The Bystander Effect: Understanding the Psychology of Courage and Inaction: Difference between revisions

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The evidence, as far as she presents it, suggests these people tend not to be the righteous do-gooders the author would like to make us all into, but spikier, more individualistic types who are disinclined to toe the line: ''awkward'' people the metropolitan elite tend to not to like.
The evidence, as far as she presents it, suggests these people tend not to be the righteous do-gooders the author would like to make us all into, but spikier, more individualistic types who are disinclined to toe the line: ''awkward'' people the metropolitan elite tend to not to like.


Had Professor Sanderson focussed on these cases, her book might have be worth persevering with. It didn’t, and no did I.
Had Professor Sanderson focussed on these cases, her book might have be worth persevering with. It didn’t, and nor did I.

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