Difference between revisions of "NOV 22"

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==25: NOV 22==
  
 
===Assigned===
 
===Assigned===
  
:*Emmons C23, “Gratitutde, SWB, and the Brain” (17)
+
:*Sapolsky, Chapter 16: Biology, the Criminal Justice System, and (Oh, Why Not?) Free Will (580-613)  (Part One 580-598)
  
===Robert Emmons, Gratitude, Subjective Well-Being, and the Brain===
+
===Sapolsky, Chapter 16: Biology, the Criminal Justice System, and (Oh, Why Not?) Free Will===
  
:*importance of exchange of gifts, symbolic and material. Note at 471, anthropological explanation.  (Consider complexity of gift giving.
+
:*Discusses professional interaction between biologists and legal scholars that may have started “neurolaw”. Conferences, Innocence Project (350 exonerated, 20 from death row). Sapolsky focusing on narrow range of topics, exclusions p. 582.( science in courtroom, min IQ for death sentence, cognitive bias in jurors, cognitive privacy)
:*Broad range of gratitude:  from specific feeling about a particular event or circumstance to a general attitude toward life.  From satisfying "civic courtesy" to Life as a gift.
 
:*Definitions:  "positive recognition of benefits received".   "undeserved merit"  Note that it is dependent upon the ''recognition'' of the benefit. From Fitzgerald (470):  appreciation, goodwill, disposition that follows from appreciation and goodwill.
 
:*Gratitude can be a "virtue" if understood as a cultivated disposition to recognize undeserved merit.
 
:*Gratitude response is stronger if the beneficiary intends the benefit.
 
  
:*Gratitude as Affective Trait
+
:*Cites his liberal credentials, but claims he’s not taking a liberal stance.   
::*grateful people experience more positive emotion. 473  Direction of causation?  If you're happy, you may be enjoying many benefits that allow for savoring and gratitude.
 
::*other correlates. Hlhealth, optimism, exercising, empathic, prosocial,forgiving helpful, supportive, less materialistic.
 
  
:*Evolutionary Perspective
+
:*583: Historic example of scientific evidence disrupting criteria for guilt in witches trials, mid-16th century.  Older women might not be able to cryLiberals, is S’s view, focus on making small adjustments (not prosecuting older women with failing tear ducts), but he’s going big:
::*"as a cognitive—emotional supplement serving to sustain reciprocal obligations-Simmel (471)  "Thus, during exchange of benefits, gratitude  prompts one person (a beneficiary) to be bound to another (a benefactor) during "exchange of benefits, thereby reminding beneficiaries of their reciprocity obligations." (Obligations are also bonds.)
 
::*"Trivers viewed gratitude as an evolutionary adaptation that regulates people's responses to altruistic acts. Gratitude for altruistic acts is a reward for adherence to the universal norm of reciprocity and is a mediating mechanism that links the receipt of a favor to the giving of a return favor."  Gratitude enacts/promotes reciprocal altruism.  "places us" in social hierarchy defined by benefactor/beneficiary.
 
  
::*Emmons: gratitude functions include: moral barometer, moral motive, moral reinforcer.
+
:*Radical claim: Current criminal justice system needs to be replaced. (Must be said, this is also a liberal reform.)
  
:*Correlates of gratitude: greater LS, hope, less depression, anxiety, envy, prosociality, empathy, forgivingness, less focused on material goods, more spiritual and religious.  Later (481) - promotes positive memory bias!
+
:*'''Three Perspectives on Free Will'''
  
:*Gratitude as Affective Trait
+
::*1. Complete free will; 2. No free will; 3. Somewhere in between.
  
::*More grateful people experience: more instances of G, more intense G, G over wider range of experience(Primed for G every day!)
+
::*No one now disputes that we sometimes are not free (epilepsy example).  Problem is how to think about it.  Sometimes it’s not “him” but “his disease”.  Sapolsky will be critical of the idea that you can make this separation.   
  
::*Core Emmons and McCullough gratitude research.  
+
::*Yet medieval europe tried animals for guilt. (Sounds weirder than it is.  Just imagine it's about the act, not criminal intent.)  Ok, it's still pretty weird...  Inference: We don’t have complete conscious control of our actions. 
  
::* Developed the GQ-6 self-rating instrument.  Found some correlates for G, including negative correlation with envy and materialism. Positive with prosociality.  In personality model, G correlates with Extroversion.  G-people higher LS, more religious,
+
:*'''Drawing Lines in the Sand''' 586
::*Acknowledge another instrument: GRAT
 
  
:*Interventions to Promote Gratitude
+
::*S Endorses a broad '''compatibilism''' = '''Free will is compatible with determinism.'''.
:*Intervention studies: Gratitude Journals with pre/post testing. gratitutde, hassles, and events conditions, 1. 1xwk 10 weeks, 2. daily for 2wks, 3. in adults with neuromuscular disease. results: higher LS, optimism, lower health complaints, more excercise.  results held up 6 months later.  
+
::*But most people talk like “libertarian dualists”, what he calls “mitigated free will”. Sapolsky will try to show that this view doesn’t hold up, in part because it depends up arbitrary use of a “homonculus” to explain things.
  
:*Some evidence in kids. Some discussion of level of maturity need for Theory of Mind (necessary for taking perspective)Quasi-experiment in grades 6&7, “hassles group”.
+
::*1842: M’Naghten.  Rule at 587.  Mentally ill murderer.  Many objected to his not being found guilty. John HinckleyAgain, many objected. Law passed restricting insanity defense in federal crimes.
  
:*Why is Gratitude Good.  Mechanisms.
+
::*"Mitigated free will" homunculus view: (read at 588. Funny, but that is how many people think.) We all more or less think this way and then the problem of responsibility comes down to figuring out what to expect from the homunculus. Note his humorous/sarcastic description of itWhat is it capable of or should have been capable of.  This is our "folk psychology" of free will.
::*1. strengthen social relationships
 
::*2. counters NA and depression (increases '''positive memory bias''' -- a form of positive illusion by foregrounding a selected reality!)
 
::*3. promotes resiliency (study of responses to disaster)(Recall Bryant discussion of savoring and copingGratitude is a form of savoring.)
 
  
:*Gratitude and the Brain
+
:*'''Age, Maturity of Groups, Maturity of Individuals'''
::*Cognitive-affective neuroscience construct (What's happening to your brain when you experience gratitude?)
 
::*Summary of other research, top of 483: read
 
::*General hypothesis:  We have structures for both perceiving gratitude in others and expressing it.
 
::*Specific hypothesis:  Limbic prefontal networks involved:  "; (1) the fusiform face-processing areas near the temporal—occipital junctions, (2) the amygdala and Limbic emotional processing systems that support emotional states, and (3) interactions between these two subcortical centers with the prefrontal regions that control executive and evaluative processes." 483.  Like other prosocial emotions.
 
::Specific hypothesis tested with studies of gratitude and mood induction in Parkinson's Disease patients, who have damage to prefrontal networks.  Hyposthesis: PD patients less likely to experience mood benefits of G-induction (by memory recall). 
 
  
:*Gratitude and SWB
+
::*2005 case Roper v. Simmons.  Age limit of 18 on executions and life terms.  Follows debates on this. 590. 
::*Strong claim for long term effects of gratitude as a trait:  p. 476 -- participants show SWB boost 6 months later.
+
::*2010 and 2012 cases on rehab for juvies. '''age related bounds on free will''' (in the justice system).
  
:*Psychological attitudes at odds with gratitude:
+
::*''Brain damage to rationality as a criterion''
::*"A number of personal burdens and external obstacles block grateful thoughts. A number of attitudes are incompatible with a grateful outlook on life, including perceptions of victimhood, an in ability to admit one's shortcomings, a sense of entitlement, and an inability to admit that one is not self-sufficient. In a culture that celebrates self-aggrandizement and perceptions of deservingness, gratitude can be crowded out." 485  (Note again, a potential connection to the discussion of egoism from buddhism.)
+
::*Morse: critic of neuroscience in courtroom, but allows for ”grossly impaired rationality”. [Note: The law is mostly interested in "rationality" not free will.]
  
====Option 3: Gratitude and Journal.====
+
::*Some views Sapolsky finds hard to accept:
 +
:::*Gazzaniga’s view: FW is an illusion, but we should still punish. Responsibility is a social level concern.  (This view makes more sense than Sapolsky sees.)
 +
:::*Deliberate actions are "free" - doesn't make sense of brain processes.
  
:*This exercise involves keeping a gratitude journal for a period of three weeks. You don't necessarily turn that in (it's likely to include some personal things), but you do turn in three journal entries (one for each week) based on the guidelines for this exercise from the leading researchers on this, Emmons & McCullough.
+
::*''Time course of decision making.''
  
::*Your daily gratitude journal is both an occasion for expressing gratitude and reporting moments during the day when you engaged in a gratitude behavior (something more extended or involved than "thanks!").  Gratitude behaviors include all of the verbal behaviors by which you can show appreciation to others or in the presence of others for benefits enjoyed. This ranges from telling people ''explicitly'' what you appreciate about what they did for you.  (examples: call centers, someone correcting you or informing you, someone doing more for you than they had to.) G behaviors can include ''requesting'' a benefit (Could you help me with this?...) that you already intend to be really grateful.  "I'd be ever so grateful if...."
+
::*Disputes about the maturity of adolescents: APA has spoken both ways in court: not mature enough for criminal resp., but mature enough to make an abortion decisionMight be contradictory unless you think that the immaturity affects impulse control more.  
  
===SCP: Short Critical Paper (1000-1500 words) ===
+
::*''Causation and Compulsion''
  
:*For this short paper, you have a choice of one of the three prompts below.  Because time is short, I will review these papers.  You are welcome to share rough drafts with others ahead of the due date.
+
:::*You might defend mitigated FW by distinguishing causation from compulsion: not everything that causes us to act is a compulsion, but for some, it is.
  
::*SCP1: Critically assess Buddhism and/or Yoga as a Happiness & Wisdom philosophy.
+
::*Works through example of schizophrenic hearing voices.  Not all cases would be compulsion.  "If your friend suggests that you mug someone, the law expects you to resist, even if it's an imaginary friend in your head." On the other hand, some say that act might be “caused” by this voice.  “Thus, in this view even a sensible homunculus can lose it and agree to virtually anything, just to get the hellhounds and trombones to stop.” 593
  
::*SCP2: Create a savoring experience opportunity, practice Bryant's savoring advice for this experience, and write a critically reflection on the efficacy of his savoring enhancing adviceThe experience could be a personal consumption pleasure experience, or a social eventIn either case, try to assess the difference, if any, that savoring practices make to your experience.
+
::*''Starting a behavior vs. halting it.''
 +
::*Libet experiment, 1980s, EEG disclosure of “readiness potential” — activity measured before conscious awareness of will.5 second delay might just be artifact of experiment designTime it takes to interpret the clock.  Libet says maybe the lag time is the time you have to veto the action your body is preparing you for (“free won’t”)
  
::*SCP3: On two separate occasions, take 15 minutes to express, in private journal writing, gratitude for various things in your life.  You may either identify list of things, but select a few items to develop in greater detail. This writing remains with you and you do not need to turn it in with your paper.  Then, write up a brief reflection on the effect of this writing exercise on your mood and affect in the hours immediately after you journal writing.  Did the writing have an immediate impact?  If so, try to describe it. Did the experience prime you to notice other things to be grateful for?  
+
::*Sapolsky’s view is that these debates reflect a consensus about the interaction of biology and free will, whatever that is.   
  
::*Upload your paper to the Short Critical Paper drop boxName your file SCP1, SCP2, or SCP3This paper is due December 1st.
+
::*''”You must be smart” vs. “You must have worked so hard”''
 +
 
 +
::*research of Carol Dweck, 90s, saying that a kid worked hard to get a result increases motivation. 
 +
 
 +
::*596: we tend to assign aptitude to biology and effort and resisting impulse to free will.  Sapolsky seems very skeptical that we can justify assigning character (impulse control anyway) to non-biological factors (fairy dust).  Read at 598. 
 +
 
 +
:*Conclusions: “worked hard/must be smart” are equally grounded in our physical nature. 
 +
 
 +
::*Some evidence that pedophilia is not freely chosen or easily resisted. 
 +
 
 +
::*Chart showing how we divide things between biology and “homuncular grit”. — Long list of ways out biology influence the items on the right.  (Note that this applies to Kevin in the Radio Lab episode, “Blame”.)
 +
 
 +
::*Like Eagleton in our podcast, Sapolsky is saying that all of these efforts to defend “mitigated free will” fails '''because both sides of these distinction are part of the same physical world.  There is no humunculus.'''
 +
 
 +
===Small Group Discussion on Will Power and "Homuncular grit"===
 +
 
 +
:*Evaluate Sapolsky's chart on p. 597 showing how we divide "biological stuff" from "homuncular grit".  How far do you go in accepting his criticism of the distinction. (read below chart).  Are there reasons for thinking we have a “homunculus” that isn’t biological?  Does this lead you to reevaluate your agreement with the prosecutor in Kevin's case?
 +
:*What is the "source" (what are the sources) of "will power"?  When you "find" willpower or marshal your personal resources to meet a challenge, is there a "who" who is deciding that or is there just a competition in your head based on all kinds of things, including perceive rewards and perceived risks?  Do you need a homunculus to have will power?
 +
 
 +
===Two Positions that might follow from your small group discussion===
 +
 
 +
:*1. There is “homuncular grit” and it’s not biological.
 +
::*Supports this view: '''Moral Responsibility and Deserved Punishment.''' Moral responsibility can be desert based since it is almost always your “moral failure” when you break the law(Except for a small range of “mitigating circumstances”).  '''You can be guilty and deserve punishment.'''
 +
 
 +
:*2. It’s biology all the way down. (Meaning, you and your development.)
 +
::*Supports this view: '''Accountability and Penalties View'''. 
 +
:::*Society must enforce standards (through laws and regulations), but this mostly involves penalties and interventions.  Speeding tickets and the loss of liberty are effective ways of encouraging compliance.  Society is also entitled to self-protection.
 +
:::*Moral responsibility just means “you have an obligation to meet the standards”.  No need for desert-based judgement or punishment.  Penalties and interventions are enough'''You can be judged to have failed to meet the standard and face consequences.''' If penalties don’t work or the social threat is great (e.g. murder), you might lose your liberty.

Latest revision as of 18:33, 22 November 2022

25: NOV 22

Assigned

  • Sapolsky, Chapter 16: Biology, the Criminal Justice System, and (Oh, Why Not?) Free Will (580-613) (Part One 580-598)

Sapolsky, Chapter 16: Biology, the Criminal Justice System, and (Oh, Why Not?) Free Will

  • Discusses professional interaction between biologists and legal scholars that may have started “neurolaw”. Conferences, Innocence Project (350 exonerated, 20 from death row). Sapolsky focusing on narrow range of topics, exclusions p. 582.( science in courtroom, min IQ for death sentence, cognitive bias in jurors, cognitive privacy)
  • Cites his liberal credentials, but claims he’s not taking a liberal stance.
  • 583: Historic example of scientific evidence disrupting criteria for guilt in witches trials, mid-16th century. Older women might not be able to cry. Liberals, is S’s view, focus on making small adjustments (not prosecuting older women with failing tear ducts), but he’s going big:
  • Radical claim: Current criminal justice system needs to be replaced. (Must be said, this is also a liberal reform.)
  • Three Perspectives on Free Will
  • 1. Complete free will; 2. No free will; 3. Somewhere in between.
  • No one now disputes that we sometimes are not free (epilepsy example). Problem is how to think about it. Sometimes it’s not “him” but “his disease”. Sapolsky will be critical of the idea that you can make this separation.
  • Yet medieval europe tried animals for guilt. (Sounds weirder than it is. Just imagine it's about the act, not criminal intent.) Ok, it's still pretty weird... Inference: We don’t have complete conscious control of our actions.
  • Drawing Lines in the Sand 586
  • S Endorses a broad compatibilism = Free will is compatible with determinism..
  • But most people talk like “libertarian dualists”, what he calls “mitigated free will”. Sapolsky will try to show that this view doesn’t hold up, in part because it depends up arbitrary use of a “homonculus” to explain things.
  • 1842: M’Naghten. Rule at 587. Mentally ill murderer. Many objected to his not being found guilty. John Hinckley. Again, many objected. Law passed restricting insanity defense in federal crimes.
  • "Mitigated free will" homunculus view: (read at 588. Funny, but that is how many people think.) We all more or less think this way and then the problem of responsibility comes down to figuring out what to expect from the homunculus. Note his humorous/sarcastic description of it. What is it capable of or should have been capable of. This is our "folk psychology" of free will.
  • Age, Maturity of Groups, Maturity of Individuals
  • 2005 case Roper v. Simmons. Age limit of 18 on executions and life terms. Follows debates on this. 590.
  • 2010 and 2012 cases on rehab for juvies. age related bounds on free will (in the justice system).
  • Brain damage to rationality as a criterion
  • Morse: critic of neuroscience in courtroom, but allows for ”grossly impaired rationality”. [Note: The law is mostly interested in "rationality" not free will.]
  • Some views Sapolsky finds hard to accept:
  • Gazzaniga’s view: FW is an illusion, but we should still punish. Responsibility is a social level concern. (This view makes more sense than Sapolsky sees.)
  • Deliberate actions are "free" - doesn't make sense of brain processes.
  • Time course of decision making.
  • Disputes about the maturity of adolescents: APA has spoken both ways in court: not mature enough for criminal resp., but mature enough to make an abortion decision. Might be contradictory unless you think that the immaturity affects impulse control more.
  • Causation and Compulsion
  • You might defend mitigated FW by distinguishing causation from compulsion: not everything that causes us to act is a compulsion, but for some, it is.
  • Works through example of schizophrenic hearing voices. Not all cases would be compulsion. "If your friend suggests that you mug someone, the law expects you to resist, even if it's an imaginary friend in your head." On the other hand, some say that act might be “caused” by this voice. “Thus, in this view even a sensible homunculus can lose it and agree to virtually anything, just to get the hellhounds and trombones to stop.” 593
  • Starting a behavior vs. halting it.
  • Libet experiment, 1980s, EEG disclosure of “readiness potential” — activity measured before conscious awareness of will. .5 second delay might just be artifact of experiment design. Time it takes to interpret the clock. Libet says maybe the lag time is the time you have to veto the action your body is preparing you for (“free won’t”)
  • Sapolsky’s view is that these debates reflect a consensus about the interaction of biology and free will, whatever that is.
  • ”You must be smart” vs. “You must have worked so hard”
  • research of Carol Dweck, 90s, saying that a kid worked hard to get a result increases motivation.
  • 596: we tend to assign aptitude to biology and effort and resisting impulse to free will. Sapolsky seems very skeptical that we can justify assigning character (impulse control anyway) to non-biological factors (fairy dust). Read at 598.
  • Conclusions: “worked hard/must be smart” are equally grounded in our physical nature.
  • Some evidence that pedophilia is not freely chosen or easily resisted.
  • Chart showing how we divide things between biology and “homuncular grit”. — Long list of ways out biology influence the items on the right. (Note that this applies to Kevin in the Radio Lab episode, “Blame”.)
  • Like Eagleton in our podcast, Sapolsky is saying that all of these efforts to defend “mitigated free will” fails because both sides of these distinction are part of the same physical world. There is no humunculus.

Small Group Discussion on Will Power and "Homuncular grit"

  • Evaluate Sapolsky's chart on p. 597 showing how we divide "biological stuff" from "homuncular grit". How far do you go in accepting his criticism of the distinction. (read below chart). Are there reasons for thinking we have a “homunculus” that isn’t biological? Does this lead you to reevaluate your agreement with the prosecutor in Kevin's case?
  • What is the "source" (what are the sources) of "will power"? When you "find" willpower or marshal your personal resources to meet a challenge, is there a "who" who is deciding that or is there just a competition in your head based on all kinds of things, including perceive rewards and perceived risks? Do you need a homunculus to have will power?

Two Positions that might follow from your small group discussion

  • 1. There is “homuncular grit” and it’s not biological.
  • Supports this view: Moral Responsibility and Deserved Punishment. Moral responsibility can be desert based since it is almost always your “moral failure” when you break the law. (Except for a small range of “mitigating circumstances”). You can be guilty and deserve punishment.
  • 2. It’s biology all the way down. (Meaning, you and your development.)
  • Supports this view: Accountability and Penalties View.
  • Society must enforce standards (through laws and regulations), but this mostly involves penalties and interventions. Speeding tickets and the loss of liberty are effective ways of encouraging compliance. Society is also entitled to self-protection.
  • Moral responsibility just means “you have an obligation to meet the standards”. No need for desert-based judgement or punishment. Penalties and interventions are enough. You can be judged to have failed to meet the standard and face consequences. If penalties don’t work or the social threat is great (e.g. murder), you might lose your liberty.