Difference between revisions of "OCT 13"

From Alfino
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Created page with "==12: OCT 13 - 4. Some Happiness Research== ===Assigned=== :*Haybron C4, “Measuring Happiness” (10) :*Gilbert, C2, “The View from in Here” (26) ===In-class=== :*Som...")
 
m
 
Line 1: Line 1:
==12: OCT 13 - 4. Some Happiness Research==
+
==14: OCT 13: Some Cultural Evolutionary Theory==
  
 
===Assigned===
 
===Assigned===
  
:*Haybron C4, “Measuring Happiness” (10)
+
:*Sapolsky, Chapter 13, "Culture, context, public goods games, religion" (493-503) (10)
:*Gilbert, C2, “The View from in Here” (26)
+
:*'''The Paradox of Moral Experience'''
  
===In-class===
+
===In-Class Topics===
:*Something on intercultural aspect of wisdom...
 
  
===Haybron, C4, “Measuring Happiness”===
+
:*Hitting Rock Bottom
  
:*We can identify which groups of people are happier and what sorts of things, on average, make people happy.
+
==='''Paradox of Moral Experience'''===
  
:*Measures of anxiety and depression are reliable and they measure a kind of unhappiness.
+
::*The Paradox of Moral Experience involves a conflict between two "standpoints" for seeing values. 1 and 2 below:
  
:*Problems:
+
::*1. We '''experience our morality''' as beliefs we hold true. They are compelling to us in a way that leads us to expect others to find them compelling. We can be surprised or frustrated that others do not see our reasons as compellingFrom this standpoint, our moral truths feel necessary rather than contingent.   
::*People could read the same question on a H survey, but think of diff meanings of happiness.
+
:::*Examples: "What's wrong with those (lib/con)s, don't they see X/Y?" "How can anyone think it's ok to act like that?")   
::*You might try to find a ratio of + to - emotion3:1?  But cultures vary in these baseline ratios. (See Argyle).   
 
::*There is reason to think the high % of self-reported happiness is implausible.  (?)
 
:::*% of people with depression and loneliness and stress.  
 
  
:*Positivity bias or positivity illusion may explain this over-report.
+
::*2. But, when we '''study morality as a functional system''' that integrates people who see and interpret the world differently, it is less surprising that we often do not find each others' reasoning or choices compelling.  We can also see how groups of people might develop "values cultures" that diverge on entire sets of values (or, "cooperative toolkits") while still solving some of the same underlying problems that all human societies face.  From this standpoint, the functions of morality are universal, but the specific strategies that individuals and cultures take seem very contingent. But, knowing this, why don’t we experience our own values as contingent?
 +
:::*Examples: Sociocentric / Individualist cultures, Specific histories that groups experience (Us vs. Europe vs. ...)
 +
::*Roughly, 1 is normal experience, when you are "in your head".  2 reflects an attempt, through knowledge, to get a "third person" experience, to "get out of your head".
 +
::*Likely evolutionary basis: Belief commitment (believing that our beliefs are true) is advantageous, but we also need to be open to belief revision through social encounters.
  
:*We might be better at measuring change in happiness than absolute happiness.
+
:*Some implications:
 +
::*We have a bias against seeing others' moral beliefs as functional.  Rather, we see them as caused, and often wrongheaded.  (Italians are more sociocentric because their culture makes them that way.  Rather than, sociocentric culture function to solve basic problems, just like individualistic ones.)
 +
::*Different moral "matrices" are connected to our personality and identity.  Areguing for the truth of your moral orientation (as opposed to focusing on issues) can be like telling someone they shouldn't be the people they are. (!)
  
===Gilbert, Chapter 2: The View from in Here===
 
  
:*Twins: Lori and Reba.  How to assess their preference to stay together?  How would you feel at the prospect of being joined that way?  View from inside vs. View from outside.
+
===Sapolsky, Chapter 13,"Culture, context, public goods games, religion" (493-520)===
  
:*Types of happiness: emotional, moral - good feeling from realizing potential or acquiring virtue - (some elements of H-l), judgement happiness (H-l).
+
:*'''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.)
  
::*How can the twins be happy? What is the role of "objective conditions"?
+
::*Schweder.  autonomy,community, divinity
 +
::*Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory. (A “matrix” is already a way of thinking about “general variables”.)
  
::*Subjectivity of Yellow, 32. Yellow isnt’ the wavelength of light, it’s the experience, the psychological state. The idea of a preference is tied to something being more pleasant.
+
:*'''Cooperation and Competition''' in Public Goods Game research
::*Nozick's experience machine, 35. Happy Frank - we can’t deny that he might present as having a happy emotional state.  (Perhaps goal of this analysis is to see that normal understanding of happiness includes life happiness, virtues, and perfective activities.  These can’t be obtained by the experience machine and Frank doesn’t have it either.). This is progress.  Lesson: you need to listen closely when people use the word “happy”. 
 
  
::*40: How similar are two people's experience of happiness? How would you know?
+
::*'''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''')
  
:::*Problemwe don't compare experiences, we compare memories of experiencesYou can’t have someone else’s experience.  
+
::*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.)
  
:::*Describer's study on memory of color swatch, 41What do we access when we make happiness judgements?
+
::*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 GameOne with “pay to punish” option.  One with 3rd party punishment option.
  
:::*How reliable is our judgement from one minute to the next?
+
::::*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.'''
  
:::*Interviewer substitution studies Daniel Simon's Lab: [http://www.simonslab.com/videos.html]Other perceptual aspects, 43-44. The card trick creates the illusion that he guessed your card, but that’s because you only remembered your card.
+
::*'''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. StillThink about that. (We’ll read a couple of pages from “The WEIRDEST People in the World on this later.)
  
:::*Conclusion: 44-45: read. Not so much about how bad we are at noticing change, but how, if we aren't paying attention, memory kicks in.
+
::*'''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.
  
:*Happiness scales
+
::*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.”
  
::*Language squishing and Experience stretching: Addresses the question: Does the range of my experience of happiness lead me to talk differently about an identical experience (of the cake) as someone else, or does it cause me to experience things differently?  (Point about guitar experience (52) -- moving targets problem.)
+
:*'''Honor and Revenge''' - (mention Mediterranean hypothesis - Italian honor culture & research on southerners....) 501
  
:::*Language squishing hyp: We "squeeze" our happiness scale (language) to fit the range of our objective expSame subjective experience of birthday cake, but different label.
+
:*'''Shamed Collectivists v. Guilty Individualists''' 501
::::*Consistent with the idea that someone is having the same experience as you from the same event, but labelling it differently because of limited experience.   
+
::*more likely to sacrifice welfare of one for group.  Use individual as means to endfocus of moral imperatives on social roles and duties vs. rights.
::::*Can’t really say that aren’t as happy as you because they didn’t have your range of experiences. You don’t have theirs either.   
+
::*uses shames vs. guilt.  read 502.  shame 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.   
  
:::*Experience stretching hyp: We take the range of our objective experience and stretch it to fit our scale.
+
:*Fools Rush In -- Reason and Intuition p. 504
::::*R&L talk about experiences the same as you do but feel something different.
+
::*How do we use insights from research to improve behavior?
::::*Consistent with the idea that someone is having a different experience than you from the same event because of their limited background AND that that experience is a real peak experience because of the limited background experience. 
+
::*Which moral theory is best? (trick question).  In this section, he's
::::*Maybe a rich background of experience (exotic experience, diverse or challenging experience, luxurious experience, experience of rarefied environments) "ruins" mundane experience.  In which case, absence of peak experiences is not a problem.
 
  
:*Drawing the theoretical conclusion: Our relationship to our judgements about happiness is changed by our experience of happiness and vice versa, creating a kind of ambiguity in intersubjective assessments of happiness. There is no “view from nowhere” (as in science). (Top of 53)
+
::*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.
  
:*Small group discussion: Thinking about R&L and "experience stretching" and "language squishing", Is our happiness limited by the limits of our experience? Can enriched experience (luxury, peak experiences, exotic experiences) "ruin you"?  Does connoisseurship really pose a risk to happiness? Think of specific cases that may work differently.
+
::*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".)
  
===SW2: Short writing assignment #2===
+
:*Slow vs. Fast
  
:*'''Stage 1''': Please write an 600 word maximum answer to the following question by '''October 18, 2020 11:59pm.'''
+
::*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.
::*Topic: Assessing Wisdom Paradigms: We have been studying three specific wisdom paradigms from Baltes, Carstensen, and Ardelt.  Identify specific insights and limits of each paradigm, showing your understanding of each as you do (400 words) and then give your own reasoned answer to these two questions: Is wisdom something that can only be acquired toward the end of the life span or can we abstract from the practices of wise elders and to enhance the cultivation of wisdom at a younger age? What, if any, are the limits of wisdom acquisition in the 2nd quarter?
 
  
:*'''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 your own notes.  Collaboration 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.
+
::*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.
  
:*Prepare your answer and submit it in the following way:
+
::*Example of Tragedy of commonsense morality using Dog meat. -- used as example of how you could induce us vs. them response.   
::# '''Do not put your name in the file or filename'''.  You may put your student id number in the file.  Put a word count in the file.
 
::# In Word, check "File-->Info-->Inspect Document-->Inspect. You will see an option to delete author information. 
 
::# Format your answer in '''double spaced text''' in a 12 point font, using normal margins. 
 
::# Save the file in the ".docx" file format using the file name "AssessingWPs".
 
::# Log in to courses.alfino.org.  Upload your file to the '''1 - Secondary 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 be using the Flow and Content areas of the rubric for this assignment. Complete your evaluations and scoring by '''October 22, 11:59pm.''' 
+
::*Example of framing: Samuel Bowles example of switching people's mind set in the case of the school responding to late parents.   
::*Use [https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSflxcVoE7HN2miQUVx4ezfliW_P71_s7gCOxp9XK5fCA_IfBA/viewform?usp=sf_link] to evaluate '''four''' peer papers.   
 
  
::*To determine the papers you need to peer review, I will send you a key with saint names in alphabetically order, along with animal names.  You will find your saint name and review the next four (4) animals' work.  
+
:*'''Veracity and Mendacity'''   
  
::*Some papers may arrive late. If you are in line to review a missing paper, allow a day or two for it to show upIf 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.)
+
::*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.
  
:*'''Stage 3''': I will grade and briefly comment on your writing using the peer scores as an initial rankingAssuming the process works normally, my scores will be close to the peer scoresUp to 14 points.
+
::*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.)
  
:*'''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://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSeCcdJmpqds6UhDnJTwkuMffe5T7Y-IOEoL-AUBYQfRiqX0Dg/viewform?usp=sf_link].  '''Fill out the form for each reviewer, but not Alfino.'''  Up to 10 points, in Points.
+
::*Subjects who don't cheat.  will vs. grace. grace wins"I don't know; I just don't cheat."
  
::*Back evaluations are due '''October 29th, 2021'''.
+
===Lecture Note on Philosophical Method: "Hitting Rock Bottom"===
 +
 
 +
:*Today 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. 
 +
 
 +
:*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). 
 +
 
 +
:*Where we are in our investigation. "Rock Bottom" theories for each "frame" we have been studying:
 +
::*Individual Frame - Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory.  C F L A S
 +
::*Group/Political Frame - Hibbing et al. "Bedrock Social Dilemmas"
 +
::*Cultural Frame - Henrich (in Sapolsky) on cultural evolution - Mental adaptations that culture makes and sustains.
 +
 
 +
:*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? How do I bring fairness concepts and an understanding of a contract (rider) into line with my intuitions about this case (elephant). What does my culture tell me about fairness in contracts?

Latest revision as of 20:09, 13 October 2022

14: OCT 13: Some Cultural Evolutionary Theory

Assigned

  • Sapolsky, Chapter 13, "Culture, context, public goods games, religion" (493-503) (10)
  • The Paradox of Moral Experience

In-Class Topics

  • Hitting Rock Bottom

Paradox of Moral Experience

  • The Paradox of Moral Experience involves a conflict between two "standpoints" for seeing values. 1 and 2 below:
  • 1. We experience our morality as beliefs we hold true. They are compelling to us in a way that leads us to expect others to find them compelling. We can be surprised or frustrated that others do not see our reasons as compelling. From this standpoint, our moral truths feel necessary rather than contingent.
  • Examples: "What's wrong with those (lib/con)s, don't they see X/Y?" "How can anyone think it's ok to act like that?")
  • 2. But, when we study morality as a functional system that integrates people who see and interpret the world differently, it is less surprising that we often do not find each others' reasoning or choices compelling. We can also see how groups of people might develop "values cultures" that diverge on entire sets of values (or, "cooperative toolkits") while still solving some of the same underlying problems that all human societies face. From this standpoint, the functions of morality are universal, but the specific strategies that individuals and cultures take seem very contingent. But, knowing this, why don’t we experience our own values as contingent?
  • Examples: Sociocentric / Individualist cultures, Specific histories that groups experience (Us vs. Europe vs. ...)
  • Roughly, 1 is normal experience, when you are "in your head". 2 reflects an attempt, through knowledge, to get a "third person" experience, to "get out of your head".
  • Likely evolutionary basis: Belief commitment (believing that our beliefs are true) is advantageous, but we also need to be open to belief revision through social encounters.
  • Some implications:
  • We have a bias against seeing others' moral beliefs as functional. Rather, we see them as caused, and often wrongheaded. (Italians are more sociocentric because their culture makes them that way. Rather than, sociocentric culture function to solve basic problems, just like individualistic ones.)
  • Different moral "matrices" are connected to our personality and identity. Areguing for the truth of your moral orientation (as opposed to focusing on issues) can be like telling someone they shouldn't be the people they are. (!)


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."

Lecture Note on Philosophical Method: "Hitting Rock Bottom"

  • Today 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.
  • 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).
  • Where we are in our investigation. "Rock Bottom" theories for each "frame" we have been studying:
  • Individual Frame - Haidt's Moral Foundations Theory. C F L A S
  • Group/Political Frame - Hibbing et al. "Bedrock Social Dilemmas"
  • Cultural Frame - Henrich (in Sapolsky) on cultural evolution - Mental adaptations that culture makes and sustains.
  • 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? How do I bring fairness concepts and an understanding of a contract (rider) into line with my intuitions about this case (elephant). What does my culture tell me about fairness in contracts?