A View from Behind the Microphone During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Lessons Learned

Thomas W. McGovern
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Abstract

Based on experience as a physician providing audio, video, and print media in the Catholic sphere during the COVID-19 pandemic, the author discusses patterns of behavior observed in the media that contributed to polarization among people of good will. Such patterns included the practice of biases such as the fundamental attribution error, the white hat bias, and motivated cognition. Polarized beliefs also developed from individual and secular cultural over-reliance on the left brain's discomfort with uncertainty to find certainty where it did not exist. Reliance on the right brain's expertise of seeing the big picture and fostering relationships while incorporating information from the left brain would lead to better understanding and action. Counterfeit versions of individual human dignity and the common good led to media reporting battles between proponents of individual rights versus the common good, while a Catholic understanding of human dignity and the common good harmonizes them instead of seeing them in opposition. Finally, the article examines some practical advice to put relationships above being right. These include active forgiveness, examination of conscience around our biases, and the CAKE acronym among other bits of wisdom from medical literature, modern psychology, and the Catholic tradition for how we can each be better versions of ourselves when discussing polarizing medical topics.
COVID-19 大流行期间麦克风背后的视角:经验教训
在 COVID-19 大流行期间,作者作为一名医生在天主教领域提供音频、视频和印刷媒体,根据自己的经验,作者讨论了在媒体中观察到的导致善意的人们之间两极分化的行为模式。这些模式包括基本归因错误、白帽子偏见和动机认知等偏见的做法。两极分化的信仰还源于个人和世俗文化过度依赖左脑对不确定性的不适感,在不存在确定性的地方寻找确定性。依靠右脑洞察全局、促进人际关系的专业能力,同时吸收左脑的信息,将有助于更好地理解和行动。假冒的个人尊严和共同利益导致了媒体报道中个人权利支持者与共同利益支持者之间的争斗,而天主教对人的尊严和共同利益的理解则是将两者统一起来,而不是将两者对立起来。最后,文章探讨了一些将人际关系置于正确之上的实用建议。这些建议包括积极宽恕、审视我们的偏见和良知,以及 CAKE 首字母缩写词,以及其他来自医学文献、现代心理学和天主教传统的智慧,告诉我们在讨论两极分化的医学话题时,如何做更好的自己。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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