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Hostility

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Hostility
Two people in a heated argument in New York City
SpecialtyPsychiatry

Hostility is seen as a form of emotionally charged aggressive behavior. In everyday speech, it is more commonly used as a synonym for anger and aggression.

It appears in several psychological theories. For instance it is a facet of neuroticism in the NEO PI, and forms part of personal construct psychology, developed by George Kelly.

Hostility/hospitality

For hunter gatherers, every stranger from outside the small tribal group was a potential source of hostility.[1] Similarly, in archaic Greece, every community was in a state of hostility, latent or overt, with every other community - something only gradually tempered by the rights and duties of hospitality.[2]

Tensions between the two poles of hostility and hospitality remain a potent force in the 21st century world.[3]

Us/them

Robert Sapolsky argues that the tendency to form in-groups and out-groups of Us and Them, and to direct hostility at the latter, is inherent in humans.[4] He also explores the possibility raised by Samuel Bowles that intra-group hostility is reduced when greater hostility is directed at Thems,[5] something exploited by insecure leaders when they mobilise external conflicts so as to reduce in-group hostility towards themselves.[6]

Non-verbal indicators

Automatic mental functioning suggests that among universal human indicators of hostility are the grinding or gnashing of teeth, the clenching and shaking of fists, and grimacing.[7] Desmond Morris would add stamping and thumping.[8]

The Haka represents a ritualised set of such non-verbal signs of hostility.[9]

Kelly's model

In psychological terms, George Kelly considered hostility as the attempt to extort validating evidence from the environment to confirm types of social prediction, constructs, that have failed.[10] Instead of reconstructing their constructs to meet disconfirmations with better predictions, the hostile person attempts to force or coerce the world to fit their view, even if this is a forlorn hope, and even if it entails emotional expenditure and/or harm to self or others.[11]

In this sense hostility is a form of psychological extortion - an attempt to force reality to produce the desired feedback,[12] even by acting out in bullying by individuals and groups in various social contexts, in order that preconceptions become ever more widely validated. Kelly's theory of cognitive hostility thus forms a parallel to Leon Festinger's view that there is an inherent impulse to reduce cognitive dissonance.[13]

While challenging reality can be a useful part of life, and persistence in the face of failure can be a valuable trait (for instance in invention or discovery [citation needed]), in the case of hostility it is argued that evidence is not being accurately assessed but rather forced into a Procrustean mould in order to maintain one's belief systems and avoid having one's identity challenged.[14] Instead it is claimed that hostility shows evidence of suppression or denial, and is "deleted" from awareness - unfavorable evidence which might suggest that a prior belief is flawed is to various degrees ignored and willfully avoided.[15]

Endocannabinoid catabolic indicators

The amygdala-prefrontal cortex (PFC) functional impairments have been linked to emotional dysregulation and aggression, and the fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH), the major catabolic enzyme for the endocannabinoid anandamide (AEA), that is produced on-demand in postsynaptic membranes before engaging in retrograde feedback onto presynaptic CB1 receptors, which causes inhibition of specific neurotransmitter release, after which AEA is broken down mainly by FAAH, has been proposed as a key regulator of the amygdala-PFC circuit that subserves emotional regulation, where PFC and amygdala binding by high FAAH, which courses low AEA and CB1 receptor activation and thereby high level of neurotransmitter release, is found positively correlated with measures of hostility and aggression, also seen in borderline personality disorder (BPD) patients.[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ J Diamond, The World Until Yesterday (Penguin 2013) p. 50 and p. 290
  2. ^ M I Finley, The World of Odysseus (Pelican 1967) p. 113-4 and p. 116-7
  3. ^ K Thorpe ed., Hospitality and Hostility in the Multilingual Global Village (2014) p. 2-7
  4. ^ R Sapolsky, Behave (London 2018) Ch 11 384-424
  5. ^ R Sapolsky, Behave (London 2018) p. 45
  6. ^ E Smith, Social Psychology (Hove 2007) p. 493
  7. ^ D Maclean, The Triune Brain in Evolution (London 1990) p. 460
  8. ^ D Morris, The Naked Ape Trilogy (London 1988) p. 109
  9. ^ R Sapolsky, Behave (London 2018) p. 17
  10. ^ D Lester, Theories of Personality (1995) p. 52
  11. ^ D Lester, Theories of Personality (1995) p. 52-4
  12. ^ G Claxton, Live and Learn (Bristol 1984) p. 132 and p. 250
  13. ^ D Lester, Theories of Personality (1995) p. 76
  14. ^ D Lester, Theories of Personality (1995) p. 52-3
  15. ^ G Claxton, Live and Learn (Bristol 1984) p. 14 and p. 19
  16. ^ Kolla, Nathan J. (2020-06-10). "Elevated fatty acid amide hydrolase in the prefrontal cortex of borderline personality disorder: a [11C]CURB positron emission tomography study". Neuropsychopharmacology. 45 (11): 1834–1841 – via PubMed Central.
  • Quotations related to Hostility at Wikiquote
  • The dictionary definition of hostility at Wiktionary