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Prompt: Are people better at making observations, discoveries, and decisions if they remain neutral and impartial?
To remain objective and unbiased means to be open-minded and considerate of opposing sides’ different opinions. For this reason, one sees a broader perspective of a situation by staying neutral than those who partake in different sides. The preeminent pacifist Gandhi and Clover from Animal Farm show that people are better at making observations, discoveries, and decisions when they remain neutral and impartial.
Gandhi, the worldwide famous pacifist, stood on a neutral ground when the British invaded and took control of his country India. The outraged Indians sought for independence and used protests and violence to repel the British. Amidst the situation, Gandhi chose to remain impartial, not advocating either sides, and was able to gain a broader view of the situation. He prudently made the decision to repel the British away in a peaceful, innocuous term. Evidently, remaining neutral and impartial made an individual better at making observations and decisions.
Similar to the position which Gandhi took, Clover the Horse from Animal Farm kept her neutrality and was able to discern more wisely than any other animals. Clover lived n a farm full of diverse animals with the pigs ruling over everyone. Corrupted by power, the pigs maltreated the animals but lived pleasurable lives themselves. The animals were blinded by the belief that pigs were looking out for the good of the farm but Clover saw the whole situation as repugnant and unfair. By advocating neither sides and remaining herself, Clover was able to make concise observations.
It is evident that impartiality and neutrality give an individual the full picture of the situation and thus make the individual better at making observations, discoveries, and decisions than the one who choose a side and go against the other. This notion was best illustrated by Gandhi and Clover, the ones that stood on the grounds of neutrality.