Yeah, I couldn't think of a better thread title, so tough. But I have a specific question to ask people's opinions on...
I hadn't really been following the stuff with the Chilean miners that have been trapped a half-mile underground for what seems to be months now. However, this one article on how psychologists who are part of the rescue team are encouraging them to be treated raised some questions for me.
To briefly explain, they censor what sort of entertainment, news and items are given to the miners by the rescue team based on certain assumptions. Here's a piece of the article explaining what I mean, with emphasis on what bothers me:
I thought INTPs or some of the psychology enthusiasts here might have an opinion on this, particularly since I imagine INTPs probably need more alone time and variation from routine than most people.
Any thoughts?
I hadn't really been following the stuff with the Chilean miners that have been trapped a half-mile underground for what seems to be months now. However, this one article on how psychologists who are part of the rescue team are encouraging them to be treated raised some questions for me.
To briefly explain, they censor what sort of entertainment, news and items are given to the miners by the rescue team based on certain assumptions. Here's a piece of the article explaining what I mean, with emphasis on what bothers me:
Now, censoring depressing material isn't what bothers me, it's the assumptions about routines and togetherness being good for everybody. Isn't that something that would only apply to some individuals, maybe the majority, but other individuals might need the opposite? It seems like they're forcing a view of normalcy on a large group of people without regard for their psychological diversity. Isn't it likely that being forced into a specific routine, and being forced into "togetherness" without being allowed any options for "alone time" could cause psychological distress to some members of the group?The plan, according to the rescue effort's lead psychiatrist, Alberto Iturra Benavides, is to leave them with "no possible alternative but to survive" until drillers finish rescue holes, which the government estimates will be done by early November.
"Surviving means discipline, and keeping to a routine," Iturra said.
So when the miners do get moments to relax, they can watch television — 13 hours a day, mostly news programs and action movies or comedies, whatever is available that the support team decides won't be depressing. They've seen "Troy" and "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button" with Brad Pitt and Jim Carrey's "The Mask." But no intense dramas — "that would be mental cruelty," said Iturra.
The news the miners see — which in Chile includes frequent reports about the miners themselves — also is reviewed first by the team above, said Luis Felipe Mujica, the general manager of Micomo, the telecommunications subsidiary of Chile's state-owned mining company.
"Of course to do that you need to watch the news first and effectively limit access to certain types of information, or to put it vulgarly, censor it," said Mujica. "This is a rescue operation, not a reality show."
Though some miners have requested them, sending down personal music players with headphones and handheld video games have been ruled out, because those tend to isolate people from one another.
"With earphones, if they're listening to music and someone calls them, asking for help or to warn them about something, they're not available," Iturra said. "What they need is to be together."
I thought INTPs or some of the psychology enthusiasts here might have an opinion on this, particularly since I imagine INTPs probably need more alone time and variation from routine than most people.
Any thoughts?