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Nonconformity In The Pedestrian By Grant Cox

Decent Essays

Social conformity is a dangerous, chaotic force. A simple gathering can spontaneously lead to surges of violence and atrocities. As one stone is thrown, another follows, each one faster than the last. They have muddied their identity into a mob. Social conformity is the suppression of one’s thoughts and identity to conform to the herd. Despite the acceptance that it may provide, individuals should be discouraged from being conformists because they will be led to a fixed mindset that rejects nonconformists, inability to invent and innovate, and failure to be significant. A person may fear nonconformity because they are afraid of rejection, but by being a conformist one will grow to be hypersensitive and exclude others. In, “The Pedestrian”, …show more content…

On a lecture by Grant Cox titled The Power of Non-Conformity, Cox describes how nonconformity can empower humans to solve otherwise unsolvable problems by giving individuals distinct abilities: to achieve recognition, to resist stagnation while supporting innovation, and to “provide a voice to those who lack one” (Grant Cox). Grant’s first example are cramble bands, marching bands that uses an unorthodox gimmick in their performances. He cites the Yale Precision Marching Band, who creates giant props, or the Columbia University Marching Band, which gained notoriety for their bold performances (Grant Cox). Scramble bands uses nonconformity to solve the problem of gaining attention in an oversaturated medium. Furthermore, Grant Cox refers to Albert Einstein to support the power of innovation and overcoming stagnation (Grant Cox). Einstein could not have resolved problems that he was encountering without reinventing the laws of physics. He used the second power to reform the known rules of physics, which allowed him to triumph against his challenges. Finally, Grant explained how Rosa Parks, even without speaking changed the world by just simply sitting against the social norms (Grant Cox). Through the third power and knowing that her voice would have done nothing she succeeded in resisting inequality. Like Rosa Parks or Albert Einstein, revolutionaries, world readers, and other extraordinary people have used these skills of nonconformity to change the world in so many incredible ways that they are engraved in the history of the planet until this

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