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==11: OCT 12==
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==14: OCT 12: Some Cultural Evolutionary Theory==
  
===Assigned Reading===
+
===Assigned===
  
:*Soler, Jean. "The Semiotics of Food in the Bible" (55-66)
+
:*Henrich, part 2 (38-58)
 +
:*Sapolsky, Chapter 13, "Culture, context, public goods games, religion" (493-503) (10)
  
===Practical Eating Series, "Practical Kitchen and Mindful Cooking (Sacred Eating)"===
+
===In-Class Topics===
:*Recall N S P model.  Examples of interactions: N & S, S & P
 
:*Objective aspects of the kitchen as workspace. Cutting boards, knives, cooking and storage equipt., machines (or not). Light.
 
:*Subjective aspects of kitchen space.  Separation of time, marking separation from out of house activities, as in other important activities. Cleaning. Ambiance: Music, news, etc.  Happy hour and appetizers as prelude to cooking.
 
::*Mentality and Cooking: variables social/alone, sacred/utilitarian, chore/pleasure.  If you are religious, start meal prep with a moment...
 
::*If you tend to see eating and meal prep as a chore, how to you change that?
 
::*Reflection of importance of food helps, but skill and knowledge do as well:
 
:::*Importance of cutting skills to enjoy cooking space, later we'll consider the more obvious connection bt skills and gastronomy: flavor and satisfaction. 
 
:::*Importance of confidence in basic cooking procedures, (again the main connection here is to taste and satisfaction (gastronomy).
 
  
:*Importance of repetition in learning and practicality. Finding flow in food preparation.
+
:*Desert and the Social Contract - Small Group Exercise
 +
:*Cultural Relativism, Universalism, and Rapa Nui (Easter Island)
  
===Soler, Jean. "The Semiotics of Food in the Bible"===
+
===Libertarian v Rawlsian Social Contracts===
  
:*How do we explain the dietary rules of Hebrews?  (and by extension, JCI tradition)
+
:*Rawls: '''It wouldn't be rational''' for you to risk a social contract in which you are worse off for '''morally arbitrary''' conditions (deadbeat parents, sickness, low skills or intelligence, homelessness, etc.).  Given the uncertainty of where you might wind up once the veil is lifted, a "rational risk" would be to give up some of your "winnings" (if you were in the most advantaged class), in return for the "insurance" of your well-being if you are in the worst off class.
  
:*Background thesis: link between diet and view of the world. "a relationship between the idea he has formed of specific items of food and the image he has of himself and his place in the universe."  (note: this was partly at issue in SW2 this term.) Some theoretical nods to Levi-Strauss (see his work, "The Raw and the Cooked").
+
:*Libertarians: '''It's not my fault''' if you have problems like bad health or not much of a way to earn a living, and making me help you with them is coercive to meFrom my perspective, it's quite '''arbitrary''' when government invents new projects or identifies more groups of people to help.
  
:*Soler gives a detailed account of the transitions through "three plates" of Judaism:
+
:*This looks like an un-resolvable tension, but ''let's see how the social contract model can help us with it''Would it be rational for the libertarian to take a chance on a libertarian social contract? Would we place a guarantee of formal liberty above all other possible outcomes?
::*1st plate: Biblical vegetarianism p. 56. -- God gave us plants and seeds to eat.  (soul not immortal till 2nd cent bc, external concept)  Paradise was vegetarian.
 
:::*Creation in the image of God, yet not GodNeed to maintain boundary.  Note the transgression found in duality of "tree of life/tree of knowledge" Elohim expresses concern that, having violated God's prohibition regarding tree of life, man might seek to usurp God. Likewise, to eat an animal with a soul would be a usurpation of God's power to take and give life.  Diff bt man and God in the food. 
 
  
::*2nd plate: Post-flood, covenant with Noah: eat anything but not "flesh with its life"  
+
:*Let's make a list of situations in which we "favor the worst off" (at least by supplying help for people to secure particular goods)
:::*Still, meat has negative connotation, concession to imperfection in man.  The flood was a response to murder, mayhem, and corruption of man. 
 
:::*Blood is theorized as the prohibited part.  Often part of sacrifice. 
 
  
::*3rd plate: Post exile covenant with Moses: adds distinction between clean and unclean animals.  Still, meat allowed as concession to man's moral imperfection. 
+
:*How would you respond to someone who objected, on Libertarian grounds, to the fairness of the following? Can you think of '''both''' liberal and conservative ways to respond?:
:::*Note: This covenant is only with the tribes of Israel. Food as cultural and cosmic separator.  (Note contemporary analogues. Intentional diets, diets that maintain ethnicity.) 
 
  
:*In Numbers, reports of Hebrews rebelling (wanting to eat their flocks, which would presumably be for dairy?)Miracle of the quails p. 59Hebrews ultimately tolerate meat eating, with focus on prohibition of blood and attention to slaughter methods, sacrifice.
+
::*Paying to educate other people's kids(An original objection to mandatory education in the US.)
 +
::*Helping first time homeowners with federally insured mortgages.
 +
::*Disability payments to individuals who have significant disabilities affecting their ability to work.   
 +
::*Housing guarantees (other countries do this more) for people who are homeless.
 +
::*Student and senior discounts on many things, from concerts to gym memberships.
 +
::*Giving disabled people good parking, among other accomodations.
 +
::*Public works like Riverfront Park, subsidies to get the downtown shopping mall, the cool concrete pedestrian bridge over the railroad?
  
::*Passover meal getting back to food origins. 61-62.
+
:*How might a conservative embrace Rawlsian thinking?
  
:*'''Moral Order and Food Order'''
+
===Sapolsky, Chapter 13,"Culture, context, public goods games, religion" (493-520)===
::*Notion of moral order also applied to "mixed" marriages, prohibition of homosexuality, even to having an ox and an ass ploughing together. 
 
::*"hoofed foot" "cloven foot" "chews the cud" -- effort to excluding carnivorous animals.  (carnivorous animals out, fish with legs out, winged insects are freaks, Eating deformed animals excluded.  Priest can't have crushed testicles (!).  Similar reasoning.  (more at 63) - excluding mollusks, birds that don't fly, snakes...
 
  
:*Clean or pure eating involves going back to origins and God's original intent for creation )Hence exclusion of "blemished" or "unnatural" animals. Note that generally carnivorous animals are not part of the creation plan and Hebrew dietary guidelines try to isolate herbivores.  
+
:*'''Context, Culture, and Moral Universals'''
 +
::*given all of the ways our moral judgements can be altered by context and culture, are there universals?  Some forms of murder, theft, and sexual misbehaviorThe Golden Rule is nearly universal. (Note that it is a basic fairness doctrine and that it’s “indexed” to a view of human nature.  Consider again the passenger’s dilemma.)
  
:*But Hebrews didn't go back to original vegetarianism, rather to nomad hunter/gatherer dietPassover meal "bitter herbs and meat" no agricultural products, no leavening for bread (back to grain pastes!), nothing fermented. food of the patriarchs. Food of the origins is taken to be '''sacred eating'''. 
+
::*Schwederautonomy,community, divinity
 +
::*Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory. (A “matrix” is already a way of thinking about “general variables”.)
  
:*Sacrifice not just about sorting God's share from ours, but atoning for taking the life of the animal.  (Meat retains some negative meanings.)
+
:*'''Cooperation and Competition''' in Public Goods Game research
  
:*Christianity comes in as an evangelical religion, so it must break with dietary laws of the Jews. Christ declares all food clean (Mark 7:19)"Not what goes into the mouth defiles a man, but what comes out of the mouth, this defiles a man" (Matthew 15:11). Peter's vision of being commanded to eat clean and unclean animals.   Goes with a theology of Christ, fusion of man/godAlso, an evangelizing religion cannot really focus on dietary exclusionsConsuming the blood and flesh of God become part of a sacrament. (That pretty much brings things around to a full circle!)  
+
::*'''Public goods game research''' - review experimental model p. 495Should remind you a bit of Prisoner’s Dilemma, uncertainty is a problem in both cases. Important 2008 research result: '''Rational choice theory predicts zero contribution to public good. But, research documents consistent prosociality, with some variation by culture.'''
 +
:::*Simple version: sucker's payoff reduces cooperation to zero
 +
:::*Punishment version: Robust pro-social results:
 +
::::*1. Everyone is somewhat prosocialIn no culture do people just not contribute.
 +
::::*2. In all cultures, people punish low contributors.  ('''Prosocial or altruistic Punishment''')
  
:*This recent NPR story about the book ''Fish on Fridays'' tells the story of the Catholic medieval promotion of fishing-fasting days and the later decline in the fish market with Anglican church politics.   [http://www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2012/04/05/150061991/lust-lies-and-empire-the-fishy-tale-behind-eating-fish-on-friday]
+
::*Interesting recent result: '''Anti-social punishment''' is also universal, though it's strength varies.  Interestingly, the lower the social capital in a country, the higher the rates of antisocial punishment.  (Another way to theorize this result - We lose “face” or experience hierarchy in the presence of overly generous people. Not a problem in individualist cultures so much.)
  
:*Discussion directions:
+
::*Other Public Good research:
 +
:::*The Dictator Game (a simple measure of fairness) (Ultimatum game without the option to refuse the division of goods).
 +
:::*Two versions of the Ultimatum Game.  One with “pay to punish” option.  One with 3rd party punishment option.
  
::*To what extent does "sustainability" provide a criterion of "trophic eating" similar to Hebrew food theology?
+
::::*Results: Variables that predict prosocial patterns of play: '''market integration''' predicts more pro social behavior (higher offers in Dictator and Ultimatum), '''community size''' (more 2nd and 3rd party punishment), '''religion''' (predicts great 2nd and 3rd party punishment). 498. '''Point: We are seeing culturally evolved “mental adaptations” in these results.'''
  
::*Does the choice between industrial and organic eating comprise choices in contemporary "culinary cosmos"?  
+
::*'''World Religions and Moralizing Gods'''
 +
:::*What is the connection between participation in world religion and prosocial play?  499: When groups get large enough to interact with strangers, they invent moralizing gods (research from Chapter 9).  The large global religions all have moralizing gods who engage in third party punishment. So we do.  Still. Think about that. (We’ll read a couple of pages from “The WEIRDEST People in the World on this later.)
  
::*Does the Christian decision to "eat God" have implications for contemporary Christian's culinary cosmos?
+
::*'''Explaining Public Goods Game Results'''499: Two hypotheses:
 +
:::*1. Our sense of fairness is an extension of a deep past in which sociality was based on kin and near kin. (don't forget monkey fairness) or,
 +
:::*2. Fairness is a cultural artifact (product of culture) that comes from reasoning about the implications of larger groups size. Looks more plausible now to say both.
  
::*Slaughterhouse question:
+
::*Note theoretical puzzle on p. 500: You might expect small kin-based communities to have higher offers in PG games, punishing unfairnes, but "impersonal prosociality" and "impersonal fairness" are really part of a different "cooperative toolkit".  In a way, the “market toolkit” is much simpler than a small group situation.  “You give me this now, and I pay you now.”
  
===Writing Assignment: Assessing the US Industrial Food System (short writing, peer review, Points)===
+
:*'''Honor and Revenge''' - (mention Mediterranean hypothesis - Italian honor culture & research on southerners....) 501
  
:*'''Stage 1''': Please write an 500 word maximum answer to the following question by '''October 16, 2020 11:59pm.'''
+
:*'''Shamed Collectivists v. Guilty Individualists''' 501
::*Topic:
+
::*more likely to sacrifice welfare of one for group.  Use individual as means to end.  focus of moral imperatives on social roles and duties vs. rights.
:::*Since about September 16 we have been acquiring information and research on the industrial food system in the US and the dietary diseases that result from itReviewing that information, identify the principle difficulties that have led to these adverse resultsBe sure to acknowledge what the industrial food system does well, be focus on problems in this answerUse the readings and the "Taxonomy" to remind yourself of the types of problems we have been consideringWhich do you consider the most serious problems and why?
+
::*uses shames vs. guiltread 502shame cultures viewed as primitive, but contemporary advocates of shamingthoughts?....examples p. 503.
 +
::*gossip as tool of shaming -- as much as 2/3 of conversation and mostly negative.   
  
:*'''Advice about collaboration''': I encourage you to collaborate with other students, but only up to the point of sharing ideas, references to class notes and readings, and your own notesCollaboration is part of the academic process and the intellectual world that college courses are based on, so it is important to me that you have the possibility to collaborate.  It's a great way to make sure that a high average level of learning and development occurs.  The best way to avoid plagiarism is to '''NOT''' share text of draft answers or outlines of your answer.  Keep it verbal.  Generate your own examples. 
+
:*Fools Rush In -- Reason and Intuition p. 504
 +
::*How do we use insights from research to improve behavior?
 +
::*Which moral theory is best? (trick question)In this section, he's  
  
:*Prepare your answer and submit it in the following way:
+
::*Virtue theory looks outdated, but maybe more relevant than we think. 
::# '''Do not put your name in the file or filename'''. You may put your student id number in the filePut a word count in the file.
+
::*reviews the point from trolley research about the utilitarian answer from the dlPFC and the nonutilitariain from the vmPFC.  Why would we be automatically non-utilitarian?  One answer: nature isn't trying to make us happy, it's try to get our genes into the next generation.
::# In Word, check "File" and "Options" to make sure your name does not appear as authorYou may want to change this to "anon" for this document.
+
::*'''Moral heterogeneity'''  - new data: 30% deontologist and 30% utilitarian in both conditions40% swing vote, context sensitivetheorize about that.
::# Format your answer in double spaced text in a 12 point font, using normal margins. 
+
::*Major criticism of utilitarian - most rational, but not practical unless you don't have a vmPFC. "I kinda like my liver".  Triggers concerns that you might be sacrificed for the greater happiness.   
::# Save the file in the ".docx" file format using the file name "AssessingIFS".
 
::# Log in to courses.alfino.orgUpload your file to the '''Points dropbox'''.   
 
  
:*'''Stage 2''': Please evaluate '''four''' student answers and provide brief comments and a score. '''Review the [[Assignment Rubric]] for this exercise.  We will only be using the Flow and Content areas of the rubric for this assignment.  We will tie specific elements of the prompt to the content assessment, so be sure to consider that in composing your answer!''' Complete your evaluations and scoring by '''TBD.'''  
+
::*Sapolsky claims that '''optimal decisions involve integration of reason and intuition'''.  508:"Our moral intuitions are neither primordial nor reflexively primitive....[but] cognitive conclusions from experience.  '''morality is a dual process,''' partitioned between structures for reasoning and intuition. (Note that both processes are cognitive. Intuition sometimes called "automatic inference" in both how they emerge and are appliedSaying "thank you".)
::*Use [https://goo.gl/forms/xmcavup2FZ4QYWW42 this Google Form] to evaluate four peer papers. The papers will be on the Sharepoint site under Student Writing, but please do not edit these files or add comments directly on them. This will compromise your anonymity.
 
::*To determine the papers you need to peer review, I will send you a key with animal names in alphabetically order, along with saint namesYou will find your animal name and review the next four (4) animals' work. 
 
::*Some papers may arrive late.  If you are in line to review a missing paper, allow a day or two for it to show up.  If it does not show up, go ahead and review enough papers to get to four reviews. This assures that you will get enough "back evaluations" of your work to get a good average for your peer review credit(You will also have an opportunity to challenge a back evaluation score of your reviewing that is out of line with the others.)
 
  
:*'''Stage 3''': I will grade and briefly comment on your writing using the peer scores as an initial ranking.  Assuming the process works normally, I will give you the higher of the two grades.  Up to 14 points in Points.
+
:*Slow vs. Fast
  
:*'''Stage 4''': Back-evaluation: After you receive your peer comments and my evaluation, take a few minutes to fill out this quick "back evaluation" rating form: [https://goo.gl/forms/cqLWi07kzo9WSpPf2].  '''Fill out the form for each reviewer, but not Alfino.'''  Up to 10 points, in Q&W.
+
::*More Josh Greene research.  Old problem: '''tragedy of the commons''' -- how do you jumpstart cooperation.  It's a "me vs us" problem. But there's an "us versus them" version when there are two groups (cultures) with competing models for thriving.  
  
::*Back evaluations are due '''TBD, 11:59pm'''.
+
::*Tragedy of Commonsense Morality (a group version of what I call The Paradox of Moral Experience).  It's really hard not to conclude that your way of doing something isn't just culturally contingent, but really true.
 +
 
 +
::*Example of Tragedy of commonsense morality using Dog meat. -- used as example of how you could induce us vs. them response. 
 +
 
 +
::*Example of framing: Samuel Bowles example of switching people's mind set in the case of the school responding to late parents. 
 +
 
 +
:*'''Veracity and Mendacity'''
 +
 
 +
::*Note range of questions 512. Truth telling not a simple policy matter. 
 +
::*Primate duplicity -- capuchin monkeys will distract a higher ranking member to take food, but not a lower one. 
 +
::*Male gelada baboons know when to hold off on the "copulation call"
 +
::*Differences with humans: we feel bad or morally soiled about lying and we can believe our own lies.
 +
 
 +
::*Human resources for lying -- poker face, finesse, dlPFC comes in with both struggle to resist lying and execution of strategic lie.
 +
::*Neuroplasticity in white and gray matter in habitual liars. 516. Compulsive liars have more white matter in their brains.   
 +
::*517: Swiss research (Baumgartner et al) -- playing a trust game allowing for deception, a pattern of brain activation predicted promise breaking.  Think of a time when you broke a promise..... Did it feel like what S is describing?  A noisy brain cut off by a decision.  (Good example of cognitive dissonance.)
 +
 
 +
::*Subjects who don't cheat.  will vs. grace. grace wins.  "I don't know; I just don't cheat."

Latest revision as of 17:27, 12 October 2023

14: OCT 12: Some Cultural Evolutionary Theory

Assigned

  • Henrich, part 2 (38-58)
  • Sapolsky, Chapter 13, "Culture, context, public goods games, religion" (493-503) (10)

In-Class Topics

  • Desert and the Social Contract - Small Group Exercise
  • Cultural Relativism, Universalism, and Rapa Nui (Easter Island)

Libertarian v Rawlsian Social Contracts

  • Rawls: It wouldn't be rational for you to risk a social contract in which you are worse off for morally arbitrary conditions (deadbeat parents, sickness, low skills or intelligence, homelessness, etc.). Given the uncertainty of where you might wind up once the veil is lifted, a "rational risk" would be to give up some of your "winnings" (if you were in the most advantaged class), in return for the "insurance" of your well-being if you are in the worst off class.
  • Libertarians: It's not my fault if you have problems like bad health or not much of a way to earn a living, and making me help you with them is coercive to me. From my perspective, it's quite arbitrary when government invents new projects or identifies more groups of people to help.
  • This looks like an un-resolvable tension, but let's see how the social contract model can help us with it. Would it be rational for the libertarian to take a chance on a libertarian social contract? Would we place a guarantee of formal liberty above all other possible outcomes?
  • Let's make a list of situations in which we "favor the worst off" (at least by supplying help for people to secure particular goods)
  • How would you respond to someone who objected, on Libertarian grounds, to the fairness of the following? Can you think of both liberal and conservative ways to respond?:
  • Paying to educate other people's kids. (An original objection to mandatory education in the US.)
  • Helping first time homeowners with federally insured mortgages.
  • Disability payments to individuals who have significant disabilities affecting their ability to work.
  • Housing guarantees (other countries do this more) for people who are homeless.
  • Student and senior discounts on many things, from concerts to gym memberships.
  • Giving disabled people good parking, among other accomodations.
  • Public works like Riverfront Park, subsidies to get the downtown shopping mall, the cool concrete pedestrian bridge over the railroad?
  • How might a conservative embrace Rawlsian thinking?

Sapolsky, Chapter 13,"Culture, context, public goods games, religion" (493-520)

  • Context, Culture, and Moral Universals
  • given all of the ways our moral judgements can be altered by context and culture, are there universals? Some forms of murder, theft, and sexual misbehavior. The Golden Rule is nearly universal. (Note that it is a basic fairness doctrine and that it’s “indexed” to a view of human nature. Consider again the passenger’s dilemma.)
  • Schweder. autonomy,community, divinity
  • Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory. (A “matrix” is already a way of thinking about “general variables”.)
  • Cooperation and Competition in Public Goods Game research
  • Public goods game research - review experimental model p. 495. Should remind you a bit of Prisoner’s Dilemma, uncertainty is a problem in both cases. Important 2008 research result: Rational choice theory predicts zero contribution to public good. But, research documents consistent prosociality, with some variation by culture.
  • Simple version: sucker's payoff reduces cooperation to zero
  • Punishment version: Robust pro-social results:
  • 1. Everyone is somewhat prosocial. In no culture do people just not contribute.
  • 2. In all cultures, people punish low contributors. (Prosocial or altruistic Punishment)
  • Interesting recent result: Anti-social punishment is also universal, though it's strength varies. Interestingly, the lower the social capital in a country, the higher the rates of antisocial punishment. (Another way to theorize this result - We lose “face” or experience hierarchy in the presence of overly generous people. Not a problem in individualist cultures so much.)
  • Other Public Good research:
  • The Dictator Game (a simple measure of fairness) (Ultimatum game without the option to refuse the division of goods).
  • Two versions of the Ultimatum Game. One with “pay to punish” option. One with 3rd party punishment option.
  • Results: Variables that predict prosocial patterns of play: market integration predicts more pro social behavior (higher offers in Dictator and Ultimatum), community size (more 2nd and 3rd party punishment), religion (predicts great 2nd and 3rd party punishment). 498. Point: We are seeing culturally evolved “mental adaptations” in these results.
  • World Religions and Moralizing Gods
  • What is the connection between participation in world religion and prosocial play? 499: When groups get large enough to interact with strangers, they invent moralizing gods (research from Chapter 9). The large global religions all have moralizing gods who engage in third party punishment. So we do. Still. Think about that. (We’ll read a couple of pages from “The WEIRDEST People in the World on this later.)
  • Explaining Public Goods Game Results499: Two hypotheses:
  • 1. Our sense of fairness is an extension of a deep past in which sociality was based on kin and near kin. (don't forget monkey fairness) or,
  • 2. Fairness is a cultural artifact (product of culture) that comes from reasoning about the implications of larger groups size. Looks more plausible now to say both.
  • Note theoretical puzzle on p. 500: You might expect small kin-based communities to have higher offers in PG games, punishing unfairnes, but "impersonal prosociality" and "impersonal fairness" are really part of a different "cooperative toolkit". In a way, the “market toolkit” is much simpler than a small group situation. “You give me this now, and I pay you now.”
  • Honor and Revenge - (mention Mediterranean hypothesis - Italian honor culture & research on southerners....) 501
  • Shamed Collectivists v. Guilty Individualists 501
  • more likely to sacrifice welfare of one for group. Use individual as means to end. focus of moral imperatives on social roles and duties vs. rights.
  • uses shames vs. guilt. read 502. shame cultures viewed as primitive, but contemporary advocates of shaming. thoughts?....examples p. 503.
  • gossip as tool of shaming -- as much as 2/3 of conversation and mostly negative.
  • Fools Rush In -- Reason and Intuition p. 504
  • How do we use insights from research to improve behavior?
  • Which moral theory is best? (trick question). In this section, he's
  • Virtue theory looks outdated, but maybe more relevant than we think.
  • reviews the point from trolley research about the utilitarian answer from the dlPFC and the nonutilitariain from the vmPFC. Why would we be automatically non-utilitarian? One answer: nature isn't trying to make us happy, it's try to get our genes into the next generation.
  • Moral heterogeneity - new data: 30% deontologist and 30% utilitarian in both conditions. 40% swing vote, context sensitive. theorize about that.
  • Major criticism of utilitarian - most rational, but not practical unless you don't have a vmPFC. "I kinda like my liver". Triggers concerns that you might be sacrificed for the greater happiness.
  • Sapolsky claims that optimal decisions involve integration of reason and intuition. 508:"Our moral intuitions are neither primordial nor reflexively primitive....[but] cognitive conclusions from experience. morality is a dual process, partitioned between structures for reasoning and intuition. (Note that both processes are cognitive. Intuition sometimes called "automatic inference" in both how they emerge and are applied. Saying "thank you".)
  • Slow vs. Fast
  • More Josh Greene research. Old problem: tragedy of the commons -- how do you jumpstart cooperation. It's a "me vs us" problem. But there's an "us versus them" version when there are two groups (cultures) with competing models for thriving.
  • Tragedy of Commonsense Morality (a group version of what I call The Paradox of Moral Experience). It's really hard not to conclude that your way of doing something isn't just culturally contingent, but really true.
  • Example of Tragedy of commonsense morality using Dog meat. -- used as example of how you could induce us vs. them response.
  • Example of framing: Samuel Bowles example of switching people's mind set in the case of the school responding to late parents.
  • Veracity and Mendacity
  • Note range of questions 512. Truth telling not a simple policy matter.
  • Primate duplicity -- capuchin monkeys will distract a higher ranking member to take food, but not a lower one.
  • Male gelada baboons know when to hold off on the "copulation call"
  • Differences with humans: we feel bad or morally soiled about lying and we can believe our own lies.
  • Human resources for lying -- poker face, finesse, dlPFC comes in with both struggle to resist lying and execution of strategic lie.
  • Neuroplasticity in white and gray matter in habitual liars. 516. Compulsive liars have more white matter in their brains.
  • 517: Swiss research (Baumgartner et al) -- playing a trust game allowing for deception, a pattern of brain activation predicted promise breaking. Think of a time when you broke a promise..... Did it feel like what S is describing? A noisy brain cut off by a decision. (Good example of cognitive dissonance.)
  • Subjects who don't cheat. will vs. grace. grace wins. "I don't know; I just don't cheat."