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听力文稿 ( Transcript )
Ur, one. One. One. It's two. One.
Once again, the correct answer is two.
Three. Three. Three. Three. Three.
The Ash experiment has been repeated many times and the results have been supported again and again. We will conform to the group because we're very social creatures, we're very much aware of what the people around us think. We want to be liked, we don't want to be seen to rock the boat, so we will go along with the group. Even if we don't believe what people are saying, we still go along. (One. One. One.)
Group dynamics is one of the most powerful forces in human psychology.
(One. One.) You can take anybody, virtually anybody, ordinary person, put them in a particular group, and they'll become like that group.
Throughout history, the military has harnessed this power of the group to motivate individuals.
I was closer to my colleagues on board Camberge during the Falklands in a way that I've never felt since. It was because we were all in that ship together facing an uncertain future.
Surgeon Captain Morgan O'Connell is a psychiatrist who served in the R oyal Navy for 31 years.
The best military units in the world are founded on the smaller group. Generally, what they are looking for in training is to see whether or not you can become part of this, this family, this, this small unit.
These units can be called upon to perform extremely high-risk operations.
The ability to do these things that in the cool light of day you wouldn't even contemplate beginning to do is founded in this grouping together of people into tight, cohesive band of brothers.
In Beeston, the evidence suggests that the London bombers were becoming a band of brothers.