HM",fil’|'|Zl{\.\\D
Tll|vL'l‘|i;\ .l.I.|:N
“Look
aromitl
_w2z1,"
saidthe
cirizcn.
"Thisis
the
largest
maria’!
in
the
world.
"
"Oh
xurely
I101,
"
said
I/tatraveller.
“Well.
perhaps
not
the
largesl,
"
midthe
cilizzm,
"butmuch
the‘best.
"
"Youarecertainlv
wrongtfzerc,"s(1id
the
traveller.“IcanIsl!
you.
..
They
buriedthe
xmznger
inthedusk.
MEL:-;x,
R<)HIiIl'l‘
Lot.
is
STEV1-LNSKJN. 18504894
IfMachfav<-,llihz1dlm(l
a
prim‘?for(llSc‘lplP,
tlaefirsrlining
hewould
haverecomrrzendezf
himtodowouldhave
beentowrizea[wok
aguirm
MucI1i1weIli.a‘m.
VULFAIRE.
1694 l778
3.12 LAW 38
ority
oftheirvaluesandbeliefs.In
the
end,
though,
their
arguments
con-
vince
only
a
fewandoffenda
great
dealmore.Thereason
arguments
do
notworkisthatmost
people
holdtheirideasandvalueswithout
thinking
aboutthem.Thereisa
strong
emotionalcontentintheirbeliefs:
They
re-
ally
donotwanttohavetoreworktheirhabitsof
thinking,
andwhen
you
challenge
them,
whether
directlythroughyourarguments
or
indirectly
throughyour
behavior,
they
arehostile.
Wiseandclever
people
learn
early
onthat
they
can
display
conven-
tionalbehaviorandmouthconventionalideaswithout
having
tobelievein
them.The
power
these
peoplegain
from
blending
inisthatof
being
left
alonetohave
the
thoughtsthey
wantto
have,
andto
express
them
tothe
peoplethey
wantto
express
them
to,
without
suliering
isolation
or
as
tracism.Once
they
haveestablishedthemselvesina
position
of
power,
they
can
try
toconvinceawidercircleofthecorrectnessoftheirideas-
perhapsworkingindirectly,usingCampanella’sstrategies
of
irony
andin-
sinuation.
In
thelatefourteenth
century,
the
Spanishbegan
a.massive
persecu-
tionof
the
Jews,murdering
thousandsand
driving
othersoutofthecoun»
try.
Thosewhoremainedin
Spain
wereforcedtoconvert.Yetoverthenext
threehundred
years,
the
Spanish
noticeda
phenomenon
thatdisturbed
them:
Many
oftheconvertslivedtheiroutwardlivesas
Catholics,
yet
somehow
managed
toretain
their
Jewish
beliefs,
practicing
the
religion
in
private.
Many
oftheseso-calledMarranos
(originally
a
derogatory
term,
being
the
Spanish
for
“pig”)
attained
high
levelsof
governmentoffice,
mar-
riedintothe
nobility,
and
gaveeveryappearance
ofChristian
piety,only
tobe
discovered
latein
lifeas
practicingJews.
(The
SpanishInquisition
was
specifically
commissionedtoferret
them
out.)
Overthe
yearsthey
masteredtheartof
dissimulation,
displaying
cmcifixes
liberally,giving
generous gifts
to
churches,
even
occasionally making
anti-Semitic
rema.rks—~andallthewhile
maintaining
theirinnerfreedomandbeliefs.
In
society,
theMan-anos
knew,
outward
appearances
arewhat
matter.
Thisremainstrue
today.
The
strategy
is
simple:
As
Campanella
didinwrit-
ing
Atheism
Conquered,
makeashowof
blending
in,
even
going
sofarasto
bethemostzealousadvocateofthe
prevailingorthodoxy.
If
you
stickto
conventional
appearances
in
public
fewwillbelieve
you
think
differently
in
private.
Do
notbeso
foolish
asto
imagine
thatinourowntimethe
old
ortho—
doxiesare
gone.Jonas
Salk,
for
instance,
thought
sciencehad
gottenpast
politics
and
protocol.
And
so,
inhissearchfora
polio
vaccine,
hebrokeall
the
rules--goingpublic
witha
discovery
before
showing
ittothescientific
community,taking
creditfor
thevaccinewithout
acknowledging
thescien-
tists
who
had
paved
the
way,making
himself
astar.
The
publicmay
have
lovedhimbutscientistsshunnedhim.His
disrespect
forhis
community’s
orthodoxieslefthim
isolated,
andhewasted
years
trying
to healthe
breach,
and
struggling
for
funding
and
cooperation.
Bertolt
Brechtunderwentamodern
formof
Inquisition—tl1e
House