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Something You Should Know

“The Bystander Effect” & Modern Idioms Explained - SYSK Choice

Something You Should Know

Mike Carruthers | OmniCastMedia

Social Sciences, Science, Health & Fitness, Education, Self-improvement

4.54.3K Ratings

🗓️ 20 July 2024

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The consensus seems to be that drinking coffee has several excellent health benefits – and now there is another one you probably haven’t heard before. This episode begins with the explanation. https://rightasrain.uwmedicine.org/body/food/can-your-coffee-habit-help-protect-you-skin-cancer You have most likely seen a bully in action and were maybe reluctant to intervene. After all, it’s not your problem. There is actually a name for this – it’s “The Bystander Effect.” It is when people don’t step in and call out a bully. Why does that happen? Why do we sometimes leave it to someone else or no one at all when clearly someone has stepped over the line? Have you ever thought what would happen if you did step in? And if you do decide to intervene, what’s the best way to do it so you don’t escalate the situation? Here with some answers and insight is psychologist Catherine Sanderson, a professor in Life Sciences at Amherst College and the author of Why We Act: Turning Bystanders into Moral Rebels (https://amzn.to/3vfUgrs) You know what an idiom is – right? Idioms are little phrases that work their way into our conversations that help us make a point. For example, play with fire, move the goal posts or drink the Kool-Aid. Ever wonder where these phrases come from and why they take on this new meaning? Do other languages have idioms? Joining me to explore this fascinating quirk in our language is Gareth Carrol a senior lecturer and researcher in linguistics at the University of Birmingham and author of the book, Jumping Sharks and Dropping Mics: Modern Idioms and Where They Come From (https://amzn.to/3J5XnaX). Summer is the favorite time of year for many people. Still, too much of a good thing can be a problem. Listen as I explore how summer weather can impact your mood and mental state. https://www.livescience.com/21431-hot-temperatures-mood.html Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Talmoor, Shishin' Mahaki.

0:03.0

Talmoor is my home.

0:06.2

My family have worked the land for generations.

0:10.8

My grand says the island does not belong to us but we belong to the island and

0:17.6

and we must be ready for a great evil is coming. His hand by Scallendy.

0:24.0

And death follows with it.

0:27.0

Listen and subscribe to the latest season of Undertoe, The Harrowing,

0:31.0

a Storyglass production presented by Realm, available wherever you get your

0:34.8

podcast.

0:37.8

Today on Something You Should Know, there's yet another benefit to drinking coffee you probably haven't heard.

0:44.5

Then the bystander effect.

0:46.6

You know, when someone's being harassed or bullied and no one steps in to intervene,

0:51.0

and yet...

0:51.9

We certainly see in children who are being bullied that when

0:55.5

somebody calls out the bully other people really appreciate that person who

1:00.0

stepped up to the bully. So in reality, stepping up can make you a hero.

1:05.0

Also what summertime weather can do to your state of mind and idioms, those phrases

1:11.8

we use to punctuate our meaning like play with fire, kick the bucket,

1:16.1

or throw someone under the bus.

1:18.4

If you throw someone under the bus, you get a sense that it's never going to be a good thing,

1:22.1

you know, if you're throwing or pushing someone under a bust,

1:24.4

and it tends to be that way with idioms that you can get a sense of what they mean either from the

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