Steve writes:

< I happen to be reading Rebecca Solnit's "A Paradise Built in Hell" which is a 
deep dive into the theme of how people (sometimes) show their best while 
suffering great disasters.   Particularly in the area of community spirit and 
synergistic cooperation.  She anecdotally and analytically reviews disasters 
from the 1906 San Francisco earthquake to Katrina, focusing *mostly* on the 
positive examples of people stepping up individually and collectively to show 
demonstrate/discover their "best selves".   In this, she speaks of the tension 
between "Seeking a better life" and "Seeking a better world".   It is suggested 
that in the face of disaster, the latter is evidently the most efficient route 
to the former, and on the whole, the behaviour of individuals in those contexts 
suggests that such is self-evident.   She acknowledges that there are plenty of 
opportunists who *do not* apprehend that their "best interests" are supported 
by cooperation, but instead notice that the fragility of their context allows 
them to "exploit" that fragility, and in fact seem convinced that it is not 
only an opportunity but an unction. >

There’s a more cynical interpretation of positive disaster behavior.  Because 
of the way human memory works, everyone understands that *many* people will 
remember in vivid detail all kinds of nuances about a crisis.   So it is of 
benefit to be helpful, because others will remember that.   It does not 
necessarily mean that anything will change about how an otherwise Grinch-like 
person will behave after the crisis.   Goodwill is a currency and a crisis is 
when one can buy low.   Also it may just be collectively necessary in some 
circumstances for everyone to cooperate, and even a completely selfish person 
can see that.

Marcus
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