Moral Psychology: The New Science of Morality

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Published on: August 6, 2010

Interesting discussions and pointers to various discussions on the new science of morality (from edge.org)

http://www.edge.org/3rd_culture/morality10/morality10_index.html

Contains videos and (downloadable) audio recordings of the talks from: Jonathan Haidt, Joshua Greene, Marc D Hauser, Sam Harris, Roy Baumeister, Paul Bloom, David Pizzaro, Elizabeth Phelps  and Joshua Knobe.

Couple of interesting papers which is a must read in these issues, especially for putting results of psychology studies in context.

  • Henrich, Joe, Heine, Steven J. and Norenzayan, Ara, “The Weirdest People in the World?” (May 7, 2010). RatSWD Working Paper No. 139.
    • How representative are experimental findings from American university students? What do we really know about human psychology?
    • Abstract: Broad claims about human psychology and behavior based on narrow samples from Western societies are regularly published. Are such species‐generalizing claims justified? This review suggests not only substantial variability in experimental results across populations in basic domains, but that standard subjects are unusual compared with the rest of the species—outliers. The domains reviewed include visual perception, fairness, spatial reasoning, moral reasoning, thinking‐styles, and self‐concepts. This suggests (1) caution in addressing questions of human nature from this slice of humanity, and (2) that understanding human psychology will require broader subject pools. We close by proposing ways to address these challenges.
    • [Link to Paper]
  • Mercier, H., Sperber, D.  “Why do humans reason? Arguments for an argumentative theory” Behavioral and Brain Sciences.
    • Abstract: Reasoning is generally seen as a mean to improve knowledge and make better decisions. Much evidence, however, shows that reasoning often leads to epistemic distortions and poor decisions. This suggests rethinking the function of reasoning. Our hypothesis is that the function of reasoning is argumentative. It is to devise and evaluate arguments intended to persuade. Reasoning so conceived is adaptive given human exceptional dependence on communication and vulnerability to misinformation. A wide range of evidence in the psychology or reasoning and decision making can be reinterpreted and better explained in the light of this hypothesis.
    • [Link to Paper]

Art of choosing TED talk

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Published on: July 27, 2010

An interesting talk by Sheena Iyengar, the author of the book Art of choosing.

Brain Cox on Why we need explorers

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Published on: June 4, 2010

An emotional plea by B. Cox public funded research…

[from ted.com] In tough economic times, our exploratory science programs — from space probes to the LHC — are first to suffer budget cuts. Brian Cox explains how curiosity-driven science pays for itself, powering innovation and a profound appreciation of our existence.


Craig Venter unveils “synthetic life”

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Published on: May 21, 2010

Here is the ted-talk about the synthetic life from Craig Venter.

A new way to explain explanation, by David Deutsch

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Published on: May 18, 2010

For tens of thousands of years our ancestors understood the world through myths, and the pace of change was glacial. The rise of scientific understanding transformed the world within a few centuries. Why? Physicist David Deutsch proposes a subtle answer.. Here is the video from TED.

Everything you wanted to know about E.Coli

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Published on: May 18, 2010

E. Coli are fascinating creatures. They live everywhere, even within our bodies. In addition to being part of our daily lives, they also play an amazing role as a scientific tool in biology. Read/hear more about this fascinating creatures in sciam’s podcasts.

How Kevin Bacon Cured Cancer: A story about networks, 6 degrees of seperation

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Published on: May 18, 2010

Interesting videos about complex networks and degrees of seperation.

More about this here: [The Link]

Singularity: Special Report in IEEE

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Published on: May 18, 2010

In 2008, IEEE brought out a special issue on Singularity. Anybody who is interested in developments of technology will probably be familiar with the term (Technological) Singularity. Perhaps popularized by futurist Ray Kurzweil (author of “Singularity is Near”). Discussion about what is singularity, is this really  happening, who are the players..etc – are collected in this IEEE portal.

More of this here:  [IEEE Singularity Page]

Why -> how -> what. talk by Simon Sinek

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Published on: May 7, 2010

Simon Sinek has a simple but powerful model for inspirational leadership all starting with a golden circle and the question “Why?” His examples include Apple, Martin Luther King, and the Wright brothers — and as a counterpoint Tivo, which (until a recent court victory that tripled its stock price) appeared to be struggling..

Below is the talk from ted.com.
Also worth checking his website: http://www.startwithwhy.com/

Computing a theory of everything

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Published on: April 30, 2010

Here is stephen wolfram about computing a theory about everything. Pretty interesting about emergence of wolfram alpha..

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