impressionableadolescent
New member
You see someone with gravy stains on his shrit, a sour expression on his face, and he's wearing velcro shoes. You figure the guy is mentally-ill, or at the very least someone to be avoided. Then you see a well-dressed, smiling man. You automatically make a more positive judgment of the second person, but is it really fair to value the one person over the other? The next step would be to actually talk to one or the other, but are you really going to talk to the first guy? It seems like a common-sense response, but I wonder, where does it come from? Is it socially-ingrained, is it a natural defense response, inborn into our DNA? Why do we always judge a book by its cover inadvertantly? I mean why do you bother trying to match, shaving, and wearing a smile if people didn't judge a book by its cover? I guess it's all you can do if you don't know a person, and maybe not worth analysis, but if people didn't operate this way, how would society run?