Identity
Us Versus Them: An Intractable Problem in Human Nature?
Humans so often classify others as either "with us" or against us."
Updated April 26, 2024 Reviewed by Monica Vilhauer Ph.D.
Key points
- "Us versus them" is one of the most poisonous, yet enduring, dynamics in human history.
- People divide themselves into groups quite easily in response to physical and behavioral differences.
- We need to find a way to move past tribalism and learn how to work together.
On June 10, 2022, the New York Rangers and Tampa Bay Lightning hockey teams had just finished a playoff game. On his way out of Madison Square Garden, Rangers fan James Anastasio spotted another man wearing a Lightning jersey and sucker-punched the man in the side of the head. The man was knocked to the ground and barely avoided serious injury. Anastasio later admitted that he did not know the man he punched.
During the 1990s, two Rwandan ethnic groups — the Hutus and the Tutsis — engaged in a bitter and bloody civil war, with the Hutus committing an attempted genocide against the Tutsis. Many thousands of people were killed before the civil war finally ended. The Hutus and Tutsis share almost all of their genetic code and are visually indistinguishable from one another.
During the Holocaust, Nazi soldiers repeatedly gunned down groups of Jewish civilians in Germany, Poland, and other European countries. When questioned during the post-war Nuremberg Trials regarding why they had murdered millions of Jews, most Nazi soldiers claimed they were "just following orders."
These are not isolated events. Humans have been dividing each other into "us" versus "them" for millennia. This form of tribalism seems hard-wired into our individual and collective minds — and there is plenty of evidence that we are strongly predisposed toward simplifying the world into those who are with us and those who are against us.
One of the first studies examining this form of tribalism was conducted by Stanford University psychologist Phil Zimbardo in the early 1970s. Zimbardo randomly assigned boys to play the role of "prisoners" or "guards" and asked them to act out their respective roles. Although the experiment was planned to continue for a week, Zimbardo and his team had to shut it down after three days because the groups had started physically attacking each other.
Remember that these groups were random, and had been created only a couple of days earlier.
In the early 1980s, Polish Jew and Holocaust survivor Henri Tajfel, along with his younger colleague John Turner, introduced social identity theory to help explain the "us versus them" phenomenon. Tajfel sought to understand why the Nazis had murdered his family with such bloody enthusiasm. A few years later, in 1987, Turner and his colleagues proposed self-categorization theory, which extends and clarifies aspects of social identity theory. These two theories propose that, when confronted with any kind of systematic collective difference, people organize themselves and others into "ingroups" (us) and "outgroups" (them). Once these groups have been created, they become self-reinforcing, such that ingroup members are allocated greater amounts of resources than outgroup members are, even if such unequal allocation causes harm to outgroup members. In some cases, especially when powerful ingroup members see an outgroup as especially threatening and as severe competition for resources, the ingroup may dehumanize the outgroup into a mass of "otherness" and may no longer view outgroup members as human beings. As David Moshman has argued, once this dehumanization process has occurred, genocide is likely to follow — as ingroup members see themselves as eliminating a threat rather than as harming other humans. Examples of this dehumanization include referring to outgroup members as animals, cockroaches, and other non-human life forms.
In their self-affirmation theory, David Sherman and Geoffrey Cohen argue that, when individuals and groups perceive a threat, they then mount a defense against that threat. These defensive maneuvers can be aggressive, discriminatory, and even deadly. Threat and defense dynamics are easy to spot — in many cases, the outgroup is cast as invaders, or some similarly threatening word, such that defensive reactions become easier to justify.
Tribalism was useful to early humans because being able to distinguish friends from foes likely meant the difference between life and death. But these "us versus them" dynamics have plagued humanity for millennia, long after the physical threats that made these dynamics useful had largely subsided. The Crusades, the Holocaust, the wiping out of indigenous groups around the world, and many other violent conquests and genocides bear witness to the allure of tribalism. But what do we do about it? How do we move past "us versus them" and toward a world where individuals and groups treat each other as equals?
One potential answer might lie in Daniel Kahneman's dual-process theory of mind. Kahneman proposes that System I is the mind's autopilot. When we have driven the same route to work every day for years, we can follow the route without engaging in conscious thought. We may even turn as though we're driving to work even when our intention is to go somewhere else.
System II, on the other hand, involves intentional and effortful thought. System II is exhausting, such that the mind often prefers not to engage this system and tries to revert back to System I when possible. System II can be used to overrule System I, though doing so takes a lot of work.
System I often works "behind the scenes," such that we do not notice what it is doing. When we see someone we don't know, our minds are sizing up that person and making thousands of snap judgments based on how that person looks, walks, speaks, is dressed, et cetera. By the time we actually speak to that person, we have likely developed a mental profile of them. Importantly, however, our snap judgments are often incorrect — sometimes wildly so.
When we speak with someone, we can easily use System II to correct the misconceptions that System I has created. But we never actually speak to many of the people we see and encounter, so our misconceptions about them are never corrected. What would we do in this situation?
We can still engage System II and notice all of the assumptions we have made about someone. Wait a minute, we might say to ourselves. How do we know all of this about someone we have never met before? Let's give this person a chance. Let's assume the best about them, rather than assuming the worst.
Kahneman's approach is only one of many that we might consider. But clearly we need to stop dividing ourselves into friends and enemies and start learning how to work together. We are quite literally standing in our own way. Let's hope that this post starts an important conversation about how to move forward.