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tpakeman

Our Use Of Little Words Can, Uh, Reveal Hidden Interests : Shots - Health News : NPR - 0 views

  • But some of his most interesting work has to do with power dynamics. He says that by analyzing language you can easily tell who among two people has power in a relationship, and their relative social status.
  • We use "I" more when we talk to someone with power because we're more self-conscious. We are focused on ourselves — how we're coming across — and our language reflects that.
  • You can't, he believes, change who you are by changing your language; you can only change your language by changing who you are
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    Our use of 'little words' reveals aspects of our pyschology
Aidar Ulan

How the Color Red Influences Our Behavior - Scientific American - 0 views

  • red regularly sways behavior.
  • Red is a powerful color
  • It means luck in China, where bridal wear is red, mourning in parts of Africa and sex in Amsterdam's red-light district.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Charged with social and cultural meanings
  • Whereas humans are trichromats—meaning that we have three types of retinal cones sensitive to long (red), medium (green) and short (blue) wavelengths—cattle are dichromats: they possess only two kinds of cones.
markfrankel18

Worth - Radiolab - 0 views

  • This episode, we make three earnest, possibly foolhardy, attempts to put a price on the priceless. We figure out the dollar value for an accidental death, another day of life, and the work of bats and bees as we try to keep our careful calculations from falling apart in the face of the realities of life, and love, and loss.
markfrankel18

Obama and the Crusaders - The New Yorker - 1 views

  • The forces in history are always multiple, complex, and contingent, much more so than the fables make it seem. The forces in any particular historical event are always almost infinitely divisible into smaller and often contradictory parts, with a lot of fuzzy cases and leg room.
  • Ideologies are abstract; the acts they inspire are real.
  • The job of the good historian is to balance understanding with indictment; it’s the polemicist who tries to use history only to plead innocent.
markfrankel18

The Foolish, Historically Illiterate, Incredible Response to Obama's Prayer Breakfast S... - 1 views

  • Now, Christianity did not "cause" slavery, anymore than Christianity "caused" the civil-rights movement. The interest in power is almost always accompanied by the need to sanctify that power.
  • If you are truly appalled by the brutality of ISIS, then a wise and essential step is understanding the lure of brutality, and recalling how easily your own society can be, and how often it has been, pulled over the brink.
markfrankel18

Can Your Car Make You An Unethical Driver? : NPR - 1 views

  • New research suggests the size of your car effects how you drive. If you have a big car, studies show you may be more likely to break the law. It has to do with posture and how powerful you feel.
markfrankel18

What Are You So Afraid Of? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Fear, arriving in layers in which genetic legacy converges with personal experience, is vital to our survival. When we freeze, stop in our tracks or take flight, it is a biological response to what we sense as near and present danger. All the same, it observes its own absurd hierarchy, in which we often harbor an abiding anxiety for the wrong things.
  • Except that we do choose, and what we choose are generally the ordinary fears such as heights, public speaking, insects, reptiles
  • The biologist E. O. Wilson has observed that while we fear snakes, spiders, darkness, open spaces and closed spaces, we do not fear the more likely instruments of danger — knives, guns, cars, electrical sockets — because, he says, “our species has not been exposed to these lethal agents long enough in evolutionary time to have acquired the predisposing genes that ensure automatic avoidance.” Which is to say, fear, real fear, deep fear, the kind that changes our habits and actions, is not something on which we are likely to follow sensible instruction.
markfrankel18

Ink-credible: do tattoos count as art? | Art and design | The Guardian - 6 views

  • Writing on the body is as old as time. But perhaps because it was adopted by popular culture first – every sailor had a tattoo – it hasn’t been classed as art
Lawrence Hrubes

Eleven Atlanta teachers in mass cheating scandal - BBC News - 1 views

  • Eleven former school teachers have been convicted for their involvement in a scheme to falsify student test scores.They changed wrong answers to demonstrate student progress, and some received performance-related bonuses.
sleggettisp

25 maps that explain the English language - 1 views

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    English is the language of Shakespeare and the language of Chaucer. It's spoken in dozens of countries around the world, from the United States to a tiny island named Tristan da Cunha. It reflects the influences of centuries of international exchange, including conquest and colonization, from the Vikings through the 21st century.
Lawrence Hrubes

BBC News - India arrests hundreds over Bihar school cheating - 0 views

  • About 300 people have been arrested in the Indian state of Bihar, authorities say, after reports emerged of blatant cheating in school exams. Parents and friends of students were photographed climbing school walls to pass on answers. Many of those arrested were parents. At least 750 students have been expelled. An estimated 1.4m students are taking their school leaving exams in Bihar alone - tests seen as crucial for their chances of a successful career. The authorities have clearly been embarrassed by the cheating, the BBC's Jill McGivering says, with the episode prompting ridicule on social media.
Vicki Close

Does reading fiction make you a more empathic, better person? - 2 views

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    Response to Science journal research paper by Castano and Corner Kidd reporting increased levels of empathy in readers of fiction. (http://mic.com/articles/104702/science-shows-something-surprising-about-people-who-love-reading-fiction)
Petr Dimitrov

Art 101: How to Think About Conceptual Art | Artspace - 1 views

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    A historically minded primer on the often-intangible medium that, in the hands of artists from Duchamp to Lawrence Weiner, helped transform art as we knew it in throughout the 20th century
Lawrence Hrubes

BBC World Service - The Why Factor, Group Thinking - 0 views

  • Anyone who has ever been in a meeting has seen the phenomenon of "Groupthink" first hand. The will of the crowd over shadows the wisdom of individuals and it can lead to dangerous consequences. Mike Williams asks why humans succumb to "Groupthink" and how we fight the tendency to follow the herd even if it leads to very perilous outcomes.
Lawrence Hrubes

BBC - Future - The man who studies the spread of ignorance - 0 views

  • How do people or companies with vested interests spread ignorance and obfuscate knowledge?
  • In one of the paper’s most revealing sections, it looks at how to market cigarettes to the mass public: “Doubt is our product since it is the best means of competing with the ‘body of fact’ that exists in the mind of the general public.
  • It comes from agnosis, the neoclassical Greek word for ignorance or ‘not knowing’, and ontology, the branch of metaphysics which deals with the nature of being. Agnotology is the study of wilful acts to spread confusion and deceit, usually to sell a product or win favour.
markfrankel18

The ethical blindness of algorithms - Quartz - 1 views

  • Can an algorithm be racist? It’s a question that should be of concern for all data-driven organizations.
markfrankel18

Why Can't Robots Understand Sarcasm? - The Atlantic - 1 views

  • According to Noah Goodman, an assistant professor at Stanford University specializing in psychology, computer science, and linguistics, humans will first need to firm up our own understanding of sarcasm. “Before you can program a computer to do something cool, you have to understand what the cool thing is,” Goodman said. “We’re sort of only at the beginning of understanding what nuanced communication actually is.”
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