Difference between revisions of "MAR 4"

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(Created page with "==13: MAR 4== ===Assigned=== :*Hibbing, John R., Kevin Smith, and John R. Alford, ''Predisposed'', Chapter 4, "Drunk Flies and Salad Greens". :*Robert Sapolsky, from ''Beh...")
 
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==13: MAR 4==
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==14: MAR 4. Unit Three: Two Theories of Moral and Political Difference==
  
 
===Assigned===
 
===Assigned===
  
:*Hibbing, John R., Kevin Smith, and John R. Alford, ''Predisposed'', Chapter 4, "Drunk Flies and Salad Greens". 
+
:*Haidt, Chapter 6, "Taste Buds of the Righteous Mind" (27)
:*Robert Sapolsky, from ''Behave'', Chapter 14, "Feeling Someone's Pain, Understanding Soemone's Pain, Alleviating Someone's Pain." 521-535.
 
  
===Sapolsky, Behave, C 14, 521-535===
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===Discussion of Logic and Insight areas of Rubric===
  
:*starts with "exposure to an aversive state" -- we call it empathy, but what is that?
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:*[[Assignment Rubric]]
::q1: When does empathy lead us to actually do something helpful?
 
::q2: When we do act, whose benefit is it for?
 
  
:*sympathy -- feeling sorry for someone's pain. 
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===Lecture Note on Philosophical Method: "Hitting Rock Bottom"===
:*empathy -- includes a cognitive step of understanding the cause of someone's pain and "taking perspective"
 
:*compassion -- S. suggests this involves empathy plus taking action.
 
  
:*basic account of empathy research:
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:*Today and Tuesday we hit "Rock Bottom" in the course.  Here what that means in terms of philosophical method.
::*we are 'overimitative' - chimp / kids study524
 
::*mouse studies -- alterations of sensitivity to pain on seeing pain; fear association seeing another mouse exp fear conditioning
 
::*lots of species engage in consolation, chimps show third party consolation behavior, no consolation behavior in monkeys -- prairie voles!
 
::*526: rats, amazing rats -- US/them behaviors, some flexibility
 
  
::*527: describes mechanism of empathy: early emo contagion in kids may not be linked to cognitive judgement as later, when Theory of Mind emerges
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:*Direction of philosophical inquiry: toward "first principles".
 +
::*In Classical Greece, a model for first principles comes from math and geometry.  Also, Essences.
 +
::*In a Post-Scientific Revolution world, with evolution on board, the idea of essences looks different. 
  
::*Some neurobiology: the ACC - anterior cingulate cortex - processes ineroceptive info, conflict monitoring, (presumably cog. dissonance). susceptible to placebo effect.  Importantly, ACC activates on social exclusion, anxiety, disgust, embarrassment, but also pleasure, mutual pleasure.
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:*Where we are in our investigation. Look at course research questions:  
::*ACC also involved in action circuits.  Oxytocin, hormone related to bonding.  Block it in voles and they don't console.  Awwww!
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::*Research question #1 and #3-7 have plausible answers nowFor 2.
::*How does self-interested "alarm" system of the ACC get involved in empathy?  '''Sapolsky's hypothesis''' 530:  Feeling someone's pain can be more effective for learning than just knowing that they're in painEmpathy may also be a self-interested learning system, separately from helping action.
 
  
::*Cognitive side of things: How do we bring judgements about desert and character to bear on empathic responses?
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:*Rock bottom means: Hitting a limit to the inquiry, ideally getting to a basic level of understanding and explanation that makes sense of the phenomena, here, our moral behaviors and rational thought about values. That mix of intuition and reason that has evolved in our big brained species. Morality works by using the "machinery" provided by evolution to teach, pass on, and monitor moral culture and behavior (maybe the conservative side, though we all contribute to preserving culture).  It also, of course, involves the criticism of current practices and proposals for new practices (maybe the liberal side, though we all contribute to criticizing culture). 
:::*Cognition comes in with less physical pain, judgement abstractly represented pain (a sign), unfamiliar pain.   
 
:::*socioeconomics of empathy 533: wealth predicts lower empathy.  the wealthy take more candy!
 
:::*especially hard, cognitively, to empathize with people we don't like, because their pain actually stimulates a dopamine response!
 
  
===Hibbing, et. al. ''Predisposed'' Chapter 4===
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:*What comes after "rock bottom"?  The way up! Using the point of view we have developed to look at our experience in new ways.
 +
::*Example of SW2. How do you locate and negotiate fairness in the context of actual differences in perception and judgement? What do my intuitions about fair contracts tell me about my own "settings" (psychological, local culture (e.g. family, home town) and deep culture (e.g. ethnicity, society, history!) (Also, see course questions 6, 7, and 8).
  
:*Point about fruit flies: taste for glycerol has biological basis, manipulable, yet we'd say the fly "likes" beer.  Variation in human preferences yet also biologically instantiated.  Focus on this chapter: taste/pref diffs of conservatives/liberals, their basis, connection to politics.  Later, cars, stocks,
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===Haidt, Chapter 6, "Taste Buds of the Righteous Mind"===
  
:*Obama's arugula faux pasHunch.com studies (note problems): supports stereotype. Neuropolitics.org: similar findings
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:*analogy of moral sense to taste sense. '''"the righteous mind is like a tongue with six taste receptors"'''
:*Hibbing et al research 93: expanded preference research to humour, fiction, art, prefs in poetry, living spaces,  
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::*unpacking the metaphor:
:*Market research in politics: mentions RNC, but consider Ethics News! since this came outBIG issue here.
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:::*places where our sensitivities to underlying value perception have depth from evolution, but have flexibility or plasticity from the "big brain", which allows for shaping within culture and retriggering. 
 +
:::*morality is rich, not reducible to one taste.  A way of perceiving the worldagainst '''moral monism'''
 +
:::*like cuisines, there is variation, but within a range.  
 +
:*mentions Enlightenment approaches, again: argument against the reductive project of philosophical ethics 113-114. ethics more like taste than science.
 +
::*Hume's three way battle: Enlightenment thinkers united in rejecting revelation as basis of morality, but divided between an transcendent view of reason as the basis (Kant) or the view that morality is part of our nature (Hume, Darwin, etc.).  Hume's empiricism.  also for him, morality is like taste
 +
:*Autism argument: Bentham (utlitarianism), Kant (deontology).    Think about the person who can push the fat guy.
 +
::*Bentham told us to use arithmetic, Kant logic, to resolve moral problems.  Note Bentham image and eccentric ideas.  Baron-Cohen article on Bentham as having Asperger's Syndrome (part of the autism range).  Kant also a solitary.  Just saying. clarify point of analysis.  not ad hominempart of Enlightenment philosophy's rationalism -- a retreat from observation.
 +
::*the x/y axis on page 117 shows a kind of "personality space" that could be used to locate Enlightenment rationalists.  (Note that Haidt is looking at the psychology of the philosopher for clues about the type of theory they might have!)
  
:*'''History of research''' on finding personality traits that predict politcs: Nazi research - Erich Jaensch J and S type personalities; background of trying to understand WW2 atrocities; hypothesis of authoritarian personality Theordor Adorno, note quote at p. 100. F-scale for Fascism.  Han Eysenck's work on "tenderminded/toughminded"; 1960's Glenn Wilson.  conservatism as resistance to change and adherence to tradition. 
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:*Major global religious and ethical culture identifies virtues that seem to respond to similar basic problems of social life.
::*70's and 80s research on RWA - right wing authoritarianism.  measure of submission to authority. 
 
::*Hibbing et al assessment:  criticisms persist in effort to find an "authoritarian personality". But claim, "there is a deep psychology underlying politics"
 
  
:*Personality research: Big Five model: openness to experience, conscientiousness, extroversion, agreeableness, and neuroticism. Two of these are relevant to political orientation. conscientiousness connected to research on "cognitive closure"
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:*Avoiding bad evolutionary theory or evolutionary psychology: "just so stories" -- range of virtues suggested "receptors", but for what? the virtue? some underlying response to a problem-type?
  
:*105ff: review of Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory
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::*moral taste receptors found in history of long standing '''challenges and advantages of social life'''.  The "moral foundations" in Haidt's theory just are the evolved psychological centers of evaluation that make up moral consciousness for humans. 
  
:*108ff: Values theory of Shalom Schwartzdiagram at 109. 10 core values on axis of individual vs. collective welfare and group loyalty versus ind. pleasureDiagram also looks like an ideological spectrum.
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:*Modularity in evolutionary psychology, centers of focus, like perceptual vs. language systemsSperber and Hirshfield: "snake detector" - note on deception/detection in biology/nature. responses to red, Hyperactive agency detection.   
  
:*PTC polymorphism linked to conservatism.   
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:*See chart, p. 125: '''C F L A S''':  Care/Harm, Fairness/Cheating, Loyalty/Betrayal, Authority/Subversion, Sanctity/Degradation
 +
::*Work through chart.  Note how the "adaptive challenges" are some of the things we have been reading research on.
 +
:*original vs. current triggers, 123 Reason/Intuition  
  
:*"Conservatives and liberals experience and process different worlds"
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:*'''Small group discussion''':  Try to find examples from everyday life of events do or would trigger each of these foundations.  Consider either real cases of people you know and the things they say or examples from general knowledge, or even hypothetical examples.  For example:
 +
 
 +
::*You and your friends all worry about COVID cases, but some more than others. Might be observing the Care/Harm trigger.
 +
::*You and your friends all occasionally enjoy risqué humor, but you are uncomfortable listening to people talk about intimate things like sex casually.  Maybe you have a different sanctity trigger.
 +
::*You hear someone talk uncharitably about someone who sees them as a good friend.  You are triggered for disloyalty.
 +
 
 +
:*Focus on both ways that we are all triggered and ways that we are differentially triggered.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
::*

Revision as of 21:38, 4 March 2021

14: MAR 4. Unit Three: Two Theories of Moral and Political Difference

Assigned

  • Haidt, Chapter 6, "Taste Buds of the Righteous Mind" (27)

Discussion of Logic and Insight areas of Rubric

Lecture Note on Philosophical Method: "Hitting Rock Bottom"

  • Today and Tuesday we hit "Rock Bottom" in the course. Here what that means in terms of philosophical method.
  • Direction of philosophical inquiry: toward "first principles".
  • In Classical Greece, a model for first principles comes from math and geometry. Also, Essences.
  • In a Post-Scientific Revolution world, with evolution on board, the idea of essences looks different.
  • Where we are in our investigation. Look at course research questions:
  • Research question #1 and #3-7 have plausible answers now. For 2.
  • Rock bottom means: Hitting a limit to the inquiry, ideally getting to a basic level of understanding and explanation that makes sense of the phenomena, here, our moral behaviors and rational thought about values. That mix of intuition and reason that has evolved in our big brained species. Morality works by using the "machinery" provided by evolution to teach, pass on, and monitor moral culture and behavior (maybe the conservative side, though we all contribute to preserving culture). It also, of course, involves the criticism of current practices and proposals for new practices (maybe the liberal side, though we all contribute to criticizing culture).
  • What comes after "rock bottom"? The way up! Using the point of view we have developed to look at our experience in new ways.
  • Example of SW2. How do you locate and negotiate fairness in the context of actual differences in perception and judgement? What do my intuitions about fair contracts tell me about my own "settings" (psychological, local culture (e.g. family, home town) and deep culture (e.g. ethnicity, society, history!) (Also, see course questions 6, 7, and 8).

Haidt, Chapter 6, "Taste Buds of the Righteous Mind"

  • analogy of moral sense to taste sense. "the righteous mind is like a tongue with six taste receptors"
  • unpacking the metaphor:
  • places where our sensitivities to underlying value perception have depth from evolution, but have flexibility or plasticity from the "big brain", which allows for shaping within culture and retriggering.
  • morality is rich, not reducible to one taste. A way of perceiving the world. against moral monism
  • like cuisines, there is variation, but within a range.
  • mentions Enlightenment approaches, again: argument against the reductive project of philosophical ethics 113-114. ethics more like taste than science.
  • Hume's three way battle: Enlightenment thinkers united in rejecting revelation as basis of morality, but divided between an transcendent view of reason as the basis (Kant) or the view that morality is part of our nature (Hume, Darwin, etc.). Hume's empiricism. also for him, morality is like taste
  • Autism argument: Bentham (utlitarianism), Kant (deontology). Think about the person who can push the fat guy.
  • Bentham told us to use arithmetic, Kant logic, to resolve moral problems. Note Bentham image and eccentric ideas. Baron-Cohen article on Bentham as having Asperger's Syndrome (part of the autism range). Kant also a solitary. Just saying. clarify point of analysis. not ad hominem. part of Enlightenment philosophy's rationalism -- a retreat from observation.
  • the x/y axis on page 117 shows a kind of "personality space" that could be used to locate Enlightenment rationalists. (Note that Haidt is looking at the psychology of the philosopher for clues about the type of theory they might have!)
  • Major global religious and ethical culture identifies virtues that seem to respond to similar basic problems of social life.
  • Avoiding bad evolutionary theory or evolutionary psychology: "just so stories" -- range of virtues suggested "receptors", but for what? the virtue? some underlying response to a problem-type?
  • moral taste receptors found in history of long standing challenges and advantages of social life. The "moral foundations" in Haidt's theory just are the evolved psychological centers of evaluation that make up moral consciousness for humans.
  • Modularity in evolutionary psychology, centers of focus, like perceptual vs. language systems. Sperber and Hirshfield: "snake detector" - note on deception/detection in biology/nature. responses to red, Hyperactive agency detection.
  • See chart, p. 125: C F L A S: Care/Harm, Fairness/Cheating, Loyalty/Betrayal, Authority/Subversion, Sanctity/Degradation
  • Work through chart. Note how the "adaptive challenges" are some of the things we have been reading research on.
  • original vs. current triggers, 123 Reason/Intuition
  • Small group discussion: Try to find examples from everyday life of events do or would trigger each of these foundations. Consider either real cases of people you know and the things they say or examples from general knowledge, or even hypothetical examples. For example:
  • You and your friends all worry about COVID cases, but some more than others. Might be observing the Care/Harm trigger.
  • You and your friends all occasionally enjoy risqué humor, but you are uncomfortable listening to people talk about intimate things like sex casually. Maybe you have a different sanctity trigger.
  • You hear someone talk uncharitably about someone who sees them as a good friend. You are triggered for disloyalty.
  • Focus on both ways that we are all triggered and ways that we are differentially triggered.