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Science
Charles
Darwin | Sigmund Freud | Brain
research | Centre for Chemical Senses | Paul
Rozin | Obsessive Compulsive Disorder | Social
Induction | Val Curtis | Mary
Douglas
Is disgust an instinctive reaction or are we taught to be disgusted? Why
does everyone find faeces repellent? Is it an evolutionary mechanism to
protect us from germs or do we need to be taught by society that it is
disgusting to touch excrement?
Certain things are universally disgusting. Urine and vomit, rats and cockroaches
have the same effect on people across the world. Our heart rate slows.
We make a 'disgust face'. We wrinkle our noses to close them from the
smell and open our mouths slightly, as if about to vomit.
But disgust is not simple. Shit is only shunned by the over-twos. Babies
are not repelled by it; they find it fascinating. This suggests that it
is not an innate reaction.
Despite the questions that disgust throws up, studies of this most primal
of emotions are rare. The first enquiries into it were made just over
100 years ago. But the subject was then forgotten by scientists for decades.
Charles Darwin
Darwin, the British naturalist, first addressed the subject in the 1870s.
He believed that what we find disgusting was determined by nature. Disgust
was an evolved response to things that might harm our prospects of survival.
However, Darwin classified disgust alongside emotions that imply a value
judgement: disdain, contempt and pride. This suggests he believed that
disgust is more complex than a simple instinctive reaction.
Sigmund
Freud
Freud, the originator of psychoanalysis, took a different view. Just as
Freud's theories of sexuality were based on our relationships with our
parents, he thought that our disgust response was also conditioned at
an early age. Children internalise their parents' attitude to faeces which
is displayed during toilet training, developing a disgust response at
this time.
Freud believed that society creates mechanisms to ensure that we control
our basest instincts. The development of disgust is one method of social
control.
Brain research
Freudian psychoanalysis may have given us indirect insights into the workings
of the mind, but these days we have a more direct route. Using MRI brain
scans, British researchers have turned up some remarkable new evidence
about the nature of disgust.
Dr Mary Phillips carried out brain scans on people while showing them
pictures which would disgust them. She found that when we feel disgusted,
a part of the brain is stimulated which is much older than the part which
deals with rational thought. It is millions of years older than the oldest
human civilisations. She concluded that disgust was so deeply ingrained
that it could not be determined purely by cultural influences.
Centre for Chemical Senses
There is undeniably some cultural element in what people find disgusting.
Pamela Dalton at the Centre for Chemical Senses in Philadelphia was asked
by the United States government to find a smell which everyone finds repellent,
so they could develop a universal stink bomb that could be used as an
alternative to tear gas.
Dalton's team used smells based on sulphur, the chemical released by rotting
eggs and vegetables. Most people find this smell highly repellent, but
some Koreans were not disgusted by it as it reminded them of the fermented
sauces they use in their cooking.
Paul
Rozin
Paul Rozin is a psychologist who works with children and adults to show
how our disgust responses vary and develop. He believes that nature and
nurture both play a part in disgust.
Adults and children aged eight or over will not eat a chocolate shaped
like dog poo, even if they know it is just ordinary chocolate. Babies,
though, have no such qualms. As children grow older, they become suspicious
of the dog poo, but with reassurance they will eat it. They are not yet
disgusted by it.
On tasting something bitter or sharp, tiny babies make a 'distaste face',
which is very similar to the adult 'disgust face'. Rozin believes that
cultural influences mould this distaste into a more complex response
disgust.
Obsessive Compulsive Disorder
Disgust is a normal reaction to dirt. But how much disgust is normal?
In people with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), the part of
the brain which deals with disgust is over-stimulated or damaged. Sufferers
are disgusted by almost everything. They find any contact with dirt, real
or perceived, disgusting and as a result their lives are hopelessly constrained.
Everything they do, even simple tasks like making a cup of tea, turn into
lengthy rituals designed to avoid contamination.
Social Induction
But if too much disgust is abnormal, so is too little. As we grow up we
are taught that we should be disgusted by certain things. Society
shapes our disgust response. Babies, for instance, have to be taught not
to touch their faeces. Also, different cultural groups teach their children
to find certain foods abhorrent.
Later in life, our disgust response is seen as a key element in what makes
us civilised. People who eat with their mouths open, revealing saliva
and half-chewed food, are disgusting. They must be taught to change their
behaviour. Sensitivity to what others may find disgusting is fundamental
to social interaction.
Val Curtis
Disgust is a complex subject, incorporating a number of different elements.
Yet, more than a century after Darwin and Freud first analysed disgust,
two distinct schools of thought endure.
Val Curtis takes the evolutionary view. She
believes that disgust is a problem-solving tool which has evolved over
many centuries.
What we find disgusting is what we believe may harm us, therefore we should
avoid it. Certain universally disgusting things such as faeces and rotting
flesh are 'inescapably dirty'.
Mary Douglas
On the other side of the debate is Mary Douglas,
who argues that what is disgusting is what we find anomalous: things that
appear where they should not be, or do not fit the generally accepted
classifications.
Hair on the head is not disgusting, for instance, but nose hair is: it
should not grow there. A dead rat in the kitchen is more disgusting than
one lying on the street. If its innards are spilling out not contained
inside the animal's skin where they should be it is even more disgusting.
Different cultures develop different categories of what is dirty and what
is clean, and consequently what is disgusting and what is not. To a Jewish
person, for example, pigs are unclean animals and therefore eating pork
is disgusting.
Dirt, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder.
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Anatomy of Disgust
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