Humans are curious creatures who may very well feel the urge to disregard exact orders. This drive is often encouraged by feelings of boredom or often because we cannot limit ourselves to more knowledge. The objective of this study was to observe curiosity between males and females. We evaluated female “peekers” against male “peekers” and female “non-peekers” against male “non-peekers.” A box visible enough to get attention from participants was decorated, a hole was cut on the top and a sign was taped to the front that read, “Do not peek.” A peeker was considered someone who disobeyed the sign and looked directly inside and non peekers were individuals who recognized the sign and followed its instruction. We hypothesized that females would be more likely to ignore the command and peek inside the box to satisfy their curiosity. After running a t-test, we concluded that there was a statistically significant difference between female peekers and male peekers and equally for male non-peekers and female non-peekers.
Keywords: curiosity, gender, commands, obey
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Cicero suggested that curiosity was an essential joy for learning and understanding while St. Augustine defined it as a futile hunger for knowledge (Lowenstein, 1994). During the 1960’s, after the field of psychology was launched so was contemporary research on curiosity. D.E Berlyne was an important founder of the concept and study on “exploratory behavior.” He proposed that curiosity is our need to obtain new information and a physical understanding of the world, which increases our likelihood to explore the things around us (Litman & Spielberger, 2003). Jordan Litman (2005) stated that absorbing more knowledge is satisfying because we hope to dismiss feelings of ignorance and doubt instead of additionally fueling our curiosity (Litman,
People who are inquisitive ask questions about why or how something is the way it is. They are not satisfied with a simple explanation of how something works, but always search for a deeper, more involved answer or explanation. Curious people question everything that interests them, even if the circumstances are not right to do so. In Anthem, Equality 7-2521 possesses these traits. As a child, he questioned everything about the world that his Teachers did not teach him, even if the Council of Scholars told him that there were no mysteries about those topics. He wanted to know everything about the world he lived in. He demonstrates his curiosity when he says, “And questions give us no rest. We know not why our curse makes us seek we know not what, ever and ever. But we cannot resist it. It whispers to us that there are great things on this earth of ours, and that we can know them if we try, and that we must know them. We ask, why must we know, but it has no answer to give us. We must know that we may know” (24). This is a desire which is never satisfied, since there is always more to learn about the world. Equality 7-2521 is naturally curious, and yearns to learn more at all
o to be able to seek what one feels to be a broader understanding on the fundamentals
In a novella by Ayn Rand called Anthem, creativity is a sin, punishable by lashes or, if severe enough, death. Curiosity, because it is one of the branches of creativity, is also a great wrongdoing. In the beginning, Equality 7-2521 talked of his sins and that the curse he has that causes his curiosity “is our wonder and our secret fear, that we know and do not resist” (18). Technology, although incredibly mindboggling, was the reason he feared the repercussions of his thought-crimes.
Curiosity is often defined as a strong desire to know or learn something. Being filled to the brim with curiosity is one of the most amazing feelings. Finding something you are interested in and wanting to know every single thing there is to know about it. Being inquisitive is such a powerful thing, always wanting to see more, to hear more, to do more, to be more. It makes people who they are, if someone is not very curious, they might be very dull because they know what they know and they are content with that. It is the naturally curious people that get more out of life, because they are always searching for something more, something bigger and brighter, and often they find it. But, in certain situations, being overly curious can land you in a place you did not plan on being and a place you do not want to be. This shows through certain works of literature, for example, Charles Perrault’s story “Bluebeard”. Through the ages, this story has been tagged as one about the negative effects of female curiosity. Bluebeard’s wife in the story is given a key by her husband to a locked door in their home. She is told to not go in that specific room, but overwhelmed with curiosity she does anyway. Another work, a film in fact, The Piano directed by Jane Campion, is an adaptation of “Bluebeard” and makes some very distinct references to it. The Piano also points to themes of female curiosity through the main character Ada McGrath. Ada is married to a man named Alistair whom she had never met. She begins to have an affair with another man, named George Baines, under unusual circumstances. Her husband finds out and naturally blames it on her “female curiosity”, and proceeds to punish her. Her punishment is similar to the pu...
...ich may be described as a desperate addiction to discovery is a fine concept but a dangerous practice. Man's natural flaws debase any professed altruistic goal; all attempts at discovery are ultimately revealed to be corrupt, selfish, and misbegotten.
According to Janesick (as cited in Agee, 2009), my research question begins with “intellectual curiosity, if not a passion for a particular topic”(p. 433). Such is the case for me. My intellectual curiosity began while instructing a course for the federal government that was complicated for individuals to understand. The lecture methodology did not work to transfer knowledge, let alone retain it. Retaining the knowledge was key because after a series of courses our students are required to take their certification exams. Passing these exams allows the student to retain their employment. I was determined to change the curriculum to active learning and found engaging methodologies that allowed students to connect with peers and use their
middle of paper ... ... Our curiosity is what makes our interactions interesting and entertaining. As members of society, it is our innate ability to wander further than what we have in front of us. We want to impose our opinions on everything.
... to think deeper and seek answers that can achieve higher understanding of the world around us. Though, as, one will find stated in many books and readings of philosophy, “be aware that seeking deeper understanding and delving into the depths of more awareness, one may bring forth more questions than answers “.
In some sense people are more truthful in their behavior when they don’t know that they are being observed. On the other hand “People may behave differently when they know they are being watched. Sometimes people try to behave better that they normally would in order to appear more socially desirable or acceptable” (3) and this could be contributed as a downside of naturalistic observation. Only in my personal opinion my individual research was successful, but quite inadequate in providing solid and undisputable evidence, possibly my research would benefit from more observation and data
As children we are born with a natural curiosity that pulls us out into the world. Going out and experiencing new things, seeing different environments; like the first time you see the ocean or snow or the Grand Canyon, it adds to the world that we know and changes our perspective on it with each new thing. But if we reflect upon it and ask what is the ocean? Or what is it that gives us life and makes us so different from a rock. These are questions which cannot be easily answ...
While the use of sense perception as the basis for the pursuit of knowledge is critical, it is dependent on other tools or ways of knowing to ensure that knowledge is being pursued. Without emotion and logic, sense perception is very restricted because there is no knowledge to be interpreted and pursued. It is the use of multiple ways of knowing that allow knowledge situations to not be just nails, but to exist in different forms and interpretations. Therefore, the combined use of ways of knowing is critical to the pursuit of knowledge.
Curiosity is an important and powerful trait. It keeps your mind active because curious people are always asking questions and search for the answers in their minds. It opens your mind up to new ideas. When you are curious about something, your mind can anticipate new ideas that relate to it. It takes curiosity to discover a new world of possibilities. With a curious mind, there will always be new things that attract your attention. Pandora in Theogony by Hesiod shows us why being curious can be very dangerous. Although it may seem being curious is such a great and healthy trait because it helps keep your mind active, there can also be a downside to it.
Milgram, S. (1963). Behavioral study of obedience. Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology. 67: 371–378.
Curiosity is a personality trait that everyone has in some way or another throughout their whole life. How it is defined, however, is up for debate. Many people consider curiosity to be simply a desire to learn and know, but scholars tend to take the meaning deeper. George Loewenstein (1994) describes curiosity as the attraction to information that “confers no extrinsic benefit,” so people tend to delve more deeply into things than would serve to help them somehow. To define it in a more distinctive manner from other traits such as novelty-seeking, one may say curiosity is a, “positive emotional-motivational system associated with the recognition, pursuit, and self-regulation of novel and challenging opportunities” (Kashdan 2004). Researchers
The layman’s view of motivation is defined has the action whereby one is given a reason or purpose to complete an objective with more zeal. This in itself is not something new, but rather a method that has been applied for an immeasurable number years, possibly before it was even defined, classified