Babies help unlock the origins of morality - Page 3 - CBS News - 0 views
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From this Wynn concludes that infants prefer those "who harm... others" who are unlike them.
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We are predisposed to break the world up into different human groups based on the most subtle and seemingly irrelevant cues, and that, to some extent, is the dark side of morality.
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Karen Wynn: I think, we are built to, you know, at the drop of a hat, create us and them.
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After the Protests - NYTimes.com - 1 views
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Protests like this one, fueled by social media and erupting into spectacular mass events, look like powerful statements of opposition against a regime
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Yet often these huge mobilizations of citizens inexplicably wither away without the impact on policy you might expect from their scale.
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Now movements can rush past that step, often to their own detriment.
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Media in the hands of citizens can rattle regimes. It makes it much harder for rulers to maintain legitimacy by controlling the public sphere. But activists, who have made such effective use of technology to rally supporters, still need to figure out how to convert that energy into greater impact. The point isn't just to challenge power; it's to change it.
Jason Silva's Captivating Videos Deliver a Dose of 'Techno-Optimism' | Underwire | WIRED - 0 views
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video maker and self-described “philosophical performer” Jason Silva has a much more optimistic (and logically sound) mode of thinking about the future and all the technologically awesome possibilities it has to offer.
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As technology has advanced, it acts as a buffer that shrinks the lag time between what we dream about and what we can create and substantiate in the world.”
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Techno-optimism is a belief in the power of technology to extend our sphere of possibilities, and ultimately a belief that technology helps us solve and transcend problems, limitations and obstacles.
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Is Google Making Us Stupid? - Nicholas Carr - The Atlantic - 1 views
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I’m not thinking the way I used to think. I can feel it most strongly when I’m reading. Immersing myself in a book or a lengthy article used to be easy.
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I feel as if I’m always dragging my wayward brain back to the text. The deep reading that used to come naturally has become a struggle.
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The Web has been a godsend to me as a writer. Research that once required days in the stacks or periodical rooms of libraries can now be done in minutes
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The Art of Focus - NYTimes.com - 0 views
As Above, So Below: The Worldview of Lynn Margulis | Reality Sandwich - 2 views
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This journey led her to emphasize in all her scientific work two phenomena -- the fusing of distinct beings into a single being: symbiosis; and the interaction of organisms and their environments to create relational "loops" that led to regulation of many Earth systems: Gaia Theory.
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Bacteria were here first and are with us still, comprising a major part of the biosphere. They are unseen with the naked eye, they lack nuclei (for this reason, they are called prokaryotes -- "pro" = before, "karyon" = nucleus). Their forms were legion and their metabolisms were (and continue to be) strange.
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What is known is that the spirochete didn't digest the thermoplasmid and the thermoplasmid did not digest the spirochete. As Margulis was fond of saying, "1 + 1 = 1." There was a union of the two, resulting in an entirely new being. They were inseparable, literally. The thermoplasmid had a rotor now, and the spirochete had a "head".
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" Now that Margulis has died, it remains our choice to catch up with what she and her life's work have set in motion. To do so, we must bring together the many fields of knowledge she embodied. Biologists must talk to physicists, virologists must talk to geologists, cosmologists must talk to microbiologists, and scientists musty talk to non-scientists. This motion of meeting and exchanging ideas, if we act with it, will evolve our thinking. "
The Evolution of Cooperation* - 1 views
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To find a good strategy to use in such situations, I invited experts in game theory to submit programs for a computer Prisoner’s Dilemma tournament – much like a computer chess tournament.
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the winner was the simplest of all candidates sub- mitted. This was a strategy of simple reciprocity which cooperates on the first move and then does whatever the other player did on the previous move. Using an American colloquial phrase, this strategy was named Tit for Tat.
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face of an uncalled-for defection by the other, forgiveness after responding to a provocation, and clarity of behavior so that the other player can recognize and adapt to your pattern of action.
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We are used to thinkingabout competitions in which there is only one winner, competitions such asfootball or chess. But the world is rarely like that. In a vast range ofsituations, mutual cooperation can be better for both sides than mutualdefection. The key to doing well lies not in overcoming others, but ineliciting their cooperation
Guest Post Online - 0 views
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Article Writing & Guestpost You Can Join this Site for Your Article & guest post, Just Easy way to join this site & total free Article site. This site article post to totally free Way. Guest Post & Article Post live to Life time only for Current & this time new User. http://guestpostonline.com
Mission for week two: Evolution of cooperation questions (ACTION REQUESTED) | Social Me... - 0 views
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Pavel's
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a lot of smart people across the region also begin to identify themselves with one of the sides, inevitably getting involved in arguments they don't want to be part of, raising hostility towards each other.
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ake control over our pre-wired responses.
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Shame and honour drive cooperation - 0 views
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Shame is a traditional deterrent from asocial behaviour and is employed when offenders are singled out for public scorn.
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Modern democratic societies have moved away from including the public in the punishment, although in some cases (e.g. drunk driving licence plates) the state still sanctions shame [1].
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shame as well as honour could become more prevalent as digital technology
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Babies help unlock the origins of morality - CBS News - 0 views
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It's a question people have asked for as long as there have been people: are human beings inherently good? Are we born with a sense of morality or do we arrive blank slates, waiting for the world to teach us right from wrong? Or could it be worse: do we start out nasty, selfish devils, who need our parents, teachers, and religions to whip us into shape?
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The philosopher Rousseau considered babies "perfect idiots...Knowing nothing,"
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for most of its history, her field agreed.
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Babies help unlock the origins of morality - Page 2 - CBS News - 0 views
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Study after study after study, the results are always consistently babies feeling positively towards helpful individuals in the world. And disapproving, disliking, maybe condemning individuals who are antisocial towards others.
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first published their findings about baby morality in the journal "Nature" in 2007, and they've continued to publish follow-up studies in other peer-reviewed journals ever since
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babies seem to view the ball thief "as deserving punishment."
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Are Babies Born Good? | Science | Smithsonian - 0 views
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The study of babies and young toddlers is a perplexing business. Even the most perceptive observers can be tempted to see what isn’t there.
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“When our infant was only four months old I thought that he tried to imitate sounds; but I may have deceived myself,” Charles Darwin wrote in “A Biographical Sketch of an Infant,” his classic study of his own son.
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Even well-behaved babies are notoriously tough to read: Their most meditative expressions are often the sign of an impending bowel movement.
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Do Babies Have a Moral Compass? Debate Heats Up | LiveScience - 0 views
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In the original study, conducted by Yale researchers in 2007, groups of 6-month-olds and 10-month-olds watched a puppet show with neutral wooden figures, where one figure, the climber, was trying to get up a hill. In one scenario, one of the other figures, called the helper, assisted the climber up the hill. In the other scenario, a third figure, called the hinderer, pushed the climber down. Babies were then presented with the helper and hinderer figures so they could pick which one they preferred, and 14 out of 16 babies in the older group (10 months old) and all 12 of the 6-month-olds picked the helper. The study, which was published in the journal Nature, seemed to imply that infants could be good judges of character. [In Photos: How Babies Learn]
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discrepancies would seem to make it tricky for infants to know that the climber needed help, and if they did, for them to know that the helper was helping. As such, it's possible the infants in the new study looked to these other variables (collisions and bounces) to make their decisions, Hamlin suggests.
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Even if flaws did exist in their study, Hamlin and her colleagues point to various independent studies, one of which uses a similar setup without the "bouncing" of the climber, that support the "babies have a moral compass" theory. The researchers go on to note they have replicated their findings, that infants prefer prosocial others, in a range of social scenarios that don't include climbing, colliding or bouncing. Hamlin's other studies have shown babies are good judges of character.
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"An experiment five years ago suggested that babies are equipped with an innate moral compass, which drives them to choose good individuals over the bad in a wooden puppet show. But new research casts doubt on those findings, demonstrating that a baby's apparent preference for what's right might just reflect a fondness for bouncy things."
Babies help unlock the origins of morality - Page 4 - CBS News - 0 views
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The youngest kids in the study will routinely choose to get fewer prizes for themselves just to get more than the other kid
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Around age 8, they start choosing the equal, fair option more and more. And by 9 or 10, we saw kids doing something really crazy --
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-- deliberately giving the other kid more.
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Web Literacy Learning Pathways - 0 views
HOW CULTURE DROVE HUMAN EVOLUTION | Edge.org - 0 views
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how culture drove human evolution
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cultural brain hypothesis—this is the idea that the real driver in the expansion of human brains was this growing cumulative body of cultural information, so that what our brains increasingly got good at was the ability to acquire information, store, process and retransmit this non genetic body of information.
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but tools and artifacts (the kinds of things that one finds useful to throw or finds useful to manipulate) are themselves products of cultural evolution.
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[JOSEPH HENRICH:] The main questions I've been asking myself over the last couple years are broadly about how culture drove human evolution. Think back to when humans first got the capacity for cumulative cultural evolution-and by this I mean the ability for ideas to accumulate over generations, to get an increasingly complex tool starting from something simple. One generation adds a few things to it, the next generation adds a few more things, and the next generation, until it's so complex that no one in the first generation could have invented it.
Mindful Infotention: Dashboards, Radars, Filters - City Brights: Howard Rheingold - 0 views
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Tuning and feeding our personal learning networks is where the internal and the technological meet the social.
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Infotention is a word I came up with to describe the psycho-social-techno skill/tools we all need to find our way online today, a mind-machine combination of brain-powered attention skills with computer-powered information filters
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More and more, knowing where to direct your attention involves a third element, together with your own attentional discipline and use of online power tools – other people
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