{"id":3840,"date":"1955-07-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1955-07-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1955-vol-36-no-7-social-sense\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T13:29:52","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T13:29:52","slug":"july-1955-vol-36-no-7-social-sense","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1955-vol-36-no-7-social-sense\/","title":{"rendered":"July 1955 &#8211; Vol. 36, No. 7 &#8211; Social Sense"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Men and women are not isolated                     individuals. They are associated in many ways: in business,                     in schools and in societies; they are banded together in families,                     churches and nations. Until we accept this fact and give it                     proper weight and thought, neither the problems of society                     nor our problems of personal mental health can be effectively                     stated and solved.<\/p>\n<p> Social sense is the lubricant that helps us rub shoulders                     with other people without friction. It is useful in every                     phase of living, from the contacts of everyday affairs to                     the highest service to humanity. It prompts you to move well                     into the elevator or the street car to leave room for more                     people; it inspires those who work for great social causes.                     It can be big or little in the things it does, but it is the                     human virtue that makes civilization and culture possible.                     Without social sense mankind would be a race of barbarians,                     lacking both institutions for public service and the business                     enterprises that make our high standard of living possible.<\/p>\n<p>Our hope of advancing civilization lies in developing an                     infinite individual variety within a society so ordered as                     to give it fullest scope. As John Stuart Mill put it in his                     great essay <em>On Liberty<\/em>: &#8220;&#8230; of pursuing our own good                     in our own way so long as we do not attempt to deprive others                     of theirs, or impede their efforts to obtain it.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Civilization is a fragile construction, painfully hard to                     build and to preserve, tragically easy to destroy. We acted                     like apes for quite a stretch &#8211; millions of years, scholars                     tell us &#8211; and the business of acting like gentlemen is a comparatively                     new idea. Social sense is one of the protective devices to                     keep us from breaking through the thin veneer.<\/p>\n<p>Society is not only a protective device but a positive good.                     In it a man can be fully himself. No one can realize his ambitions                     except through business, literature, art, the professions                     and other means of self-expression &#8211; every one of which                     requires an audience or colleagues.<\/p>\n<h3>Stability and change<\/h3>\n<p>The primary ends of society are social order and public                     prosperity. These require a certain stability. If conditions                     were constantly changing, life would be impossible. We must                     be able to count on what to expect in the home, in the office,                     and in all other of our contacts with people, if we are to                     live happily, work successfully, and enjoy life.<\/p>\n<p>But this is not to deny the necessity of change. To stall                     would be just as fatal as to race our engines or change gears                     every minute. A wholesome society must be a happy combination                     of conservation and change, of stable order and intelligent                     readjustment.<\/p>\n<p>Advancement demands change, but it must be informed advancement.                     Nonconformists in matters of principles and science and business                     are the world&#8217;s great innovators, leaders of world opinion,                     but nonconformists in the decencies and customs of everyday                     life are the world&#8217;s most waspish irritations.<\/p>\n<p>Our problems of social living are complicated by the expansion                     of human knowledge and its creations. Our social competence                     must catch up with our scientific achievements. The intelligence                     needed for building a world in which atomic fission and human                     beings may exist together has become indispensable.<\/p>\n<p>We are likely to think that it is not worth doing the little                     we can do toward saving our western way of life, but all that                     is done, the greatest that is done, will be made up of the                     acts of individual people. Whoever can clarify our thinking                     in a small way and in a small circle, whoever can remove a                     resentment, soften a prejudice, strengthen a good work: that                     person is contributing to the total solution.<\/p>\n<h3>Prejudice<\/h3>\n<p>One of the greatest encumbrances in business, professional                     and social life is prejudice. The simple truth is that for                     success in business and for personal peace of mind we need                     to co-operate in working out a way of life with people                     who are just as sure they are right as we are ourselves.<\/p>\n<p>This is more widely accepted in business than in many other                     sectors of life. Few business men seeking to sell goods ask                     about the prospect&#8217;s religion, race or political beliefs.                     They are concerned with what the man represents in the business                     field.<\/p>\n<p>Outside of business a man has room for opinions, convictions                     and ideas, but not for intolerance except against things and                     acts that are anti-social. In attempting to eradicate                     these things, intolerance is beneficial. Robert Burns, the                     poet who could pity an uprooted daisy and feel the panic thumping                     through the heart of a field-mouse, whose tolerance embraced                     the world like the warmth of a summer day, fought what he                     believed to be social ills with taunts and venom.<\/p>\n<p>Tolerance means we should not expect too much of other people.                     No one has a right to call himself civilized who cannot listen                     to both sides of an argument and get the other fellow&#8217;s point                     of view. This is good business as well as good social sense.                     By looking at the proposal from the buyer&#8217;s viewpoint, the                     salesman perceives the things that need to be cleared away                     so as to let the customer see the good points about the sales                     proposition.<\/p>\n<p>Social sense calls for a self-forgetful approach to                     those with whom we live and work and fraternize. The negative                     person should read David Dunn&#8217;s practical book <em>Try Giving                     Yourself Away <\/em>(Updegraff Press).<\/p>\n<p>To indulge in anger is not only unsocial, but it is against                     one&#8217;s own interests. Someone has ventured the opinion that                     all provocations to anger may be brought under one of two                     rubrics: fear or mortification. It is difficult to disprove                     this, and just thinking of it makes it simple to set up safeguards                     against flying into tantrums.<\/p>\n<p>A person who is angry does not see life in the same way                     as when he is cheerful. Dignity, common sense, justice, are                     shrivelled up in a blast of temper and destroyed, and the                     angry person looks somewhat ridiculous.<\/p>\n<p>Logic tells us the futility of anger. Is it not absurd to                     be angry with a man because he does not understand the force                     of your reasons, or gives weak ones of his own, or is rude?                     A Stoic philosopher, Epictetus, said in that stately way of                     his something that is good for every executive&#8217;s guidance                     even today: If they are wise men, why make war with them;                     if they are fools, why heed them?<\/p>\n<h3>Does ignorance excuse?<\/h3>\n<p>Between foolishness and ignorance there is a wide gulf,                     and the nice questions arise: how far should we indulge ignorance;                     how far does ignorance excuse unsocial conduct? Finding reasonable                     answers to these questions is a challenge &#8211; and a headache                     &#8211; to every business executive.<\/p>\n<p>There are two kinds of ignorance. A man may be ignorant                     of what is right and what is wrong, and this may be cured                     by instruction; or he may be possessed by the ignorance that                     thinks wrong does not matter. We ought to try to understand                     people to the extent of knowing which sort of ignorance they                     have, so that we shall know how to cure it, or how far to                     trust them, or whether we should avoid them.<\/p>\n<p>One need not be ashamed of one&#8217;s ignorance if it is honestly                     come by&#8230;the result of cramped opportunity to learn, of schooling                     cut short by economic forces or by illness, or of something                     lying totally outside one&#8217;s control. The great fault in ignorance                     lies in not trying to cure it when opportunity can be made.<\/p>\n<h3>Social education<\/h3>\n<p>In appraising social sense we cannot measure people by their                     pretensions, by what someone called &#8220;the shadowy grandeur                     of artificial poses.&#8221; It is not by partaking gracefully in                     the motions of formal dinner parties, or reading books because                     they are &#8220;best sellers&#8221;, or talking socially to people we                     do not care about concerning things that do not interest us:                     it is not by these manifestations that we demonstrate our                     social sense. Social sense pertains to the realities of life.<\/p>\n<p>Whatever force great national or world leaders had in the                     way of technical knowledge, academic learning and the power                     of making courageous decisions, every one had, pre-eminently,                     the personal magnetism that won people. Their social sense                     was the keystone of their success arch.<\/p>\n<p>Where are we of today to start reconstructing our world                     on a firm base of social sense? Most of us will agree that                     humanity&#8217;s greatest hope is in education, moral and academic,                     of both children and adults, but particularly education of                     children. We must so arrange things that young people are                     given the best possible opportunity to reach social maturity.<\/p>\n<p>Children must be taught certain fundamentals, like respect                     for others&#8217; rights and for others as individuals, honesty                     in their own thoughts and in dealing with associates, and                     living under the law. They learn these things in school, in                     the family, in church, in associations like the Boy Scouts                     and the Girl Guides. The lessons will not be confined to hidebound                     texts, but will use living principles &#8211; things in which we                     of the western world have believed and in which we trust &#8211;                     as the firm base upon which to erect a self-reliant,                     self-possessed and self-controlled society.<\/p>\n<p>It is not enough to abolish by legislation some external                     phase of temptation to anti-social behaviour. Grown people,                     as well as children, may be nursed into inefficiency by relying                     upon law to keep their social course straight.<\/p>\n<p>What we need is the imbibing of principles that will give                     us a standard by which to judge any event, a starting place                     for any adventure, a base to return to when the going gets                     hard. The person who establishes his life on such principles                     can be the most daring person, because from there on up his                     intelligence has fullest play, not tied down by fearsome backward                     glances nor trammelled by ghostly memories of taboos half                     remembered.<\/p>\n<h3>Rights and duties<\/h3>\n<p>One thing necessary to know is that every right brings with                     it an obligation of a double sort: when one man has a right                     other men are under an obligation to respect it, and, in a                     more subtle sense, when a man has a right he is thereby laid                     under a social obligation to employ it for the general good.<\/p>\n<p>Absolute freedom is not possible, and we only frustrate                     ourselves if we yearn earnestly for it. It can never be allowed,                     in business or in the professions or in any other aspect of                     life, that members of society should do as they please. We                     have the right to speak freely, to worship freely, to choose                     our work freely, to select our political leaders freely: but                     these rights carry with them the obligation to speak, to worship,                     to choose and to select wisely.<\/p>\n<p>To assure society of general adherence to the necessary                     rules of duty, we have governing principles like the British                     North America Act, the Criminal Code of Canada, and the rules                     of fair play in sports &#8211; things that are our social way of                     saying that might does not make right, that minorities and                     erring people and individuals are, in our way of life, important.<\/p>\n<p>Because human behaviour is so complex, no book of rules                     can hope to regulate all of it in detail. Our laws attempt                     to lay down broad maxims and to govern certain special types                     of behaviour that experience has shown are likely to do particularly                     hurtful damage.<\/p>\n<p>When one of these laws is taken out of the statute book                     on to the floor of a court, social sense and clear intelligence                     and upright reasoning need to be applied by the authorities.                     In a good society, a court of law would not be an arena wherein                     lawyers battle for conviction or acquittal, but a forum in                     which counsel co-operate with the bench to see that justice                     is done.<\/p>\n<h3>A sense of values<\/h3>\n<p>Every civilized man desires the richest and fullest life                     obtainable. To attain it he needs to learn to think and to                     feel and to discriminate, to develop himself as fully as his                     environment allows, to express himself in ways that contribute                     to his social satisfaction, to permit his intellect to play                     freely around every significant event and idea, and to allow                     his emotions to respond fittingly to all stimuli.<\/p>\n<p>Clive Bell, writing in his book <em>Civilization <\/em>(Pelican),                     put it this way: &#8220;Sweet reasonableness and appropriate seriousness                     were the qualities that distinguish Greek life, thought and                     art: the one is Reason, sweetened by a Sense of Values; the                     other a Sense of Values, hardened and pointed by Reason.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>This could be taken as an all-inclusive prescription                     for attainment of social sense. From these primary qualities                     may spring a host of secondaries, like tolerance, intellectual                     honesty, good manners, a dislike of vulgarity, freedom from                     superstition and prudery, a taste for truth and beauty, detestation                     of brutality, desire for a liberal education, and a fearless                     acceptance of the good things of life.<\/p>\n<p>Only by grasping such a handful of civilized qualities as                     we can, and holding them tight, may we hope to become members                     of a good society.<\/p>\n<h3>Understanding people<\/h3>\n<p>One of the bases of social sense in business or private                     life is an understanding of people. There are few gifts that                     one person can give to another as rich as understanding, and                     there are few necessities so vital.<\/p>\n<p>We cannot imagine two departmental managers working successfully                     at arm&#8217;s length on a project, particularly if they are highly                     creative people whose self-expression through their work                     means more to them than bread-and-butter. They need                     to know each other&#8217;s nature, desires and interests, so as                     to win and give a sympathetic response to overtures and suggestions.<\/p>\n<p>It can be vastly perplexing if, when we are engaged on work                     that requires co-operation and joint action, we come                     up against a personality we have not studied.<\/p>\n<p>In a special issue of the <em>American Journal of Sociology                     <\/em>a few years ago, devoted to a study of &#8220;Misunderstandings                     in Human Relations&#8221;, attention was drawn to the tendency of                     introverted (contemplative) and extroverted (activistic) personalities                     to misinterpret each other because they are unable to understand                     that they see different meanings and objectives in life.<\/p>\n<p>Examples will readily occur to business men from their own                     experience of how two men, locked in responsibility for some                     plan or job, flared up and parted and perhaps ruined the job,                     just because of this unfortunate misunderstanding. One man                     thought the other a busybody; the other thought his harness-mate                     was a dreamer.<\/p>\n<p>Social sense in a situation like this does not consist in                     ignoring differences, but in getting to understand them. Study                     may be needed, reading a book or two, perhaps talking with                     a psychologist or a psychiatrist, but certainly a frank talking                     it out with the men concerned.<\/p>\n<h3>Customs and manners<\/h3>\n<p>Many smaller upsets occur in the working day, due to people                     rubbing each other the wrong way. To avoid piling up an unbearable                     load of static, we have developed a code of customs to which                     everyone is supposed to conform. Let us not demolish well-established                     customs without careful thought. When we do dismantle a custom                     and look underneath, we may find a reality, a necessity, the                     custom had marked or masked.<\/p>\n<p>Only uncultivated people find good manners formidable. Courtesy                     is kindness expressed in action, and etiquette is merely a                     collection of forms that help to make courtesy easy and natural.<\/p>\n<p>Courtesy is the best single quality to lift one above the                     crowd. It can be summed up in a sentence: be considerate of                     others in little things. Its essence is thoughtfulness. It                     spreads, under this general principle, into every hour of                     the day and every social act: using a friendly voice, saying                     &#8220;thank you&#8221; to colleagues, messengers, elevator operators,                     people who hold doors open for us, people who serve us at                     counters, people who step aside to let us pass, and, indeed,                     upon the slightest excuse given us to show appreciation of                     even a required act.<\/p>\n<p>Courtesy is refraining from doing things that irritate others.                     Courtesy will prevent our launching into a tiresome monologue                     when someone makes a casual remark about health, weather,                     or any other of the social small-talk topics. Courtesy                     will prompt us to arrive on time when we have arranged to                     meet someone or to pay a call. Courtesy will see that we do                     not pick out special cronies at social gatherings, excluding                     all others. Courtesy, no less than the law, will prevent the                     motorist from blocking the sidewalk at an intersection, sounding                     his horn to voice his exasperation in a traffic jam, splashing                     mud on pedestrians. Courtesy will impel pedestrians to walk                     on the right of the sidewalk and to protect other pedestrians                     against the danger of an umbrella, open or closed. Courtesy                     will prevent people from breaking into a queue, pushing ahead                     of others already waiting to board street cars and elevators,                     blocking doorways and sidewalks, scattering rubbish on the                     street and in parks.<\/p>\n<p>Courtesy will lead us to treat every person with such consideration                     that his memory of us will be pleasant. No matter how exalted                     we may be in the hierarchy of industry or business, we may                     blend that greatness with gentleness, magnanimity, and absence                     of arrogance.<\/p>\n<p>Courtesy is most effective when by custom and long habit                     it has become subconscious.<\/p>\n<p>As Joseph Addison, distinguished scholar and essayist of                     the 17th &#8211; 18th century, said it: &#8220;good breeding shows itself                     most where to an ordinary eye it appears the least.&#8221; Courtesy                     includes something of the ancient code of chivalry, which                     allowed a fair field, and equal partition of sun and wind,                     and whatever else appertains to a fair combat. Courtesy includes                     respectfulness when it is due.<\/p>\n<h3>Business courtesy<\/h3>\n<p>All courtesy is not sentimental. The man with a sense of                     values will not fail to appreciate the sheer intrinsic superiority                     of courteous over ill-bred behaviour. Of course, many                     courtesies that belong to the social world would be out of                     place in a business office or in a factory. But it is still                     wrong &#8211; anywhere &#8211; to indulge in haughtiness, or temper, or                     spiteful talk, or sneering ways, or provoking actions.<\/p>\n<p>In the business world, codes of courtesy are expressed through                     graceful self-respect, good-natured impersonal composure,                     tact, patience, and recognition of the rights and privileges                     of others.<\/p>\n<p>It is well to treat formal people formally, avoiding familiarity                     with people you do not know well. Good advice, good for the                     executive as well as for the juniors to whom it is addressed,                     is given in <em>Poise for the Successful Business Girl <\/em>and                     <em>Keys to Etiquette for the Business Girl<\/em>, both published                     by The Dartnell Corporation, Chicago. These hints are of universal                     interest in business, because the rules of business manners                     should be known to all parties.<\/p>\n<h3>Today&#8217;s special problems<\/h3>\n<p>It has become clear that human actions, and not super-human                     or sub-human influences, are the great barriers to human                     progress in the social sense that is of greatest importance                     to the race. Upon the development of social sense depends                     not alone the fullness of happiness we enjoy but our very                     existence.<\/p>\n<p>Our problems resolve themselves into these parts: they are                     largely social in origin, in that they can be traced to groups:                     they are social in their results; and the responsibility for                     their solution is social.<\/p>\n<p>We have more problems than our forefathers had because we                     have more interests, more functions and more agencies. The                     principle holds good in the social field as well as in mechanics                     that the greater the number of parts in a machine the greater                     is the probability of something going out of adjustment.<\/p>\n<p>Our society may not be so much in need of the redemption                     some people urge as of a grown-up recognition that new                     social problems must be accepted and dealt with as part of                     our increased maturity.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[35],"class_list":["post-3840","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-35"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>July 1955 - Vol. 36, No. 7 - Social Sense - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/july-1955-vol-36-no-7-social-sense\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"July 1955 - Vol. 36, No. 7 - Social Sense - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Men and women are not isolated individuals. 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They are associated in many ways: in business, in schools and in societies; they are banded together in families, churches and nations. 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