REVIEW: SURVIVAL OF THE NICEST

REVIEW: SURVIVAL OF THE NICEST


PRODUCT (book):  SURVIVAL OF THE NICEST:  How Altruism Makes Us Human and Why It Pays to Get Along

Author:  Stefan Klein (translated by David Dallenmayer)

Publisher:  The Experiment Publishing [2014]


Stefan Klein writes engaging books about big, important subjects.  His last book, THE SCIENCE OF HAPPINESS, was a #1 International Best Seller.  It won Klein the Georg von Holtzbrinck Prize for Scientific Journalism.

What Klein does is pile together data from a wide assortment of scientific studies in many different disciplines and then combine them with factoids from history and modern culture in order to look at some Big Human Question from many different angles.  Then he puts the puzzle pieces together and comes up with cogent answers that make a lot of sense.

All this dancing around encourages other people to look at and explore new directions (or resurrect old ones) that may lead to more effective ways of walking in our post-modern age.

It’s a lot like putting together a life-built poem, actually.

EVERYTHING NICE AND RODNEY KING

In his latest book, SURVIVAL OF THE NICEST, Klein puts together the current research on genetics and the brain, economics, social psychology, behavioral and anthropological experiments and just plain old common-sense real-life observations to answer a question that echoes Rodney King’s plaintive query, “Why can’t we all just get along?

The book does not get into the big moral issues about whether we humans are inherently “good” or “bad.”  It doesn’t lay a lot of shoulds and oughtas on you.

As Klein says, “There are already plenty of convincing systems of moral philosophy, and the only question is why we follow them so seldom.

What this book does instead is take a look at what scientists and other observers have discovered about human nature.  Surprisingly, these findings back up and validate what all the wisdom-systems of the world have been saying:  Humans are built to connect with one another and help each other.

Altruism, the urge to help others, is locked into our genes side-by-side with alpha-dog tendencies and the urge for autonomy.

WORLD-CHANGING TOOLS

Cooperation and collaboration were the tools our ancestors used in the distant past to upgrade human existence, step-by-step.

Our predecessors of long ago lived in caves and other nasty places and spent their time running away from lions and tigers and bears and placating bullying neighbors while trying to keep their children from starving.

Because our ancestors banded together and developed ways to work with one another towards common purposes, many of us today have been raised to a very different level of existence.

Now we live in cities, towns and communities that depend on the efforts of many good folks to keep them running right.

Some of us work on keeping the rest of us from killing off all the lions, tigers and bears who used to feed on our ancestors.

We’re still trying to find ways to discourage overt bullying tendencies that are also a part of our basic  human equipment, and we keep trying to find ways to stem an epidemic of obesity.

Klein says about all these scientific studies that he has encountered, “A central discovery is that egocentrics do better only in the short term, but in the long run, it is mostly people who act for the welfare of others who get ahead.

The “me-me-me” guys don’t get it all their way, it seems.

KINDNESS IS CONTAGIOUS

Any act of kindness has a ripple-effect that spreads, the scientists have found.

In one report published in the New England Journal of Medicine, there was a story about an incredible cascade of altruism that was triggered in 2007 by a 28-year-old man who decided to donate a kidney to anyone who needed it.  He gave away the organ without expecting anything in return.

The young man’s donated kidney was transplanted into a 53-year-old woman in Arizona.  Her husband, who was unable to give her a kidney because of incompatibility, offered to donate his kidney to someone who needed it.

The recipient of that kidney was a young woman in Ohio whose mother then donated an organ.

This chain continued.  Brothers donated because someone had helped their sisters, friends gave their kidneys because some anonymous donor had saved their buddy’s life. The chain crisscrossed America.  It ignored racial boundaries.

No one was forced to undergo an organ removal.  Donors often waited months to find a compatible recipient to whom their kidney could be given.

At the end of the study, there had been a total of 22 operations.

The last one reported was an organ donated by a young African American woman in Ohio.

None of the donors gained any personal advantage from their donation.  They were all simply acting out of gratitude that some unknown person had given back a life to their loved one.

Stories like this one show that kindness really is contagious.  People who see other people being kind to each other are more willing to be kind their own selves.

NOT ALL SUNSHINE AND MARIGOLDS

I also have to say this book is not all sweetness-and-light, mostly because we humans are not.

The Takers of the world, the Freeloaders and the “all-for-one-and-that-one’s-me” guys in the world make sometimes insurmountable problems in the easy flow of “all-together-now.”

Studies delineate all the reasons why the Dark Side of humans evolved.  There were good life-and-death reasons for it.

All of us are made of both sets of impulses – the lion and the lamb lives in us all.

How we deal with these impulses in ourselves and others determines how we deal with each other.

Klein is assiduous in pointing out the pitfalls of ignoring the actions of the ones who refuse to get with the program.  He even suggests ways to counter such self-serving moves.

FEEDING THE GIVING HEART

As Klein says, this flood of findings by scientists can help us design ways to encourage people’s more generous propensities and discourage their thug tendencies.

Thinking on these insights can help us develop ourselves into individuals who can build the sorts of sustainable communities in which we want to spend our lives.

Klein lays out various strategies that help encourage and nurture the loving-kindness that lurks in the human heart.

  • Connection counters and heals the Lone Cowboy Syndrome. The more people can understand and accept that each of us is part of all of us, that we are all interdependent beings and we need one another, the better prepared we will be to share resources and help each other.
  • Long-term commitments and common interests promote loyalty and selflessness more than short-term arrangements do. The saddest commentary I have ever heard describing a person of my acquaintance was this:  “Oh, him….He only has NEW friends.
  • Fairness promotes cooperation and trust among people. Unfairness is fatal, as is allowing freeloaders to take advantage of a system based on generosity.  People are often willing to forego large personal advantages as long as they are convinced that others are being fair.  Nothing destroys cooperation as fast as feeling exploited.
  • Tolerance and respect for other people’s differences promotes voluntary cooperation while coercion and control (as well as specious rewards) tend to destroy it. Sitting on people’s heads will not change their minds.
  • Transparency in the public arena encourages right behavior. This works because cooperative people benefit from their good reputations.
  • Audible, public praise for even small contributions to the common good are often more effective than punishing malefactors in encouraging our altruistic natures to unfold.

FINAL THOUGHTS

I recommend this book as a thought-provoking read, one likely to have you coming back to it again and again.

Many of the wise guys tell us that we create the worlds in which we live.

In this book Klein presents an array of scientific proof that says we can, indeed, work to make a paradise right here on earth.  All it really takes is getting into the habit of showing loving-kindness to one another.

As Klein suggests in his closing sentence in this book, “The journey begins with curiosity.  By experimenting with generosity we have nothing to lose and much to gain, for selflessness makes us happy and transforms the world.

 


 AHIMSA

“Do no harm….”

The whispers of a thousand thousand years of wise guys

Beat out a rhythm in my head

Under the dancing light of Indra’s Net

That stretches into infinity.

A totally lovely concept, that…

A premise to dream on.

 

But, what can you do

When your determination to stand harmless

Meets an adamantine wall of arrogant idiocy

That insists on creating a maelstrom of discord and thorny prickles

That stab and poke and irritate,

That leaves a wake of broken dreams behind.

What can you do?

 

Ahimsa thrives among the gentle ones,

Who heed the call to hug and hold each other warm

Through sunshine and starlight,

Who dance and laugh in the rain,

Collecting sweet joys to share.

 

But then there comes one fool

Who insists on blundering about

With his eyes held stubbornly shut

Banging into everybody else’s dance,

Stepping all over everybody else’s feet.

 

Chaos spreads, spinning outward,

As this arrogant disregard

Knocks surrounding dancers off their feet

And into other people’s spaces,

And the disruption ripples across the dance hall floor

Spreading in widening gyres.

Ahimsa does not work then.

Like a flashlight with dead batteries

It cannot help to show the way.

 

And now you’re down to that one penultimate set of moves,

The one you always dread,

The one where you put on your gnarly troll-girl suit,

The one where you grab that fool

By the scruff of his neck and the seat of his pants

And you march him on out that dance hall door….

The “bye, bye…go-do-your-Saint-Vitus dance-somewhere-else-please” move,

The one where you throw away another piece of your own self.

 

And you know before you even start

That in the aftermath of all that,

When the hall shuts down and the floor is clear,

And the dancers all go home,

There you will be, sitting in the dark,

Crying for that still-blind fool

Wandering outside in the cold.

by Netta Kanoho

Picture credit:  via Amazon.com

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24 thoughts on “REVIEW: SURVIVAL OF THE NICEST

  1. I really love self-help books and this one has to be on my list as it is a perfect blend of positive thinking and self-introspection.I have many issues and they really do not get any better as the day passes.I have this fear of commitment and it is a little embarrassing to admit but I really do not open up about my feelings to anyone.
    I really have been looking for such books these days and hope it helps me.

    1. Hey Shrey:

      Thanks for the visit and the comments. Please come again….

  2. I have heard of this book before and haven’t read it. I love the theme of this book and how you described it. Kindness is indeed contagious but sadly there is very little of it in this messed up and broken world. That video is the epitome of what kindness is. I remember when I first watched that video last year on my facebook news feed, my heart melted and I was reduced to tears. Why is there so little of kindness in today’s world? Why do people feel the need to overpower others? If anything, it inspires me to be kinder and nicer to people.
    Great article.

    1. Hey Kent: Thanks for the visit and the comments. My own feeling is that kindness may be the only way to fix this broken world….Please come again!

      1. You’re right! I will! Please write more interesting articles!

        1. Great, Kent! I will keep writing more articles….Please come again.

  3. Susan Ray says:

    Becoming quite interested in this subject because I’ve been called “one of the nicest people” but I’m often bullied and mocked because others don’t understand It just feels good to be nice and it’s for no other reason than to feel good that I’ve done the right thing. No other alternative motive but many are intimidated by seeing what they lack in themselves.

  4. wsfitness says:

    Hello!
    I love your thorough review on this book. I am one to spend literally HOURS at a book store because I end up reading a good portion of the books just to make sure it’s something I want to take home. This is something that sounds like so much more than a self help book. It spands more disciplines than anyone would guess by just reading the inside cover. For this thoughtful review, I thank you. I wish all reviews were like this 🙂

    1. Thanks, w….please come again!

  5. Musbau Shittu says:

    Wow!! Thanks for sharing this nice article, I appreciate you taking time and breaking it all down for us this is great. I don’t really know much about poems but this is inspiring. I have bookmarked to read further on this. I will also share this with my friends and sure they are gonna like it. Again, thanks for the article you have really done a great job.

    1. Thanks for the visit and for sharing your thoughts, Musbau.

  6. This is a book I’ll love to read and go through, the title seems so catchy and the review was so detailed and I’ll love to also ask if this is the first book from Stefan Klein, I guess I’m not conversant with the author but the book is loaded and I’ll love to purchase it immediately. Thanks for the well job done on the review

    1. Thanks for your visit and for sharing your thoughts, Salim.

  7. Tracy cole says:

    This sounds so exciting and adventurous. I feel tickled by the theme. What an amazingly talented writer you are!

    I’ve really enjoyed reading this article as you’ve provided us with lots of valuable information. I have heard about  this lovely book but I havent tasted its benefits this much. This is an eye opener for me and i am getting mine anytime soon

    1. Thanks for the visit and for sharing your thoughts, Tracy.

  8. Even with all the philosophies in this world we humans still find a way to harm each other. I’ve read a lot of books about human nature and why we are the way we are. I have also tried to be true to my innate nature of kindness, but I’ve found that it’s often mistaken for weakness. I am so disappointed with humanity that I have largely withdrawn from society. I hope this book offers guidance to people who need it and who can use it to extend kindness in the world for I am tired.

    1. Thanks for the visit and for sharing your thoughts, Dawn.  I do understand your sadness and am sorry that you’ve felt the need to retreat from society.  

      Whenever I get disheartened and the world looks really dark, I remind myself….all it takes to bring back the light is one little match.  The dark can never completely overwhelm the light.  And that’s a very good thing, I think.

      Please do come again.

  9. afolabi anumicheal says:

    Thanks for writing this review on survival of the nicest. You really try in this article to explain in detail what to look out for in the book. I must say Kelvin really did a lot of work in this book. Although I have not read it but with the little I have go through about it here. I learn one thing or the other from the book and am hoping to get it in coming days, it good to be kind to one another other because that is the only way we can make this world a better place for all of us to live 

    1. Thanks for your visit, afolabi, and for sharing your thoughts.  I do appreciate it.

  10. Very informative review and touching interpretation. This looks like a nice read. (The video though… tears…) The video was very touching and a great example of happiness. Our ancestors must have done something right because we are here still trying to spread kindness and stop bullying. 

    I thought this was a very good review. Thanks for sharing.

    1. Thanks for your visit and for sharing your thoughts, Melissa.  I know…that video!  Right?  

      I think you’re right, you know.  Our ancestors must’ve done some things right!  Thanks for that one!

      Please do come again.

  11. Thank you for your article. Stefan Klein’s book introduces a compelling concept to wrap our heads around. 

    It is common to hear how aggressive moves are required to take over the challenges we confront. But contentious procedures leave marks that can bring us down further on in life. 

    Stefan Klein’s idea implies another, more sustainable approach.

    1. Paolo, thanks for your visit and for sharing your thoughts.  My own feeling is that playing nice gets a lot more accomplished than pushing and shoving does.  Lessons learned on the playground stand up to scientific inquiry and study, it seems.  

      (I found that really cool!)

      Please do come again.

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