Righteous Mind

By: Jonathan Haidt Read: April 2, 2025 Rating: 8/10

Why fight between two people is a fight between two different value systems

It took me a long time to realize that arguments we argue about — aren’t always about facts. They are about values.

Reading Jonathan Haidt’s The Righteous Mind made this clearer that: be it liberals or conservatives, or activists or traditionalists — they’re all wired with different moral priorities—care, fairness, loyalty, authority, sanctity.

They feel different things are sacred. What seems obviously right to one clan feels intuitively wrong to another.

My partner and I had taken the Haidt’s moral foundations questionnaire together recently, and it was fun to see the contrast of responses in some of the questions: we both cared about fairness and compassion—but whenever I leaned toward equity, she leaned more towards loyalty and cultural continuity. Interesting!

Neither of us was wrong, but we realised we had different inner compasses. And without naming those differences, we mistook friction for betrayal.

Other books

Three body problem

Three body problem

Cixin Liu

Read: February 2, 2025 — Rating: 9/10

A very fresh to the conventional sci-fi plot, with a unique take on the genre through the lens of 'sentient photons'

Fooled by Randomness

Fooled by Randomness

Nassim Nicholas Taleb

Read: January 15, 2020 — Rating: 8/10

Antifragility as a concept that is often misunderstood, and it's a concept that is often misused. But once understood, it can be applied to a lot of things in our lives.

Outliers

Outliers

Malcolm Gladwell

Read: February 2, 2025 — Rating: 8/10

Prime examples of pure, original thinking