Difference between revisions of "NOV 11"

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==19: NOV 11. Unit 5: Gastronomy and 3 points in American Food Culture==
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==22: NOV 11==
  
===Assigned Reading===
+
===Assigned===
  
:*Barber, Dan. Introduction ''The Third Plate: Field Notes on the Future of Food,'' (1-22). (22)
+
:*Robert Sapolsky, from ''Behave'', Chapter 14, "Feeling Someone's Pain, Understanding Someone's Pain, Alleviating Someone's Pain." 535-552.
:*Andrews, Geoff. Chapter 2: "The Critique of 'Fast Life'" ''The Slow Food Story'' (pp. 29-47). (18)
 
  
===Andrews, Chapters 1 & 2, The Slow Food Story===
+
===Hidden Brain, Empathy Gym, segments 3 and 4===
  
====Chapter 1, "Politics in Search of Pleasure"====
+
:*We will start today by following the research from the second half of the Hidden Brain podcast. (see above.)
  
(This wasn't assigned for us, but I have these notes to share:)
+
===Small Group Exercise===
:*context for slow food: social movements of the 60's and 70's.  (Italian counter-culture.)
 
:*low power radio stations common means: Radio Bra Onde Rosse.
 
:*politics at Club Tenco, also the pursuit of pleasure.
 
:*revival of traditional festivals: the singing for eggs (Cante i'euv)
 
:*1982 incident: Montalcino Sagra del Tordo (thrush) Mention Arci clubs.
 
::*in play: '''Is the pursuit of pleasure through healthy food and culture a capitalist bourgeoisie plot or a fundamental right to be advocated politically?'''
 
:*formation of an "Arci Gola" (appetite)
 
:*projects: Gambero Rosso, wine guides, Osterie d'Italia, guides to osterie.
 
:*1986: wine poisoning scandal.  McDonalds opens in Rome at Spanish Steps.
 
:*Slow Food Manifesto
 
:*Parallel movement in US embodied on story of Alice Waters, founder of [http://www.chezpanisse.com/menus/restaurant-menu/ Chez Panisse].  Pollan also finds sources of these ideas in 1960s US counter-culture.
 
:*Eco-gastronomy -- (a great sub-field of food study, by the way! cf. Dan Berber, The Third Plate) and the "politics of aesthetics" (only partly in line with Marxism).  (So Carlo Petrini is another candidate for Gramsci's authentic intellectual.)
 
:*Projects: international food exhibitions, then Terra Madre (2004), related movements in Germany (Greens)
 
:*slow food also has a conservative dimension.  Restoration and preservation of historical food systems.
 
::*Mention experience with Guido and the ancient grains seminar.  Photos.
 
  
====Chapter 2, "The Critique of 'Fast Life'"====
+
:*From Jamil Zaki, we get a complicated picture of the value of human empathy.  Depending how we experience painful situations that elicit empathy, we might contribute to someone overcoming trauma or we might heighten our own pain.  Empathy can include tribal responses (whites reading about Native Americans study), but it doesn't have to (Soccer study).  The prospective pain of empathy can lead us to avoid others in pain (donation table study). On the other hand, "pumping" empathy the right way might make us more open to helping people or voting for solutions to problems like homelessness (Zaki's virtual reality study).
  
:*some key dates: McDonald's in Rome, 1986, incident between the two arci chapters (a moment in which politics and gastronomy interact to great effect!). 
+
:*Looking at this research and sharing your own experiences of empathy, try to answer this question:  Is Empathy gym worth the risk? If you do think you should "work your empathy" and "pump it", how do you avoid the negative consequences?   
:*critique of "productivity culture"; efficiency vs. frenzy; idea that you need to live faster because other things are accelerating (financial trade volume, sale, news cycles, social media posting and communication). Especially focused on speed. 
 
:*[In terms we have been using, Slow Food manifesto calls into question the "culinary cosmos" of the industrial lifestyle ''when it compromises basic human modes of experiencing pleasure in authentic and just food.''  ]
 
:*critique includes resistance to corporate formations and rationalizations (degradation) of taste. Slow Food is tied to leftist politics, but also has a US upper middle class "face" in the US site.  [https://www.slowfoodusa.org/?gclid=Cj0KEQjwzpfHBRC1iIaL78Ol-eIBEiQAdZPVKlmzqWS_FmOH2gJfU8ltX286Ru8IBHGg3w0LO9EgXVYaAjWK8P8HAQ] 
 
:*Castell's theory of time-space compression -- capitalism more and more about speed of transactions.  circulation of capital.  (on edge of a big discussion about the future of work - piece work is coming back). 
 
:*Counter view of Charles Leadbeater and others: '''fast culture is the answer''', the problem is that we have all of these institutions from the 19th century and earlier slowing us down. 
 
:*Victoria de Grazia, ''Irresistible Empire: America's Advance through 20th Century Europe'' -- American hegemony in food expressed in "reduction" of all class and value distinctions in food.  Rich and poor eat McD's.
 
:*Ritzer's "McDonaldization of Society" -- "globalization of nothing" (social forms centrally conceived, centrally controlled and lacking in context). 
 
:*Schlosser, Fast Food Nation:
 
::*1970 6 billion on fast food; ("million" in the text is a mistake)
 
::*2001 110 billion
 
::*2010 200 billion (not in text)
 
:*British "trolley towns"; American suburbs.  globalization of construction and architecture.
 
:*Petrini on slowness:  p. 39 read 
 
:*Slow cities: features of slow cities
 
  
:*[https://www.slowfoodusa.org/ Slow Food USA]
+
===Sapolsky, Behave, C 14, 535-552===
  
====Small Group Discussion: Slow food culture====
+
:*'''A Mythic Leap forward''' - covering mirror neurons and what they do and don't show about moral life.
  
:*Does the slow food movement present an attractive ideal for you?
+
::*1990s U of Parma, rhesus monkeys under study, PMC - premotor cortex, PFC communicates with PMC during decision making (and taking action), "about 10% of neurons for movement X also activated when observing someone else doing movement X.  so called '''mirror neurons'''  --mirroring can be abstract, involve gestalts, fill in missing pieces, seems to incorporate (encode) intentional states.  "picking up a cup to drink" activates them.
:*For those of you for whom it is an attractive ideal, identify 3-5 ways that you might implement slow food culture in your life?
 
:*Does Slow Food culture require a loss of productivity or is it more about reclaiming some of your time for an essential activity?
 
  
 +
::*537: S is sceptical of theory that mirror neurons are there to enhance learning (537: a, b, c), but allows (538) that it might aid movement learning or refining movements.  Still, there are mirror neuron critics who endorse a version of the social learning theory -- learning from others (Hickok).  But he also criticizes idea that MNs help us understand others.
  
===Barber, "Introduction" ''The 3rd Plate''===
+
::*538: Do mirror neurons help you understand what someone is thinking, aid to Theory of Mind? are these neurons focused on social interactions? (stronger effect at close distances) -- but Hickok (2014 '''The Myth of Mirror Neurons''') criticizes this as correlation, no evidence that it helps learning. and not clear that intentionality requires this kind of aid.  We can understand lots of intentions we can't perform.
  
:*Browse to these three restaurants
+
::*[However, mirror neurons might be a "general utility feature" in Theory of Mind without always being about learning.  It could be more about a biological mechanism of communication, layered along with observation. Sapolsky cites evidence that mirror neurons interact with brain regions related to Theory of Mind. - Alfino]
::*Blue Hill and Stone Barnes -- as a project [[https://www.bluehillfarm.com/dine/stone-barns]]
 
::*Chez Panisse [https://www.chezpanisse.com/]  
 
  
:*Story of Eight Row flint corn at Blue Hills. sig"varietal restoration" "heritage cultivation"
+
::*540: Very skeptical of idea that mirror neurons explain understanding other's actions or empathySpecifically of Gallese and Ramachandran -- cites evidence of overhype. "Gandhi neurons" Pretty public admonishment! Cites list of scholars he's agreeing with.
::*Story of the summer of corn at Blue Hills Farm when Barber was a kid.  Note diffs.
 
::*planted in "Three Sisters"
 
::*polenta not typically thought of as high flavor experience, but in this case it was.
 
::*Barber says (8) that the polenta story is the kind of experience he found himself repeating. What does he mean.  What are the main features of the polenta story?
 
  
:*Barber's "Plates"
+
:*'''The Core Issue (in Empathy): Actually doing something.'''
::*some background on "farm to table" "artisanal eaters" "locavores" -- (another side of industrial food, esp. for a chef, is the effect of varieties and production methods on flavor). 
 
::*chef as activist (p. 10 reference to Paul Bocuse) -- Wolfgang Puck -- eventually industrial food system produces a version of the chef's innovation.
 
::*p. 11ff: Barber's critique of farm to table and the 1st and 2nd plates.  Criticizing the way we eat:  protein-centric plate, small side of veg  [http://chartsbin.com/view/1155 Protein consumption per capita by country]
 
::*Some detail on Blue Hills.   
 
:::*lamb chop story-- Problem: farm serving table.  Table is still in charge of the plate.  "cherry picking ingredients that are often ecologically demanding and expensive to grow" So, eliminate the menu!  p.14 top of 15.  Note characterization of American cuisine vs. French and Italian.  No peasant heritage to base it on.  Am: immoderation, big slabs of meat.  (Carla's story Fall 2018 - What it means to have a place based culinary identity).
 
::*16: Note discussion of '''cuisine''' - based on ingredients local and sustainable. 
 
:::*1st, 2nd, 3rd plates 17.  Claim: "The future of cuisine will represent a paradigm shift, a new way of thinking about cooking and eating that defies Americans' ingrained expectations." 18  Note that he gives another definition of the 3rd Plate at p. 21. 
 
::*18: "truly delicious food is dependent on an entire system of agriculture. .... 21: the thrid plate goes beyond raising awareness about the importance of farmers and sustainable agriculture.  I helps us recognize that what we eat is part of an integrated whole, a web of relationships, that cannot be reduced to single ingredients"
 
::*The food "supply chain" is an ecology. The implication is that we can assess it in terms of sustainability, flavor, quality, diversity...etc.
 
  
===Practicing Critical gastronomy on your own diet and supply chain===
+
::*S resumes the topic of the 1st half of the chapter.  Empathy can be a substitute for action.  "If feel your pain, but that's enough."  In adolescents (chapter 6) empathy can lead to self-absorption.  It hurts to feel others pain when your "you" is new. 
  
:*How much of the following is true of your diet?
+
::*543: research predicting prosocial action from exposure to someone's pain: depends upon heart rate rise, which indicates need for self-protection. 543: "The prosocial ones are those whose heart rates decrease; they can hear the sound of someone else's need instead of the distressed pounding in their own chests."  (Echoes research showing less prosocial behavior to strangers under cognitive load, hunger condition, social exclusion, stress.  Block glucocorticoids and empathy goes up.) 
::*When I think of dinners, I think in terms of the first or second plates. +3
+
 
::*I typically check to see where produce comes from and try to buy seasonally. +3
+
::*Research on Buddhist monks, famously Mathieu Ricard (digress).  without Buddhist approach, same brain activation as others.  with it, quieter amygdala, mesolimbic dopamine activation - compassion as positive state.  (Mention hospice, compassionate meditation.). Richard reports “a warm positive state associated with a strong prosocial motivation.”  (Very much like the experience of hospice volunteering.)
::*I know which of the things in my pantry and fridge are least sustainable and I have concern about limiting them in my diet(Not just meat, but certainly meat. Also, coffee, strawberries, fruit from Chile or any distant place, industrial foods with high processing, industrial ag products.) +3
+
 
::*I agree with the consensus of nutritionists about protein, contra my culture's practice. +3 Or, I'm thinking about it more now. +2
+
::*Evidence from “empathy training” of similar change in neural activation.
::*I want my supply chain to maximize not only sustainability, but also flavor, which means good soil health and food grown with care. +3
+
 
::*I regularly look for "trade ups" or incremental improvements to move me toward better gastronomy and better food values. +3
+
:*Doing something effectively
 +
 
 +
::*empathy disorders and misfires: "Pathological altruism"; empathic pain can inhibit effective action. Doctors and others need to block empathy to have sustainable careers.
 +
 
 +
:*'''Is there altruism?''' 
 +
::*2008 Science study: we predict spending on ourselves will increase happiness, but only altruistic uses of the money did so in the study.
 +
 
 +
::*S suggests that given the design of the ACC, and the abundant ways the social creatures get rewards from prosocial reputations (reputation, debts to call in, extra benefits in societies with moralizing gods), maybe we shouldn't be looking for "pure" altruism.  (recalls that belief in moralizing gods increases prosocial behavior toward strangers.)  some evidence charitable people are raised that way and transmit the trait through family life. 548
 +
 
 +
:*reminder of Henrich on "moralizing gods" and “contingent afterlives”.  Probably helped humans become comfortable in urban environments.   
 +
 
 +
::*Final study of the chapter. 2007 Science, test subjects in scanners, given money, sometimes taxed, sometimes opp to donate.  Hypothesis: If one is purely altruistic, you would expect identical dopamine responses. Follow results 549:
 +
:::*a. the more dopamine (pleasure response) you get in receiving unexpected money, the less you express in parting with it - either voluntarily or not.
 +
:::*b. more dopamine when taxed, more dopamine when giving voluntarily. Seems to identify a less self-interested person. Could also be "inequity aversion" - we sometimes just feel better when a difference is eliminated.  
 +
:::*c. more dopamine when giving voluntarily than taxed.
 +
 
 +
:*In the end, Sapolsky thinks empathy is still a puzzling product of evolution.  Altruism and reciprocity are linked however, so maybe we should stop scratching our heads about "pure altruism"
 +
:*Seems to endorse the idea that altruism (compassionate empathy) is trainable -- like potty training, riding a bike, telling the truth!  So don't forget you workouts at '''empathy gym'''!

Revision as of 19:49, 11 November 2021

22: NOV 11

Assigned

  • Robert Sapolsky, from Behave, Chapter 14, "Feeling Someone's Pain, Understanding Someone's Pain, Alleviating Someone's Pain." 535-552.

Hidden Brain, Empathy Gym, segments 3 and 4

  • We will start today by following the research from the second half of the Hidden Brain podcast. (see above.)

Small Group Exercise

  • From Jamil Zaki, we get a complicated picture of the value of human empathy. Depending how we experience painful situations that elicit empathy, we might contribute to someone overcoming trauma or we might heighten our own pain. Empathy can include tribal responses (whites reading about Native Americans study), but it doesn't have to (Soccer study). The prospective pain of empathy can lead us to avoid others in pain (donation table study). On the other hand, "pumping" empathy the right way might make us more open to helping people or voting for solutions to problems like homelessness (Zaki's virtual reality study).
  • Looking at this research and sharing your own experiences of empathy, try to answer this question: Is Empathy gym worth the risk? If you do think you should "work your empathy" and "pump it", how do you avoid the negative consequences?

Sapolsky, Behave, C 14, 535-552

  • A Mythic Leap forward - covering mirror neurons and what they do and don't show about moral life.
  • 1990s U of Parma, rhesus monkeys under study, PMC - premotor cortex, PFC communicates with PMC during decision making (and taking action), "about 10% of neurons for movement X also activated when observing someone else doing movement X. so called mirror neurons --mirroring can be abstract, involve gestalts, fill in missing pieces, seems to incorporate (encode) intentional states. "picking up a cup to drink" activates them.
  • 537: S is sceptical of theory that mirror neurons are there to enhance learning (537: a, b, c), but allows (538) that it might aid movement learning or refining movements. Still, there are mirror neuron critics who endorse a version of the social learning theory -- learning from others (Hickok). But he also criticizes idea that MNs help us understand others.
  • 538: Do mirror neurons help you understand what someone is thinking, aid to Theory of Mind? are these neurons focused on social interactions? (stronger effect at close distances) -- but Hickok (2014 The Myth of Mirror Neurons) criticizes this as correlation, no evidence that it helps learning. and not clear that intentionality requires this kind of aid. We can understand lots of intentions we can't perform.
  • [However, mirror neurons might be a "general utility feature" in Theory of Mind without always being about learning. It could be more about a biological mechanism of communication, layered along with observation. Sapolsky cites evidence that mirror neurons interact with brain regions related to Theory of Mind. - Alfino]
  • 540: Very skeptical of idea that mirror neurons explain understanding other's actions or empathy. Specifically of Gallese and Ramachandran -- cites evidence of overhype. "Gandhi neurons" Pretty public admonishment! Cites list of scholars he's agreeing with.
  • The Core Issue (in Empathy): Actually doing something.
  • S resumes the topic of the 1st half of the chapter. Empathy can be a substitute for action. "If feel your pain, but that's enough." In adolescents (chapter 6) empathy can lead to self-absorption. It hurts to feel others pain when your "you" is new.
  • 543: research predicting prosocial action from exposure to someone's pain: depends upon heart rate rise, which indicates need for self-protection. 543: "The prosocial ones are those whose heart rates decrease; they can hear the sound of someone else's need instead of the distressed pounding in their own chests." (Echoes research showing less prosocial behavior to strangers under cognitive load, hunger condition, social exclusion, stress. Block glucocorticoids and empathy goes up.)
  • Research on Buddhist monks, famously Mathieu Ricard (digress). without Buddhist approach, same brain activation as others. with it, quieter amygdala, mesolimbic dopamine activation - compassion as positive state. (Mention hospice, compassionate meditation.). Richard reports “a warm positive state associated with a strong prosocial motivation.” (Very much like the experience of hospice volunteering.)
  • Evidence from “empathy training” of similar change in neural activation.
  • Doing something effectively
  • empathy disorders and misfires: "Pathological altruism"; empathic pain can inhibit effective action. Doctors and others need to block empathy to have sustainable careers.
  • Is there altruism?
  • 2008 Science study: we predict spending on ourselves will increase happiness, but only altruistic uses of the money did so in the study.
  • S suggests that given the design of the ACC, and the abundant ways the social creatures get rewards from prosocial reputations (reputation, debts to call in, extra benefits in societies with moralizing gods), maybe we shouldn't be looking for "pure" altruism. (recalls that belief in moralizing gods increases prosocial behavior toward strangers.) some evidence charitable people are raised that way and transmit the trait through family life. 548
  • reminder of Henrich on "moralizing gods" and “contingent afterlives”. Probably helped humans become comfortable in urban environments.
  • Final study of the chapter. 2007 Science, test subjects in scanners, given money, sometimes taxed, sometimes opp to donate. Hypothesis: If one is purely altruistic, you would expect identical dopamine responses. Follow results 549:
  • a. the more dopamine (pleasure response) you get in receiving unexpected money, the less you express in parting with it - either voluntarily or not.
  • b. more dopamine when taxed, more dopamine when giving voluntarily. Seems to identify a less self-interested person. Could also be "inequity aversion" - we sometimes just feel better when a difference is eliminated.
  • c. more dopamine when giving voluntarily than taxed.
  • In the end, Sapolsky thinks empathy is still a puzzling product of evolution. Altruism and reciprocity are linked however, so maybe we should stop scratching our heads about "pure altruism".
  • Seems to endorse the idea that altruism (compassionate empathy) is trainable -- like potty training, riding a bike, telling the truth! So don't forget you workouts at empathy gym!