Since implicit attitudes lead to outward social behaviors, all this leads to a bigger question as to whether we might actually change our likes and dislikes based on the language we use. Results of the IAT, the Implicit Association Test indicated preferences undeniably differed for test subjects who first took the test in one language, then took the same test again in another language with which they were already familiar.
It was the 1930s when Linguist Benjamin Lee Whorf first suggested language can determine thought. Now, the question of whether or not our attitudes are fixed or can actually shift based on the language we choose and use may open a significant door to reconsideration of how we see and judge the archetypal Other in our everyday ways of being.
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