
Would they wear an actual vintage Nazi hat with a swastika on it?
The 1986 paper was the equivalent of a sculptor's cutting down a statue's raw form from a mammoth block of marble.
And the papers Rosen published in its aftermath were the chisel maneuvering that revealed a detailed anatomy underneath.
In work published the next year, he observed that some of our discussed responses might be adaptations designed to avoid pathogens.
pathogens. Under this logic, a person who swerves to avoid the blast radius of a sick person's sneeze is likely to survive and produce offspring who will themselves avoid sneeze radii.
Rosen also elaborated what he called the animal reminder theory,
which posits that disgust is a way to strenuously ignore the mountain of evidence that humans are, We are not. copulating with the dead, like certain snakes, or cannibalizing our children, like rabbits.
Adhering to such purity rules goes a long way toward minimizing awareness that our bodily temple is only a meat suit. One of Rosen's most intriguing theories is that disgust operates as
a foreshadowing of our own deaths. Every encounter with moldy meat is a sneak preview of the fact
that we will all, at some point, become moldy meat ourselves.
Both the reality puncturing and social elements of disgust make it ripe for comedy.
Take this monologue from a 1995 Seinfeld episode.
Jerry, now I was thinking the other day about hair,
and that the weird thing about it is that people will touch other people's hair.
You will actually kiss another human being right on the head. But if
one of those hairs should somehow be able to get out of that skull and go off on its own, it is now
the vilest, most disgusting thing that you can encounter. The same hair. People freak out. There
was a hair in the egg salad. Seinfeld's point about rogue hairs also goes for fingernails,
dandruff, and other anatomical
flotsam, whether it be our own—grosser, the longer we've been separated from it—or someone
else's—always gross. What we consider innocuous when attached to the body or housed snugly within
it—snot, spit, pee—becomes a pollutant only when it bursts free from its container.
becomes a pollutant only when it bursts free from its container.
In 1994, Rosen and two co-authors came up with a 32-item disgust scale to measure a person's sensitivity to the emotion.
By this time, he was proposing seven domains of disgust—
food, animals, body products, sexual deviance,
what he called body envelope violations, i.e. gore,
poor hygiene, and contact with death.
The first portion of the test consisted of true or false statements like,
I might be willing to try eating monkey meat under some circumstances,
and it would not upset me at all to watch a person with a glass eye take the eye out of the socket.
The second portion asked that a person rate how disgusting she might find certain experiences, such as, you discover that a friend of yours changes underwear only once a week,
or you are walking barefoot on concrete and you step on an earthworm. At 7.5,
Rosin's own score was much lower than the average of 17. This was borne out in our interactions.
At dinner one night,
Rosin pulled out his iPhone to share photos of a meal that one of his sons, an amateur chef,
had prepared. Deep-fried tarantulas, crickets in chili sauce, mealworms sautéed in olive oil.
Dessert was a plate of imitation turds molded from chocolate cake.
One of them was coiled, Rosin said of the cakes zooming in. It was a lot of fun.
Later that night,
the topic of funerals came around.
Razin explained that he hadn't yet decided
what to do with himself, so to speak,
after his own death.
Historically, most cannibals ate their ancestors,
he said.
I mean, they ate them after they died.
They didn't kill them.
He acknowledged that ritual cannibalism held little appeal to the average person, but he thought the underlying concept
had a certain beauty. When my ex-wife died, she was cremated, and we were burying her ashes under
a tree in the backyard, he said, and I felt I had to eat some. Why, I asked as Razan buttered a piece
of baguette. To assimilate some of the person I loved very much,
Razin replied, as though it were obvious.
This is good bread, by the way.
One constant of disgust discourse over the past two centuries
is that people have loved to claim that their period
is the most disgusting period that ever existed.
Obviously, this can't be true.
It's unthinkable that any
era since the advent of modern sanitation could be more disgusting than the thousands of years
preceding it. Yes, it is now easy to buy vomit-flavored jelly beans at your local Walmart
and to watch internet videos of people being decapitated, but these are elective activities.
The scenarios that perhaps carry the highest disgust payload, like caring for the sick, now largely occur in institutions, not homes.
Garbage is sealed in odor-resistant bags.
Our waste vanishes seconds after its production, whisked down an invisible network of pipes to tanks and treatment facilities.
Part of disgust is the very awareness of being disgusted, the consciousness of itself.
The scholar William Ian Miller wrote in 1997,
Disgust necessarily involves particular thoughts,
characteristically very intrusive and unriddable thoughts,
about the repugnance of that which is its object.
In other words, you can't be disgusted without knowing that you're disgusted.
Relatedly, there's no unambiguous evidence that
non-human animals experience disgust. Distaste, yes. Dislike, yes. But the capacity to be disgusted
is, as Miller put it, human and humanizing. Those with ultra-high thresholds are those whom
we think of as belonging to somewhat different categories, proto-human like children, sub-human like the mad, or supra-human like saints.
The 14th century saint Catherine of Siena is famous for drinking the pus of a woman's open
sore in an act of holy self-abasement. The theorist Sian Nye has written a book
about disgust as a social feeling. A person in the thick of it will often want her experience confirmed by other people. As in, oh my god, this cheese smells disgusting.
Here, smell it. More recently, researchers have shown that disgust is an accurate predictor of
political orientation, with conservatives displaying a far higher disgust response than liberals.
In a 2014 study, participants were shown a range of images,
some disgusting, some not, while having their brain responses monitored. With great success,
researchers could predict a person's political orientation based on analysis of this fMRI data.
Rosen's most famous student is Jonathan Haidt, the social psychologist and co-author of The
Coddling of
the American Mind, who received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania and collaborated with
Rosen on a number of papers. I came to see him because I was studying moral psychology,
and I hadn't really thought about disgust, Haidt told me over the phone. But when I started reading
ethnographies, I saw they almost all had purity and pollution norms. Tons of rules,
about menstruation, how you handle corpses, sexual taboos, food taboos. Western societies,
he noticed, were the global exception in their lower regulation of disgust-related activities.
But then this wasn't entirely true, Haidt realized. Within America, there were plenty
of groups that legislated bodily practices related to disgust, like Orthodox Jews and Catholics and, to a lesser degree, social conservatives.
It was only among Western secular progressives that disgust remained somewhat lawless.
continued to zero in on the political uses of the word, noticing that Americans often listed as disgusting such things as racism, brutality, hypocrisy, and ambulance-chasing lawyers.
Liberals say that conservatives are disgusting. Conservatives say that welfare cheaters are
disgusting, he wrote in a paper with Rosen and two others in 1997. What was that about?
Was the use of disgust for such a wide range of activities
simply a metaphoric quirk of the English language?
Did the pundits who sat around all day expressing disgust on TV
have to keep a vomiting bucket next to their desks?
Or were they just being linguistically imprecise?
Neither, exactly.
When Haidt and Rosen looked at other languages,
they found that many contained words with a compound meaning equivalent to disgust, single words that could be applied to both legislation and diarrhea.
German had ekel.
Japanese had keno.
Bengali had genna.
Hebrew had goal.
When an Israeli woman was asked what situations made her feel goal,
she cited a horrible accident and you see body parts all over the place,
and a person who just picked his nose and ate it later.
But she also said that if you really dislike a politician, you would use the word goal.
If the initial function of disgust was like a piece of caution tape plastered over our mouths, the tape had,
over time, wound itself around our other holes to regulate sexual activity and our minds to
regulate moral activity. This potency of the emotion is such that a single anecdote can taint
an entire presidential campaign. You may remember a 2019 story about how Senator Amy Klobuchar once
ate a salad with a comb. According to the article, an aide purchased a Senator Amy Klobuchar once ate a salad with a comb.
According to the article, an aide purchased a salad for Klobuchar at an airport.
Later, when the senator wanted to eat her salad on the plane,
she discovered that there were no utensils available.
After berating the aide, Klobuchar retrieved a comb from her purse
and somehow ate her salad with it.
When finished, she handed the comb to her aide with orders to clean it.
The comb story was part of a larger narrative about the senator's treatment of her staff,
which Klobuchar bravely tried to spin into evidence of her exactitude.
You have to admire the effort, but the senator's defense was useless. Nobody came away thinking
that her mistake was in having high expectations. Her mistake was in doing something gross in front of multiple witnesses.
That image was indelible.
You couldn't read the story without imagining the comb,
a hair perhaps still caught in its teeth,
plunging into an oily airport salad.
Like all disgusting stories, it had a contaminating effect.
Now the anecdote was in you, the voter.
The taste of the comb was upon your own tongue, and you had no
choice but to resent Klobuchar for putting it there. The episode belongs to a list of discussed
related political scandals. The pubic hair on the Coke can, the stain on the blue Gap dress.
On a recent weekend, I passed a truck in Queens with a giant bumper sticker that said,
any burning or disrespecting of the American flag
and the driver of this truck will get out and knock you the
out.
This was a perfect Haidt litmus test.
A liberal might walk past the truck and think some version of
this guy, and it's definitely a guy, has an anger problem.
A conservative might walk past the truck and think
this guy, and it's definitely a guy, must really love our country.
As Haidt put it,
there are people for whom a flag is merely a piece of cloth.
But for most people, a flag is not a piece of cloth.
It has a sacred essence.
If a person views the American flag as a rectangle of fabric,
it is unfathomable to be disgusted by its hypothetical desecration.
If a person views the flag as a sacred symbol, it is unfathomable to be disgusted by its hypothetical desecration. If a person views the flag as a
sacred symbol, it is unfathomable to not feel this way. These two types of human, which broadly map
onto liberal and conservative, or relatively disgust-insensitive and relatively disgust-sensitive,
live in separate moral matrices. If it seems bizarre that disgust sensitivity and politics should be so closely
correlated, it's important to remember that disgust sensitivity is really measuring our
feelings about purity and pollution. And these, in turn, contribute to our construction of moral
systems. And it is our moral systems that guide our political orientations.
To ward off disgust, we enact purity rights,
like rinsing the dirt from our lettuce
or canceling a semi-public figure
who posted a racist tweet when she was a teenager.
We monitor the borders of mouth, body, and nation.
In Mein Kampf, Adolf Hitler described Jews
as like a maggot in a rotting body
and a noxious bacillus.
Another category of humankind consistently deemed
repulsive is women. To take one of several zillion illustrations, one reason long skirts were a
dominant fashion in Western Europe for centuries, according to the fashion historian Anne Hollander,
was to conceal the bottom half of the body, and by extension, its sexual organs. Mermaids aren't just a folkloric figure, but the expression,
Hollander argues, of a horrified disgust at the lower female anatomy, which is seen as amphibiously
moist and monstrous. But purification rites may also be healthful, washing your hands,
or ritually significant, baptism. We will never disentangle ourselves from the instinct to purify,
even as we name different reasons for doing it.
Justice, patriotism, progress, tradition, freedom, public health, God, science.
Beneath it all will be a confused omnivore,
stumbling upon a dewy mushroom in the forest,
with no clue what will happen if she eats it.
One of Rosin's greatest coinages is benign masochism, which describes any experience
that is pleasurable not despite being unpleasant, but because of its unpleasantness. Horror movies,
roller coasters, deep tissue massage, bungee jumping, hot chili peppers,
frigid showers, and tragic novels all fit into the category.
I can think of some additional edge cases, like acupuncture or the films of John Waters.
Rosen pointed out during dinner one night that
many people like to look at their own
after they make it in the toilet.
There is a fascination, all the humor.
It's probably related to benign masochism.
The idea is that these experiences
offer a similar excitement
in that they cause fear or pain or repulsion
without posing any real existential threat.
Our ability to withstand safe menaces
yields a gratifying sense of mastery.
It's a meta experience.
When you gobble a ghost pepper or cue up the exorcist, you get to experience yourself experiencing something,
and you extract enjoyment from your ability to forge a gap between what should feel bad,
but instead, through sheer will, feels fun. As with disgust, benign masochism is a uniquely
human experience.
There's no evidence that dolphins or coyotes or elephants indulge in it.
The paper Rosen and a team wrote about it took me several days to comprehend and served as an example of the subject at hand,
an immense irritant with only abstract and hard-won rewards.
Chili peppers make you sweat.
Tragic novels make you cry.
Academic papers embalm you
in a formaldehyde of words and then give you a splendid phrase to use for the rest of your life.
My personal motherlode of benign masochism, and perhaps yours in the near future,
is the FDA's Food Defect Levels Handbook, which is designed for food manufacturers but is available
online for anyone to browse,
which I do often. It outlines the amount of disgusting matter in a given food that will trigger enforcement action, meaning that any less is just fine. Commercially produced peanut butter,
the site will tell you, is allowed to contain anything fewer than 30 insect fragments and one rodent hair per 100 grams.
A can of mushrooms may house fewer than 20 maggots.
Fewer than a quarter of salt-cured olives in a package may be moldy.
A clever entrepreneur could establish a weight loss program entirely on the basis of alerting people to the larvae and dry rot
and beetle eggs that adulterate their favorite foods.
But who wants to live that way?
The best bulwark against disgust,
the only bulwark against so much of life's wretchedness,
is, in the end, denial. you