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sandrine_h

Top court says evidence from hypnosis not reliable - Canada - CBC News - 0 views

  • The Supreme Court of Canada ruled Thursday that evidence obtained through hypnosis should not be used in criminal cases because testimony based on such evidence is not "sufficiently reliable" in a court of law.
  • evidence obtained through hypnosis has been used byCanadian courtsfor nearly 30 years.
  • the technique of hypnosis and its impact on human memory are not understood well enough for post-hypnosis testimony to be sufficiently reliable in a court of law
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  • hypnosis can, in certain circumstances, result in the distortion of memory.
  • Initially, the neighbour told police she saw Trochym on the afternoon of Thursday, Oct. 15, 1992,but after she underwent hypnosis at the request of police, she remembered she sawthe accusedleave on Wednesday afternoon.
  • In its ruling, the court said the dangers posed by problems with the evidence could deprive an accused of a fair trial.
  • But dissenting judges, in their reasons, expressed concern about the majority ruling in which hypnosis is described as a "novel science" and "hypnotically refreshed memories" are now consideredinadmissible as evidence. "This ignores the fact that the technique has been used in Canada for almost 30 years, and has been employed in Canadian criminal investigations to assist in memory retrieval of both Crown and defence witnesses for a similar amount of time," they wrote. "Hypnosis is not new science, nor is its use in forensic investigation new."
mcginnisca

Woman says she was near killed Oregon occupier Finicum - CNN.com - 0 views

  • Victoria Sharp says she is certain LaVoy Finicum was unjustly gunned down by state police after they and the FBI pursued his vehicle in southern Oregon.
  • "I know what I saw."
  • Sharp said she heard three shots and saw Finicum fall
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  • You know, I can't say that he was reaching for a weapon or not," said Sharp.She watched the video again."OK, he was running through snow and it does not look like he is reaching to me. He's trying to keep his balance. He's running, I remember it. He didn't reach for anything."
Megan Flanagan

Paris ringleader directed killers in Bataclan theater - CNN.com - 0 views

  • ringleader of the Paris attacks last month appears to have directed the three terrorists inside the Bataclan theater by phone from a few blocks away,
  • Abdelhamid Abaaoud standing in a doorway yelling into his phone for about an hour.
  • Abaaoud's head was shaved and he was wearing layers of loose clothing, but when photographs were later published in the media the witness immediately recognized him and alerted the authorities.
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  • "the presence of Abaaoud in the immediate vicinity of the attacks provides an indication of his degree of implication in the supervision and control of the plot, and suggests he was giving direct orders and instructions to his team inside the Bataclan."
  • right until the moment the three suicide bombers at the Stade de France started blowing themselves up.
  • Abaaoud's phone was geo-located in the vicinity of the attacks between 10:28pm and 12:28am that night, inlcuding in proximity to the Bataclan before the attack was over.
  • Abaaoud had previously appeared in videos produced by ISIS
  • He was killed five days later when police raided an apartment in the Paris district of St. Denis
  • "More than 2,000 French citizens and residents are involved in Syrian and Iraqi jihadi networks. Among them, 600 are believed to be fighting alongside terrorist organizations abroad and 250 are believed to have returned," he says.
  • Abdeslam and Abaaoud are believed to have planned and co-ordinated the attacks. Abdeslam had made several trips between the French and Belgian capitals in September and October, and he had also traveled to Italy, Hungary and Austria.
  • Paris attacks have focused attention on the substantial French contingent within ISIS
  • Fabien Clain -- who is now thought to be a senior figure within ISIS according to Brisard.
  • Salah Abdeslam, who drove three of the suicide bombers to the Stade de France, is still being sought.
  • Abaaoud had been in contact with that group by cell phone from Greece, according to investigators.
  • rench foreign fighter told investigators he had attended a training camp for a week in Raqqa, ISIS' headquarters in Syria, before being told by Abaaoud to launch an attack
  • "Abaaoud had provided him a USB stick containing encryption software and 2,000 euros,"
  • Paris attacks "demonstrated major failures in European border control policy and the exchange of information between European Union member states.
lenaurick

Schadenfreude alert: Envy decreases empathy in brain - CNN.com - 0 views

  • You might claim to sympathize with the pain experienced by a higher status person, but it's quite likely your jealous brain would actually turn a neural blind eye.
  • The participants reported that they'd felt equal amounts of empathy and discomfort when the other players underwent the horrible needle treatment, regardless of whether those players were one-star or three-star. But looking at the participants' brain activity told a rather different story.
  • When they observed photos of an inferior one-star player undergoing the needle injection, their brains showed increased activity in two key brain areas that are known to be involved in feeling pain and in representing the pain of others
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  • But revealingly, when it came to seeing the superior three-star players having the needle injection, the participants' AI and aMCC were eerily quiet. In other words, their brain's automatic empathic response was apparently dampened.
  • Moreover, when viewing inferior players' suffering, but not the suffering of superior players, the participants' brains showed increased communication between the AI and other regions involved in empathy and perspective-taking
  • putting themselves mentally and emotionally in the position of the inferior players, but not the superior.
  • The researchers didn't find any neural evidence that their participants enjoyed watching three-star players' suffering. However, the results do suggest that the automatic simulation of others' pain that normally goes on in our brains was dampened when participants saw a superior player suffering.
  • It just goes to show how competitive we are by nature and how quick we are to measure ourselves in relation to others
  • The researchers think the reduced neural empathy we show toward superior people is somehow linked to the way they make us feel bad about ourselves
  • Of course, it's worth bearing in mind that, like most social neuroscience research, this study involves making a lot of assumptions about the meaning of people's brain-activity patterns. It certainly seems as if the participants were overstating the empathy they felt for the superior players, and that their brains gave away their true feelings. But this is just one interpretation of the results.
  • It's also a shame, from a methodological point of view, that there wasn't a condition in which the participants looked at equal-status players in pain.
  • These issues aside, the new results are consistent with, and add to, past research that's shown people's neural empathic responses are diminished when witnessing pain endured by someone they dislike, or someone from a different social group.
  • We can strive to be good people, but sadly it seems our brains often reveal the darker side of human nature.
alliefulginiti1

Voices From China's Cultural Revolution - The New York Times - 0 views

  • ademics and writers who witnessed the Cultural Revolution.
  • At the time, no one really knew who was for or against the revolution.
  • If there had been no Cultural Revolution, then I would not be who I am today.
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  • It wasnā€™t the manual labor. Thatā€™s a different kind of hardship. This was the worst kind of bitterness.
  • ou will have no future in this place. You will not have a good job. Everyone looks down on you.ā€That burden, that burden on your spirit, is very heavy.
  • Even before the Cultural Revolution, there were divisions in our class over family background.
  • After the Cultural Revolution broke out, they were also the ones who formed the first Red Guard group.
  • One night these rebels ā€“ Red Guards ā€“ burst into the apartment, turning everything inside out
  • At Tsinghua High School I also saw students and teachers who were beaten up, or had their hair shaved off.
  • But the hospital said they didnā€™t treat this kind of cow demon and snake spirit,
  • They said that because of my family background I could never love socialism and the Communist Party.
  • Struggle sessions, when people were accused of political crimes, publicly humiliated and subject to verbal and physical abuse by a crowd, were a frequent occurrence during the Cultural Revolution
  • People who didnā€™t experience the Cultural Revolution only know that a large number of officials were persecuted,
  • They treat one-sidedly extolling the achievements of the past as a ā€œpositive energyā€ to be exalted, and they treat exposing and reflecting on the mistakes of history as a ā€œnegative energyā€ to be beaten down.
Emily Freilich

The Man Who Would Teach Machines to Think - James Somers - The Atlantic - 1 views

  • Douglas Hofstadter, the Pulitzer Prizeā€“winning author of Gƶdel, Escher, Bach, thinks we've lost sight of what artificial intelligence really means. His stubborn quest to replicate the human mind.
  • ā€œIf somebody meant by artificial intelligence the attempt to understand the mind, or to create something human-like, they might sayā€”maybe they wouldnā€™t go this farā€”but they might say this is some of the only good work thatā€™s ever been done
  • Their operating premise is simple: the mind is a very unusual piece of software, and the best way to understand how a piece of software works is to write it yourself.
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  • ā€œIt depends on what you mean by artificial intelligence.ā€
  • Computers are flexible enough to model the strange evolved convolutions of our thought, and yet responsive only to precise instructions. So if the endeavor succeeds, it will be a double victory: we will finally come to know the exact mechanics of our selvesā€”and weā€™ll have made intelligent machines.
  • Ever since he was about 14, when he found out that his youngest sister, Molly, couldnā€™t understand language, because she ā€œhad something deeply wrong with her brainā€ (her neurological condition probably dated from birth, and was never diagnosed), he had been quietly obsessed by the relation of mind to matter.
  • How could consciousness be physical? How could a few pounds of gray gelatin give rise to our very thoughts and selves?
  • Consciousness, Hofstadter wanted to say, emerged via just the same kind of ā€œlevel-crossing feedback loop.ā€
  • In 1931, the Austrian-born logician Kurt Gƶdel had famously shown how a mathematical system could make statements not just about numbers but about the system itself.
  • But then AI changed, and Hofstadter didnā€™t change with it, and for that he all but disappeared.
  • By the early 1980s, the pressure was great enough that AI, which had begun as an endeavor to answer yes to Alan Turingā€™s famous question, ā€œCan machines think?,ā€ started to matureā€”or mutate, depending on your point of viewā€”into a subfield of software engineering, driven by applications.
  • Take Deep Blue, the IBM supercomputer that bested the chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov. Deep Blue won by brute force.
  • Hofstadter wanted to ask: Why conquer a task if thereā€™s no insight to be had from the victory? ā€œOkay,ā€ he says, ā€œDeep Blue plays very good chessā€”so what? Does that tell you something about how we play chess? No. Does it tell you about how Kasparov envisions, understands a chessboard?ā€
  • AI started working when it ditched humans as a model, because it ditched them. Thatā€™s the thrust of the analogy: Airplanes donā€™t flap their wings; why should computers think?
  • Itā€™s a compelling point. But it loses some bite when you consider what we want: a Google that knows, in the way a human would know, what you really mean when you search for something
  • Cognition is recognition,ā€ he likes to say. He describes ā€œseeing asā€ as the essential cognitive act: you see some lines a
  • How do you make a search engine that understands if you donā€™t know how you understand?
  • s ā€œan A,ā€ you see a hunk of wood as ā€œa table,ā€ you see a meeting as ā€œan emperor-has-no-clothes situationā€ and a friendā€™s pouting as ā€œsour grapesā€
  • Thatā€™s what it means to understand. But how does understanding work?
  • analogy is ā€œthe fuel and fire of thinking,ā€ the bread and butter of our daily mental lives.
  • thereā€™s an analogy, a mental leap so stunningly complex that itā€™s a computational miracle: somehow your brain is able to strip any remark of the irrelevant surface details and extract its gist, its ā€œskeletal essence,ā€ and retrieve, from your own repertoire of ideas and experiences, the story or remark that best relates.
  • in Hofstadterā€™s telling, the story goes like this: when everybody else in AI started building products, he and his team, as his friend, the philosopher Daniel Dennett, wrote, ā€œpatiently, systematically, brilliantly,ā€ way out of the light of day, chipped away at the real problem. ā€œVery few people are interested in how human intelligence works,ā€
  • For more than 30 years, Hofstadter has worked as a professor at Indiana University at Bloomington
  • The quick unconscious chaos of a mind can be slowed down on the computer, or rewound, paused, even edited
  • project out of IBM called Candide. The idea behind Candide, a machine-translation system, was to start by admitting that the rules-based approach requires too deep an understanding of how language is produced; how semantics, syntax, and morphology work; and how words commingle in sentences and combine into paragraphsā€”to say nothing of understanding the ideas for which those words are merely conduits.
  • , Hofstadter directs the Fluid Analogies Research Group, affectionately known as FARG.
  • Parts of a program can be selectively isolated to see how it functions without them; parameters can be changed to see how performance improves or degrades. When the computer surprises youā€”whether by being especially creative or especially dim-wittedā€”you can see exactly why.
  • When you read Fluid Concepts and Creative Analogies: Computer Models of the Fundamental Mechanisms of Thought, which describes in detail this architecture and the logic and mechanics of the programs that use it, you wonder whether maybe Hofstadter got famous for the wrong book.
  • ut very few people, even admirers of GEB, know about the book or the programs it describes. And maybe thatā€™s because FARGā€™s programs are almost ostentatiously impractical. Because they operate in tiny, seemingly childish ā€œmicrodomains.ā€ Because there is no task they perform better than a human.
  • ā€œThe entire effort of artificial intelligence is essentially a fight against computersā€™ rigidity.ā€
  • ā€œNobody is a very reliable guide concerning activities in their mind that are, by definition, subconscious,ā€ he once wrote. ā€œThis is what makes vast collections of errors so important. In an isolated error, the mechanisms involved yield only slight traces of themselves; however, in a large collection, vast numbers of such slight traces exist, collectively adding up to strong evidence for (and against) particular mechanisms.
  • So IBM threw that approach out the window. What the developers did instead was brilliant, but so straightforward,
  • The technique is called ā€œmachine learning.ā€ The goal is to make a device that takes an English sentence as input and spits out a French sentence
  • What you do is feed the machine English sentences whose French translations you already know. (Candide, for example, used 2.2 million pairs of sentences, mostly from the bilingual proceedings of Canadian parliamentary debates.)
  • By repeating this process with millions of pairs of sentences, you will gradually calibrate your machine, to the point where youā€™ll be able to enter a sentence whose translation you donā€™t know and get a reasonable resul
  • Google Translate team can be made up of people who donā€™t speak most of the languages their application translates. ā€œItā€™s a bang-for-your-buck argument,ā€ Estelle says. ā€œYou probably want to hire more engineers insteadā€ of native speakers.
  • But the need to serve 1 billion customers has a way of forcing the company to trade understanding for expediency. You donā€™t have to push Google Translate very far to see the compromises its developers have made for coverage, and speed, and ease of engineering. Although Google Translate captures, in its way, the products of human intelligence, it isnā€™t intelligent itself.
  • ā€œDid we sit down when we built Watson and try to model human cognition?ā€ Dave Ferrucci, who led the Watson team at IBM, pauses for emphasis. ā€œAbsolutely not. We just tried to create a machine that could win at Jeopardy.ā€
  • For Ferrucci, the definition of intelligence is simple: itā€™s what a program can do. Deep Blue was intelligent because it could beat Garry Kasparov at chess. Watson was intelligent because it could beat Ken Jennings at Jeopardy.
  • ā€œThereā€™s a limited number of things you can do as an individual, and I think when you dedicate your life to something, youā€™ve got to ask yourself the question: To what end? And I think at some point I asked myself that question, and what it came out to was, Iā€™m fascinated by how the human mind works, it would be fantastic to understand cognition, I love to read books on it, I love to get a grip on itā€ā€”he called Hofstadterā€™s work inspiringā€”ā€œbut where am I going to go with it? Really what I want to do is build computer systems that do something.
  • Peter Norvig, one of Googleā€™s directors of research, echoes Ferrucci almost exactly. ā€œI thought he was tackling a really hard problem,ā€ he told me about Hofstadterā€™s work. ā€œAnd I guess I wanted to do an easier problem.ā€
  • Of course, the folly of being above the fray is that youā€™re also not a part of it
  • As our machines get faster and ingest more data, we allow ourselves to be dumber. Instead of wrestling with our hardest problems in earnest, we can just plug in billions of examples of them.
  • Hofstadter hasnā€™t been to an artificial-intelligence conference in 30 years. ā€œThereā€™s no communication between me and these people,ā€ he says of his AI peers. ā€œNone. Zero. I donā€™t want to talk to colleagues that I find very, very intransigent and hard to convince of anything
  • Everything from plate tectonics to evolutionā€”all those ideas, someone had to fight for them, because people didnā€™t agree with those ideas.
  • Academia is not an environment where you just sit in your bath and have ideas and expect everyone to run around getting excited. Itā€™s possible that in 50 yearsā€™ time weā€™ll say, ā€˜We really should have listened more to Doug Hofstadter.ā€™ But itā€™s incumbent on every scientist to at least think about what is needed to get people to understand the ideas.ā€
maxwellokolo

Witnessing Fear in Others Can Physically Change the Brain - 0 views

  •  
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simoneveale

Why We Remember So Many Things Wrong - The New Yorker - 1 views

  • Two and a half years after the event, she remembered it as if it were yesterday: the TV, the terrible news, the call home. She could say with absolute certainty that thatā€™s precisely how it happened. Except, it turns out, none of what she remembered was accurate.
  • Neisser became fascinated by the concept of flashbulb memoriesā€”the times when a shocking, emotional event seems to leave a particularly vivid imprint on the mind.
  • Nicole Harsch, handed out a questionnaire about the event to the hundred and six students in their ten oā€™clock psychology 101 class, ā€œPersonality Development.ā€ Where were the students when they heard the news? Whom were they with? What were they doing? The professor and his assistant carefully filed the responses away.
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  • two and a half years later, the questionnaire was given a second time to the same students.
  • It was then that R. T. recalled, with absolute confidence, her dorm-room experience.
  • She didnā€™t know any details of what had happened,
  • We donā€™t really remember an uneventful day the way that we remember a fight or a first kiss.
  • Her hope is to understand how, exactly, emotional memories behave at all stages of the remembering process: how we encode them, how we consolidate and store them, how we retrieve them.
  • When it comes to the central details of the event, like that the Challenger exploded, they are clearer and more accurate. But when it comes to peripheral details, they are worse. And our confidence in them, while almost always strong, is often misplaced.
  • Within the brain, memories are formed and consolidated largely due to the help of a small seahorse-like structure called the hippocampus; damage the hippocampus, and you damage the ability to form lasting recollections.
  • A key element of emotional-memory formation is the direct line of communication between the amygdala and the visual cortex.
  • Phelps has combined Neisserā€™s experiential approach with the neuroscience of emotional memory to explore how such memories work, and why they work the way they do.
  • Memory for the emotional scenes was significantly higher, and the vividness of the recollection was significantly greater.
  • hat is, if you were shocked when you saw animals, your memory of the earlier animals was also enhanced. And, more important, the effect only emerged after six or twenty-four hours: the memory needed time to consolidate.
  • o, if memory for events is strengthened at emotional times, why does everyone forget what they were doing when the Challenger exploded?
  • The strength of the central memory seems to make us confident of all of the details when we should only be confident of a few.
  • Our misplaced confidence in recalling dramatic events is troubling when we need to rely on a memory for something importantā€”evidence in court, for instance
  • After reviewing the evidence, the committee made several concrete suggestions to changes in current procedures, including ā€œblindedā€ eyewitness identification
  • standardized instructions to witnesses, along with extensive police training in vision and memory research as it relates to eyewitness testimony, videotaped identification, expert testimony early on in trials about the issues surrounding eyewitness reliability, and early and clear jury instruction on any prior identifications
Javier E

Why parents see their kids in the Stanford attacker, not his victim - The Washington Post - 1 views

  • Turner and other elite students are living the American Dream. Parents raise them in a world of winners and losers, victory and defeat, and expect them to be victors
  • They mythologize this behavior as natural order. From ā€œboys will be boysā€ to ā€œhe was a born champion,ā€ young men like Brock Turner are taught that they should aspire to be talented, successful winners.
  • for every conqueror, there must be conquered. We donā€™t say that someone simply won a game, they demolished their competition. A young man doesnā€™t just ā€œhave sexā€ with a woman, he ā€œscoresā€ or ā€œsmashes.ā€ There are no ties, and there is no second place.
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  • This mentality is understandable when we consider what innocent victims truly symbolize in our society. Itā€™s hard for parents, or for anyone, to acknowledge that their children could end up as victims of assault.
  • The overwhelming message is clear: Our best and brightest young men will at times become overzealous in their attempts to conquer the world ā€” and if they sometimes conquer young women, it is best for everyone if we pretend it didnā€™t happen.
  • Melvin Lerner showed through his famous electric shock experiments that, even when we are first-hand witnesses to an assault on an innocent victim, we will try to discredit and derogate the victim. The more severe the assault, the greater our derogation. We simply cannot allow the reality that often, good people will find themselves the victims of senseless abuse.
  • Thatā€™s borne out in the way colleges handle sexual assault. While multiple studies have shown that 1 in 5 college women have been sexually assaulted on campus, students determined to be guilty of sexual assault receive only minor sanctions 75 to 90 percent of the time. Only 3 percent of convicted rapists ever see jail
  • , ā€œThe more innocent a victim, the more threatening they are. Victims threaten our sense that the world is a safe and moral place, where good things happen to good people and bad things happen to bad people. When bad things happen to good people, it implies that no one is safe, that no matter how good we are, we too could be vulnerable.
  • We do not want to acknowledge that we are raising half of our children to conquer the world while leaving the other half of our children to be conquered. We would rather focus on the victors and pretend that the victims do not exist. We as a society have created this culture, and only we can change it.
Javier E

How 'Concept Creep' Made Americans So Sensitive to Harm - The Atlantic - 0 views

  • How did American culture arrive at these moments? A new research paper by Nick Haslam, a professor of psychology at the University of Melbourne, Australia, offers as useful a framework for understanding whatā€™s going on as any Iā€™ve seen. In ā€œConcept Creep: Psychology's Expanding Concepts of Harm and Pathology,ā€
  • concepts like abuse, bullying, trauma, mental disorder, addiction, and prejudice, ā€œnow encompass a much broader range of phenomena than before,ā€expanded meanings that reflect ā€œan ever-increasing sensitivity to harm.ā€
  • ā€œthey also have potentially damaging ramifications for society and psychology that cannot be ignored.ā€
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  • He calls these expansions of meaning ā€œconcept creep.ā€
  • critics may hold concept creep responsible for damaging cultural trends, he writes, ā€œsuch as supposed cultures of fear, therapy, and victimhood, the shifts I present have some positive implications.ā€
  • Concept creep is inevitable and vital if society is to make good use of new information. But why has the direction of concept creep, across so many different concepts, trended toward greater sensitivity to harm as opposed to lesser sensitivity?
  • The concept of abuse expanded too far.
  • Classically, psychological investigations recognized two forms of child abuse, physical and sexual, Haslam writes. In more recent decades, however, the concept of abuse has witnessed ā€œhorizontal creepā€ as new forms of abuse were recognized or studied. For example, ā€œemotional abuseā€ was added as a new subtype of abuse. Neglect, traditionally a separate category, came to be seen as a type of abuse, too.
  • Meanwhile, the concept of abuse underwent ā€œvertical creep.ā€ That is, the behavior seen as qualifying for a given kind of abuse became steadily less extreme. Some now regard any spanking as physical abuse. Within psychology, ā€œthe boundary of neglect is indistinct,ā€ Haslam writes. ā€œAs a consequence, the concept of neglect can become over-inclusive, identifying behavior as negligent that is substantially milder or more subtle than other forms of abuse. This is not to deny that some forms of neglect are profoundly damaging, merely to argue that the conceptā€™s boundaries are sufficiently vague and elastic to encompass forms that are not severe.ā€
  • How did a working-class mom get arrested, lose her fast food job, and temporarily lose custody of her 9-year-old for letting the child play alone at a nearby park?
  • One concerns the field of psychology and its incentives. ā€œIt could be argued that just as successful species increase their territory, invading and adapting to new habitats, successful concepts and disciplines also expand their range into new semantic niches,ā€ he theorizes. ā€œConcepts that successfully attract the attention of researchers and practitioners are more likely to be applied in new ways and new contexts than those that do not.ā€
  • Concept creep can be necessary or needless. It can align concepts more or less closely with underlying realities. It can change society for better or worse. Yet many who push for more sensitivy to harm seem unaware of how oversensitivty can do harm.
  • The other theory posits an ideological explanation. ā€œPsychology has played a role in the liberal agenda of sensitivity to harm and responsiveness to the harmed,ā€ he writes ā€œand its increased focus on negative phenomenaā€”harms such as abuse, addiction, bullying, mental disorder, prejudice, and traumaā€”has been symptomatic of the success of that social agenda.ā€
  • Jonathan Haidt, who believes it has gone too far, offers a fourth theory. ā€œIf an increasingly left-leaning academy is staffed by people who are increasingly hostile to conservatives, then we can expect that their concepts will shift, via motivated scholarship, in ways that will help them and their allies (e.g., university administrators) to prosecute and condemn conservatives,
  • While Haslam and Haidt appear to have meaningfully different beliefs about why concept creep arose within academic psychology and spread throughout society, they were in sufficient agreement about its dangers to co-author a Guardian op-ed on the subject.
  • It focuses on how greater sensitivity to harm has affected college campuses.
  • ā€œOf course young people need to be protected from some kinds of harm, but overprotection is harmful, too, for it causes fragility and hinders the development of resilience,ā€ they wrote. ā€œAs Nasim Taleb pointed out in his book Antifragile, muscles need resistance to develop, bones need stress and shock to strengthen and the growing immune system needs to be exposed to pathogens in order to function. Similarly, he noted, children are by nature anti-fragile ā€“ they get stronger when they learn to recover from setbacks, failures and challenges to their cherished ideas.ā€
  • police officers fearing harm from dogs kill them by the hundreds or perhaps thousands every year in what the DOJ calls an epidemic.
  • After the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the Bush Administration and many Americans grew increasingly sensitive to harms, real and imagined, from terrorism
  • Dick Cheney declared, ā€œIf there's a 1% chance that Pakistani scientists are helping al-Qaeda build or develop a nuclear weapon, we have to treat it as a certainty in terms of our response. It's not about our analysis ... It's about our response.ā€ The invasion of Iraq was predicated, in part, on the idea that 9/11 ā€œchanged everything,ā€
  • Before 9/11, the notion of torturing prisoners was verboten. After the Bush Administrationā€™s torture was made public, popular debate focused on mythical ā€œticking time bombā€ scenarios, in which a whole city would be obliterated but for torture. Now Donald Trump suggests that torture should be used more generally against terrorists. Torture is, as well, an instance in which people within the field of psychology pushed concept creep in the direction of less sensitivity to harm,
  • Haslam endorses two theories
  • there are many reasons to be concerned about excessive sensitivity to harm:
Javier E

Do Political Experts Know What They're Talking About? | Wired ScienceĀ | Wired... - 1 views

  • I often joke that every cable news show should be forced to display a disclaimer, streaming in a loop at the bottom of the screen. The disclaimer would read: ā€œThese talking heads have been scientifically proven to not know what they are talking about. Their blather is for entertainment purposes only.ā€ The viewer would then be referred to Tetlockā€™s most famous research project, which began in 1984.
  • He picked a few hundred political experts ā€“ people who made their living ā€œcommenting or offering advice on political and economic trendsā€ ā€“ and began asking them to make predictions about future events. He had a long list of pertinent questions. Would George Bush be re-elected? Would there be a peaceful end to apartheid in South Africa? Would Quebec secede from Canada? Would the dot-com bubble burst? In each case, the pundits were asked to rate the probability of several possible outcomes. Tetlock then interrogated the pundits about their thought process, so that he could better understand how they made up their minds.
  • Most of Tetlockā€™s questions had three possible answers; the pundits, on average, selected the right answer less than 33 percent of the time. In other words, a dart-throwing chimp would have beaten the vast majority of professionals. These results are summarized in his excellent Expert Political Judgment.
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  • Some experts displayed a top-down style of reasoning: politics as a deductive art. They started with a big-idea premise about human nature, society, or economics and applied it to the specifics of the case. They tended to reach more confident conclusions about the future. And the positions they reached were easier to classify ideologically: that is the Keynesian prediction and that is the free-market fundamentalist prediction and that is the worst-case environmentalist prediction and that is the best case technology-driven growth prediction etc. Other experts displayed a bottom-up style of reasoning: politics as a much messier inductive art. They reached less confident conclusions and they are more likely to draw on a seemingly contradictory mix of ideas in reaching those conclusions (sometimes from the left, sometimes from the right). We called the big-idea experts ā€œhedgehogsā€ (they know one big thing) and the more eclectic experts ā€œfoxesā€ (they know many, not so big things).
  • The most consistent predictor of consistently more accurate forecasts was ā€œstyle of reasoningā€: experts with the more eclectic, self-critical, and modest cognitive styles tended to outperform the big-idea people (foxes tended to outperform hedgehogs).
  • Lehrer: Can non-experts do anything to encourage a more effective punditocracy?
  • Tetlock: Yes, non-experts can encourage more accountability in the punditocracy. Pundits are remarkably skillful at appearing to go out on a limb in their claims about the future, without actually going out on one. For instance, they often ā€œpredictā€ continued instability and turmoil in the Middle East (predicting the present) but they virtually never get around to telling you exactly what would have to happen to disconfirm their expectations. They are essentially impossible to pin down. If pundits felt that their public credibility hinged on participating in level playing field forecasting exercises in which they must pit their wits against an extremely difficult-to-predict world, I suspect they would be learn, quite quickly, to be more flexible and foxlike in their policy pronouncements.
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oliviaodon

White House Pushes 'Alternative Facts.' Here Are the Real Ones. - The New York Times - 0 views

  • Kellyanne Conway, counselor to President Trump, said on NBCā€™s ā€œMeet the Pressā€ on Sunday that the White House had put forth ā€œalternative factsā€ to ones reported by the news media about the size of Mr. Trumpā€™s inauguration crowd.
  • In leveling this attack, the president and Mr. Spicer made a series of false statements.Here are the facts.In a speech at the C.I.A. on Saturday, Mr. Trump said the news media had constructed a feud between him and the intelligence community. ā€œThey sort of made it sound like I had a ā€˜feudā€™ with the intelligence community,ā€ he said. ā€œIt is exactly the opposite, and they understand that, too.ā€In fact, Mr. Trump repeatedly criticized the intelligence agencies during his transition to office and has questioned their conclusion that Russia meddled in the election to aid his candidacy. He called their assessment ā€œridiculousā€ and suggested that it had been politically motivated.
  • Mr. Trump said of his inauguration crowd, ā€œIt looked honestly like a million and a half people, whatever it was, it was, but it went all the way back to the Washington Monument.ā€Aerial photographs clearly show that the crowd did not stretch to the Washington Monument. An analysis by The New York Times, comparing photographs from Friday to ones taken of Barack Obamaā€™s 2009 inauguration, showed that Mr. Trumpā€™s crowd was significantly smaller and less than the 1.5 million people he claimed. An expert hired by The Times found that Mr. Trumpā€™s crowd on the National Mall was about a third of the size of Mr. Obamaā€™s in 2009.
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  • Speaking later on Saturday in the White House briefing room, Mr. Spicer amplified Mr. Trumpā€™s false claims. ā€œThis was the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration ā€” period ā€” both in person and around the globe,ā€ he said.There is no evidence to support this claim. Not only was Mr. Trumpā€™s inauguration crowd far smaller than Mr. Obamaā€™s in 2009, but he also drew fewer television viewers in the United States (30.6 million) than Mr. Obama did in 2009 (38 million) and Ronald Reagan did in 1981 (42 million), Nielsen reported. Figures for online viewership were not available.
  • Mr. Spicer said that Washingtonā€™s Metro system had greater ridership on Friday than it did for Mr. Obamaā€™s 2013 inauguration. ā€œWe know that 420,000 people used the D.C. Metro public transit yesterday, which actually compares to 317,000 that used it for President Obamaā€™s last inaugural,ā€ Mr. Spicer said.Neither number is correct, according to the transit system, which reported 570,557 entries into the rail system on Friday, compared with 782,000 on Inauguration Day in 2013.
  •  
    This article provides examples of alternative facts, and "real" facts.
Javier E

Deluded Individualism - NYTimes.com - 2 views

  • We tend to see ourselves as self-determining, self-conscious agents in all that we decide and do, and we cling to that image. But why? Why do we resist the truth? Why do we wish ā€” strain, strive, against the grain of reality ā€” to be autonomous individuals, and see ourselves as such?
  • why do we presume individual agency in the first place? Why do we insist on it stubbornly, irrationally, often recklessly?
  • though Republicans call for deep cuts to the safety net, their districts rely more on government support than their Democratic counterparts.
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  • The Timesā€™s reporters spoke with residents who supported the Tea Party and its proposed cuts to federal spending, even while they admitted they could not get by without government support.
  • the fate of the middle class counties and urban ghettos is entwined. When the poor are left to rot in their misery, the misery does not stay contained. It harms us all. The crime radiates, the misery offends, it debases the whole. Individuals, much less communities, cannot be insulated from it.
  • Thanks to a decades-long safety net, we have forgotten the trials of living without it. This is why, the historian Tony Judt argued, itā€™s easy for some to speak fondly of a world without government: we canā€™t fully imagine or recall what itā€™s like. We canā€™t really appreciate the horrors Upton Sinclair witnessed in the Chicago slaughterhouses before regulation, or the burden of living without Social Security and Medicare to look forward to. Thus, we can entertain nostalgia for a time when everyone pulled his own weight, bore his own risk, and was the master of his destiny. That time was a myth
  • To be human, according to Spinoza, is to be party to a confounding existential illusion ā€” that human individuals are independent agents ā€” which exacts a heavy emotional and political toll on us. It is the source of anxiety, envy, anger ā€” all the passions that torment our psyche ā€” and the violence that ensues.
  • There is no such thing as a discrete individual, Spinoza points out. This is a fiction. The boundaries of ā€˜meā€™ are fluid and blurred. We are all profoundly linked in countless ways we can hardly perceive. My decisions, choices, actions are inspired and motivated by others to no small extent.
  • weā€™re all in this together. We are not the sole authors of our destiny, each of us; our destinies are entangled ā€” messily, unpredictably. Our cultural demands of individualism are too extreme. They are constitutionally irrational, Spinoza and Freud tell us, and their potential consequences are disastrous. Thanks to our safety net, we live in a society that affirms the dependence and interdependence of all. To that extent, it affirms a basic truth of our nature. We forsake it at our own peril.
anonymous

Errol Morris: The Thinking Man's Detective | Arts & Culture | Smithsonian Magazine - 0 views

  • To illustrate the near-impossibility of establishing veracity in photography he engaged in what might seem like a mad, hopeless enterprise: to see whether the cannonballs were initially on the road or placed thereā€”posed for ideological impact. An investigation that involved him going halfway around the world to the Crimea to find the road and subsequently interviewing ā€œshadow expertsā€ on the time of day each photograph might have been shot. As one commenter wrote: ā€œDonā€™t miss the excursus on the use of albatross eggs to provide the albumen for photo emulsions in early film developing. Or the meditation on Descartesā€™ Meditations. Or the succinct and devastating deconstruction of deconstructionistsā€™ dim witted view of truth (just because we canā€™t necessarily know it, they rashly conclude it doesnā€™t exist). This leads to his critique of the correlative misreading of the film Rashomon [itā€™s not an ā€˜all points of view are equally validā€™ manifesto] and his desire, expressed in a footnote, for a Rashomon about Rashomon.ā€
Javier E

Elon studies future of "Generation Always-On" - 1 views

  • Elon studies the future of "Generation Always-On"
  • By the year 2020, it is expected that youth of the ā€œalways-on generation,ā€ brought up from childhood with a continuous connection to each other and to information, will be nimble, quick-acting multitaskers who count on the Internet as their external brain and who approach problems in a different way from their elders. "There is no doubt that brains are being rewired,"
  • the Internet Center, refers to the teens-to-20s age group born since the turn of the century as Generation AO, for ā€œalways-on." ā€œThey have grown up in a world that has come to offer them instant access to nearly the entirety of human knowledge, and incredible opportunities to connect, create and collaborate,"
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  • some said they are already witnessing deficiencies in young peoplesā€™ abilities to focus their attention, be patient and think deeply. Some experts expressed concerns that trends are leading to a future in which most people become shallow consumers of information, endangering society."
  • Many of the respondents in this survey predict that Gen AO will exhibit a thirst for instant gratification and quick fixes and a lack of patience and deep-thinking ability due to what one referred to as ā€œfast-twitch wiring.ā€
  • ā€œThe replacement of memorization by analysis will be the biggest boon to society since the coming of mass literacy in the late 19th to early 20th century.ā€ ā€” Paul Jones, University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
  • ā€œTeens find distraction while working, distraction while driving, distraction while talking to the neighbours. Parents and teachers will have to invest major time and efforts into solving this issue ā€“ silence zones, time-out zones, meditation classes without mobile, lessons in ignoring people.ā€
  • ā€œSociety is becoming conditioned into dependence on technology in ways that, if that technology suddenly disappears or breaks down, will render people functionally useless. What does that mean for individual and social resiliency?
  • ā€œShort attention spans resulting from quick interactions will be detrimental to focusing on the harder problems and we will probably see a stagnation in many areas: technology, even social venues such as literature. The people who will strive and lead the charge will be the ones able to disconnect themselves to focus.ā€
  • ā€œThe underlying issue is that they will become dependent on the Internet in order to solve problems and conduct their personal, professional, and civic lives. Thus centralized powers that can control access to the Internet will be able to significantly control future generations. It will be much as in Orwell's 1984, where control was achieved by using language to shape and limit thought, so future regimes may use control of access to the Internet to shape and limit thought.ā€
  • ā€œIncreasingly, teens and young adults rely on the first bit of information they find on a topic, assuming that they have found the ā€˜rightā€™ answer, rather than using context and vetting/questioning the sources of information to gain a holistic view of a topic.ā€
  • ā€œParents and kids will spend less time developing meaningful and bonded relationships in deference to the pursuit and processing of more and more segmented information competing for space in their heads, slowly changing their connection to humanity.ā€
  • ā€œItā€™s simply not possible to discuss, let alone form societal consensus around major problems without lengthy, messy conversations about those problems. A generation that expects to spend 140 or fewer characters on a topic and rejects nuance is incapable of tackling these problems.ā€
julia rhodes

False Memory: Did It Happen? | Psychology Today - 0 views

  • . As convincing as juries may find the testimony of witnesses, good prosecutors know that human memory is, more often than not, the least reliable source of evidence.
  • ā€œWe think parts of the brain used to actually perceive an object and to imagine an object overlap,ā€ says Northwestern University scientist Kenneth Paller. ā€œThus, the vividly imagined event can leave a memory trace in the brain thatā€™s very similar to that of an experienced event.ā€
  • How this process works is a research question of great interest to neuroscientists. This week, researchers affiliated with a project at MIT reported a giant step toward explaining how external stimuli can distort mental representations to produce brand new, seemingly accurateā€”but completely falseā€”memories.
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  • The researchers studied a group of brain cells in the hippocampal region of the mouse brain. They found that they could create false associations between events and environments by artificially stimulating the neurons.
  • A member of the MIT team, Susumu Tonegawa, commented on the significance of the research in Science  magazine's weekly podcast:Independent of what is happening around you in the outside world, humans constantly have internal activity in the brain. So just like our mouse, it is quite possible we can associate what we happen to have in our mind with a bad or good high valence, online event. So, in other words, there could be a false association of what you have in your mind rather than what is happening to you, so this is a way we believe that at least some form of strong force memory observed in humans could be made. Because our study showed that the false memories and the genuine memories are based on very similar, almost identical, brain mechanisms, it is difficult for the false memory bearer to distinguish between them. So we can study this, because we have a mouse model now.
Emily Freilich

Rights group's report offers compelling evidence of Syria chemical attack - CBS News - 0 views

  • On Tuesday, the group Human Rights Watch issued a report that said evidence strongly implies that Syrian government troops' firing of rockets containing a nerve agent into a Damascus suburb on August 21 that the U.S. said killed over 1,400 people.
  • While the report doesn't furnish conclusive proof that the Syrian government carried out the attack with chemical weapons, it does present the most coherent circumstantial evidence I've seen so far to support the case.
  • The report does not rely on ambiguous intercepted phone calls. It cites no shadowy intelligence gathering
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  • HRW's experts take a close look at witness statements and photographs and video of the victims and -- above all -- the remains of the weapons that appear to have been used.
  • The report provides another map that shows that there were several military bases around Zamalka and Moadimiyeh on August 21st, that were within the correct firing distanc
Javier E

Elizabeth Loftus interview: False-memory research on eyewitnesses, child abuse recovere... - 1 views

  • psychologist Elizabeth Loftus of the University of Californiaā€“Irvine, has made her name working on false memory. She tells Alison George how recollections can be conjured up,
  • Is it the power of suggestion from a therapist that creates these "memories," then? EL: Yes, a lot of the cases involve suggestive psychotherapy. But you don't absolutely need the therapy. You can get suggestion from the culture and the environment, like when somebody turns on Oprah and sees one of these repressed-memory therapists talking, then believes this has happened to them.
  • The memory of witnesses to crimes and accidents was a natural place to go. In particular I looked at what happens when people are questioned about their experiences. I would ultimately see those questions as a means by which the memories got contaminated.
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  • Depending on the study, you might get as many as 50 percent of people falling for the suggestion and developing a complete or partial false memory.
  • What exactly is going on when we retrieve a memory? EL: When we remember something, we're taking bits and pieces of experienceā€”sometimes from different times and placesā€”and bringing it all together to construct what might feel like a recollection but is actually a construction. The process of calling it into conscious awareness can change it, and now you're storing something that's different
  • How do you plant these memories? EL: We use a "false feedback" technique. We gather a whole bunch of data from you, about your personality, thoughts about different foods, all kinds of things. Later, we hand you this computerized profile, which reveals certain things that probably happened when you were a child. In the middle of the list is, say, that you got sick eating strawberry ice cream. We give you false feedback about your data, and then encourage you to elaborate and imagine. Later we ascertain whether you have a belief that it happened to you. Then we offer you a choice from all these different foods. In that example we found that participants didn't want strawberry ice cream as much.
  • bad governments, bad people, they don't have requirements of conduct. When we recently published a study about planting false memories among U.S. soldiers, I was worried we were putting out a recipe for how you can do horrible things to somebody and then wipe their memory away.
  • Is there any way to distinguish a false memory from a real one? EL: Without independent corroboration, little can be done to tell a false memory from a true one.
Javier E

Untier Of Knots Ā« The Dish - 0 views

  • Benedict XVI and John Paul II focused on restoring dogmatic certainty as the counterpart to papal authority. Francis is arguing that both, if taken too far, can be sirens leading us away from God, not ensuring our orthodoxy but sealing us off in calcified positions and rituals that can come to mean nothing outside themselves
  • In this quest to seek and find God in all things there is still an area of uncertainty. There must be. If a person says that he met God with total certainty and is not touched by a margin of uncertainty, then this is not good. For me, this is an important key. If one has the answers to all the questions ā€“ that is the proof that God is not with him. It means that he is a false prophet using religion for himself. The great leaders of the people of God, like Moses, have always left room for doubt. You must leave room for the Lord, not for our certainties; we must be humble.
  • If the Christian is a restorationist, a legalist, if he wants everything clear and safe, then he will find nothing. Tradition and memory of the past must help us to have the courage to open up new areas to God.
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  • In the end, you realize your only real option ā€“ against almost every fiber in your irate being ā€“ is to take each knot in turn, patiently and gently undo it, loosen a little, see what happens, and move on to the next. You will never know exactly when all the knots will resolve themselves ā€“ it can happen quite quickly after a while or seemingly never. But you do know that patience, and concern with the here and now, is the only way to ā€œsolveā€ the ā€œproblem.ā€ You donā€™t look forward with a plan; you look down with a practice.
  • we can say what God is not, we can speak of his attributes, but we cannot say what He is. That apophatic dimension, which reveals how I speak about God, is critical to our theology
  • I would also classify as arrogant those theologies that not only attempted to define with certainty and exactness Godā€™s attributes, but also had the pretense of saying who He was.
  • It is only in living that we achieve hints and guesses ā€“ and only hints and guesses ā€“ of what the Divine truly is. And because the Divine is found and lost by humans in time and history, there is no reachable truth for humans outside that time and history.
  • We are part of an unfolding drama in which the Christian, far from clinging to some distant, pristine Truth he cannot fully understand, will seek to understand and discern the ā€œsigns of the timesā€ as one clue as to how to live now, in the footsteps of Jesus. Or in the words of T.S. Eliot, There is only the fight to recover what has been lost And found and lost again and again: and now, under conditions That seem unpropitious. But perhaps neither gain nor loss. For us, there is only the trying. The rest is not our business.
  • Ratzingerā€™s Augustinian notion of divine revelation: it is always a radical gift; it must always be accepted without question; it comes from above to those utterly unworthy below; and we are too flawed, too sinful, too human to question it in even the slightest respect. And if we ever compromise an iota on that absolute, authentic, top-down truth, then we can know nothing as true. We are, in fact, lost for ever.
  • A Christian life is about patience, about the present and about trust that God is there for us. It does not seek certainty or finality to lifeā€™s endless ordeals and puzzles. It seeks through prayer and action in the world to listen to Godā€™s plan and follow its always-unfolding intimations. It requires waiting. It requires diligence
  • We may never know why exactly Benedict resigned as he did. But I suspect mere exhaustion of the body and mind was not the whole of it. He had to see, because his remains such a first-rate mind, that his project had failed, that the levers he continued to pull ā€“ more and more insistent doctrinal orthodoxy, more political conflict with almost every aspect of the modern world, more fastidious control of liturgy ā€“ simply had no impact any more.
  • The Pope must accompany those challenging existing ways of doing things! Others may know better than he does. Or, to feminize away the patriarchy: I dream of a church that is a mother and shepherdess. The churchā€™s ministers must be merciful, take responsibility for the people, and accompany them like the good Samaritan, who washes, cleans, and raises up his neighbor. This is pure Gospel.
  • the key to Francisā€™ expression of faith is an openness to the future, a firm place in the present, and a willingness to entertain doubt, to discern new truths and directions, and to grow. Think of Benedictā€™s insistence on submission of intellect and will to the only authentic truth (the Popeā€™s), and then read this: Within the Church countless issues are being studied and reflected upon with great freedom. Differing currents of thought in philosophy, theology, and pastoral practice, if open to being reconciled by the Spirit in respect and love, can enable the Church to grow, since all of them help to express more clearly the immense riches of Godā€™s word. For those who long for a monolithic body of doctrine guarded by all and leaving no room for nuance, this might appear as undesirable and leading to confusion. But in fact such variety serves to bring out and develop different facets of the inexhaustible riches of the Gospel.
  • Francis, like Jesus, has had such an impact in such a short period of time simply because of the way he seems to be. His being does not rely on any claims to inherited, ecclesiastical authority; his very way of life is the only moral authority he wants to claim.
  • faith is, for Francis, a way of life, not a set of propositions. It is a way of life in community with others, lived in the present yet always, deeply, insistently aware of eternity.
  • Father Howard Gray S.J. has put it simply enough: Ultimately, Ignatian spirituality trusts the world as a place where God dwells and labors and gathers all to himself in an act of forgiveness where that is needed, and in an act of blessing where that is prayed for.
  • Underlying all this is a profound shift away from an idea of religion as doctrine and toward an idea of religion as a way of life. Faith is a constantly growing garden, not a permanently finished masterpiece
  • Some have suggested that much of what Francis did is compatible with PTSD. He disowned his father and family business, and he chose to live homeless, and close to naked, in the neighboring countryside, among the sick and the animals. From being the dashing man of society he had once been, he became a homeless person with what many of us today would call, at first blush, obvious mental illness.
  • these actions ā€“ of humility, of kindness, of compassion, and of service ā€“ are integral to Francisā€™ resuscitation of Christian moral authority. He is telling us that Christianity, before it is anything else, is a way of life, an orientation toward the whole, a living commitment to God through others. And he is telling us that nothing ā€“ nothing ā€“ is more powerful than this.
  • I would not speak about, not even for those who believe, an ā€œabsoluteā€ truth, in the sense that absolute is something detached, something lacking any relationship. Now, the truth is a relationship! This is so true that each of us sees the truth and expresses it, starting from oneself: from oneā€™s history and culture, from the situation in which one lives, etc. This does not mean that the truth is variable and subjective. It means that it is given to us only as a way and a life. Was it not Jesus himself who said: ā€œI am the way, the truth, the lifeā€? In other words, the truth is one with love, it requires humbleness and the willingness to be sought, listened to and expressed.
  • ā€œproselytism is solemn nonsense.ā€ That phrase ā€“ deployed by the Pope in dialogue with the Italian atheist Eugenio Scalfari (as reported by Scalfari) ā€“ may seem shocking at first. But it is not about denying the revelation of Jesus. It is about how that revelation is expressed and lived. Evangelism, for Francis, is emphatically not about informing others about the superiority of your own worldview and converting them to it. That kind of proselytism rests on a form of disrespect for another human being. Something else is needed:
  • nstead of seeming to impose new obligations, Christians should appear as people who wish to share their joy, who point to a horizon of beauty and who invite others to a delicious banquet. It is not by proselytizing that the Church grows, but ā€œby attraction.ā€
  • what you see in the life of Saint Francis is a turn from extreme violence to extreme poverty, as if only the latter could fully compensate for the reality of the former. This was not merely an injunction to serve the poor. It is the belief that it is only by being poor or becoming poor that we can come close to God
  • Pope Francis insists ā€“ and has insisted throughout his long career in the church ā€“ that poverty is a key to salvation. And in choosing the name Francis, he explained last March in Assisi, this was the central reason why:
  • Saint Francis. His conversion came after he had gone off to war in defense of his hometown, and, after witnessing horrifying carnage, became a prisoner of war. After his release from captivity, his strange, mystical journey began.
  • the priority of practice over theory, of life over dogma. Evangelization is about sitting down with anyone anywhere and listening and sharing and being together. A Christian need not be afraid of this encounter. Neither should an atheist. We are in this together, in the same journey of life, with the same ultimate mystery beyond us. When we start from that place ā€“ of radical humility and radical epistemological doubt ā€“ proselytism does indeed seem like nonsense, a form of arrogance and detachment, reaching for power, not freedom. And evangelization is not about getting others to submit their intellect and will to some new set of truths; it is about an infectious joy for a new way of living in the world. All it requires ā€“ apart from joy and faith ā€“ is patience.
  • ā€œPreach the Gospel always. If necessary, with words.ā€
  • But there is little sense that a political or economic system can somehow end the problem of poverty in Francisā€™ worldview. And there is the discomfiting idea that poverty itself is not an unmitigated evil. There is, indeed, a deep and mysterious view, enunciated by Jesus, and held most tenaciously by Saint Francis, that all wealth, all comfort, and all material goods are suspect and that poverty itself is a kind of holy state to which we should all aspire.
  • Not only was Saint Francis to become homeless and give up his patrimony, he was to travel on foot, wearing nothing but a rough tunic held together with rope. Whatever else it is, this is not progressivism. It sees no structural, human-devised system as a permanent improver of our material lot. It does not envision a world without poverty, but instead a church of the poor and for the poor. The only material thing it asks of the world, or of God, is daily bread ā€“ and only for today, never for tomorrow.
  • From this perspective, the idea that a society should be judged by the amount of things it can distribute to as many people as possible is anathema. The idea that there is a serious social and political crisis if we cannot keep our wealth growing every year above a certain rate is an absurdity.
  • this is a 21st-century heresy. Which means, I think, that this Pope is already emerging and will likely only further emerge as the most potent critic of the newly empowered global capitalist project.
  • Now, the only dominant ideology in the world is the ideology of material gain ā€“ either through the relatively free markets of the West or the state-controlled markets of the East. And so the churchā€™s message is now harder to obscure. It stands squarely against the entire dominant ethos of our age. It is the final resistance.
  • For Francis, history has not come to an end, and capitalism, in as much as it is a global ideology that reduces all of human activity to the cold currency of wealth, is simply another ā€œismā€ to be toppled in humankindā€™s unfolding journey toward salvation on earth.
  • Francis will grow as the church reacts to him; it will be a dynamic, not a dogma; and it will be marked less by the revelation of new things than by the new recognition of old things, in a new language. It will be, if its propitious beginnings are any sign, a patient untying of our collective, life-denying knots.
Javier E

The exoneration of Kash Register and the problem of false eyewitness testimony. - 0 views

  • according to Brandon Garrett, a law professor at the University of Virginia and the author of Convicting the Innocent, eyewitness misidentifications have played a leading role in nearly 75 percent of 250 convictions overturned by DNA evidence between 1989 and 2010. In more than one-half of those exonerations, the eyewitnesses start off unsure, a ā€œglaring signā€ of potential trouble as Garrett puts it, yet appear to become increasingly certain over time. This often corresponds with police practices like suggestive photo arrays, lineups, and even well-intentioned comments like ā€œGood job!ā€ after a witness makes an identification, however tentative. All of this can cause ā€œcontaminationā€ of memory, Garrett says so that ā€œthere is no way to know after the fact whether the eyewitness could have actually picked the person with any degree of confidence.ā€
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