用户824010

读后感

用户824010
Book Review: The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind Written by Gustave Le Bon, the founding father of crowd psychology, The Crowd: A Study of the Popular Mind is a milestone work in social psychology. This bilingual edition with American high school reading difficulty brings readers an incisive analysis of collective mentality, remaining highly instructive for understanding group behaviors in modern society. Le Bon put forward core viewpoints that individuals will lose rational judgment once integrated into a crowd. Independent thinking fades away, while unconscious emotion, blind impulse and herd instinct dominate people’s actions. The book systematically sorts out psychological features of crowds: extreme emotional swings, vulnerability to hints and manipulation, and disregard for logic and moral constraints. The author further analyzes how speeches, rumors and symbolic images easily stir up mass passion, and elaborates on the destructive impacts of extreme group behavior on social order and individual rights. Concise in layout and compact in content, it avoids tedious academic jargon and condenses profound social observations into readable paragraphs. As a distinguished French sociologist nicknamed “the Machiavelli of group society”, Le Bon summarized his theories based on social revolutions and mass movements of his era. His research not only laid the basic framework for modern crowd psychology, but also deeply influenced later studies on ideology, media communication and public opinion. Even over a century after publication, his analysis of herd mentality still explains many social phenomena, such as online public opinion polarization and blind collective following. The bilingual version is a great choice for learners. The parallel Chinese and English texts help readers master professional psychological vocabulary while grasping theoretical ideas, priced at only 9.9 yuan with high cost performance. Admittedly, Le Bon’s views carry obvious limitations rooted in his historical background. He holds a biased negative attitude toward crowds and ignores positive power of rational mass movements for social progress. Such one-sided judgment is the main flaw of the book. Overall, The Crowd is an essential popular science reading for anyone learning psychology and sociology. It reminds us to keep independent thinking amid noisy public voices, stay alert to emotional group manipulation, and view collective behaviors with rational objectivity. Whether for academic study or daily self-reflection, this classic deserves careful reading. (Word count: 492)
2026-06-20
喜欢(0)
发布

回复(共0条)

    本书评还没有人回复