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Home OTHER VIEW

A Piece of a Magnet Is Also a Magnet

How individuals absorb the character of their societies and pass it on to the world

Dr. Reyaz Ahmad by Dr. Reyaz Ahmad
April 12, 2026
in OTHER VIEW
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There is a simple scientific truth that carries a powerful social lesson: a piece of a magnet is also a magnet. Break a magnet into smaller parts, and each part still carries the same magnetic property. Human society often works in much the same way. Every individual is, in some measure, a smaller reflection of the family, school, community, nation, and digital environment that shaped them.

This idea helps explain why the world today feels so deeply connected, not only through trade and technology, but through habits, attitudes, fears, and values. A person does not form opinions in isolation. We inherit language, prejudice, kindness, courage, suspicion, discipline, and even apathy from the environments around us. In that sense, each citizen becomes a carrier of social energy. What exists in the larger society is often reproduced in the individual.

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That is why the crisis of misinformation is not merely a media problem. It is a social one. The World Economic Forum’s Global Risks Report 2025 says misinformation and disinformation remain the top short-term global risk for the second year in a row, and links them to societal fragmentation and declining trust. When falsehood becomes normal in the public sphere, it does not stay on screens. It enters homes, classrooms, voting booths, and street conversations. A divided society produces divided individuals, and those individuals then deepen the division.

The same pattern can be seen in conflict and displacement. UNHCR reported that 123.2 million people were forcibly displaced by the end of 2024, while UNICEF says 48.8 million children had been displaced by conflict and violence by the end of that same year. These are not only humanitarian statistics. They are signs of what happens when violence becomes embedded in political systems and social life. Children who grow up surrounded by fear, uncertainty, and interrupted education often carry those scars into adulthood. The broken condition of society is reproduced in the individual, just as the force of the magnet remains in every fragment.

Education shows this even more clearly. UNICEF says that in the Middle East and North Africa, at least 30 million children are out of school, while Education Cannot Wait reports that 234 million crisis-affected school-aged children worldwide need urgent support and 85 million are completely out of school. A society that fails to educate its children does not merely create illiteracy. It creates a weakened social future. When schools collapse, trust weakens, opportunity shrinks, and frustration grows. The individual child becomes a mirror of a neglected system, and later, society itself must live with the consequences.

Yet the same principle can work in a hopeful direction. Good values also spread. Public responsibility can become personal responsibility. The International Energy Agency reported that global renewable capacity additions rose to about 700 gigawatts in 2024, with solar and wind accounting for 95% of that growth. This is more than an energy story. It is proof that when governments, markets, and communities begin moving in one constructive direction, millions of individuals adjust their behaviour as well. Positive collective choices create positive personal habits. Good social magnetism, too, can be passed from the whole to the part.

In today’s world, this lesson matters urgently. Nations worried about extremism, hatred, corruption, intolerance, or violence often focus only on punishing individuals after the damage is done. But the deeper question is this: what kind of social magnet are we creating in the first place? If the larger culture rewards cruelty, selfishness, and lies, then many of its people will carry those same traits. If it rewards empathy, honesty, discipline, and service, those qualities will also multiply.

The statement “a piece of a magnet is also a magnet” reminds us that no person is entirely separate from society. Each of us carries part of the moral and social charge of the world around us. That is why reform cannot stop at speeches. It must reach homes, schools, media, institutions, and public leadership. Change the larger force, and the smaller pieces begin to change as well.

In the end, the world we see in individuals is often the world we first built in society.

The writer is a mmber of Faculty of Mathematics, Department of General Education SUC, Sharjah, UAE. Email: reyaz56@gmail.com

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