Difference between revisions of "APR 23"

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==27: APR 23. ==
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==24. APR 23==
  
===Assigned===
+
===Assigned Work===
  
:*Sapolsky, Chapter 16: Biology, the Criminal Justice System, and (Oh, Why Not?) Free Will (580-613) (Part Two 598-613)
+
:*Montgomery, David. Chapter 2: "Skin of the Earth" ''Dirt''(pp. 9-25); (16)
 
+
:*Montgomery, David. Chapter 3: "Rivers of Life" (pp. 27-47) (20)
:*Over the next few classes, try to watch some of these: 
 
:*Some videos/websites about prisons and incarceration:
 
::*[https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/pie2023.html Prison Policy Initiative] Prison Policy Initiative]: A good up-to-date overview of prison facts and some popular myths about the US prison system.  Updated to 2023!
 
::*The Atlantic, data visualization on incarceration of African Americans [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u51_pzax4M0]
 
::*Data visualization on mass incarceration. [https://mkorostoff.github.io/incarceration-in-real-numbers/]
 
::*Norwegian prison, [https://youtu.be/zNpehw-Yjvs]
 
::*US Supermax prison, “Red Onion” [https://youtu.be/ocTl5G4AJ9A]
 
::*”When kids do hard time,” Wabash Prison, [https://youtu.be/VqrH_7lQMvc]
 
  
 
===In-class===
 
===In-class===
  
:*Some limits on Ultimate Moral Responsibility: Trying not to be the inquisitor.
+
:*Documentary reports:
:*How can anyone be a compatibilist?
+
::*Island of the Whales
:*How should we treat people who make mistakes?
 
 
 
===Some arguments against Ultimate Moral Responsibility===
 
 
 
:Lines of argument regarding individual moral responsibility:
 
 
 
:*1. Strawson's Impossibility Argument.
 
::*We cannot be "ultimately" responsible for how we are.  What follows from his argument?
 
 
 
:*2. Mele's Self-modification argument and the "Benji" response.
 
::*We can self-modify, but some of our ability to do that is not up to us.
 
 
 
:*3. Growth of Knowledge argument - Sapolsky (604-605)
 
::*The more we learn about human behavior, the harder it is to make retributive punishment and "end in itself".
 
 
 
:Lines of argument at the social and cultural levels:
 
 
 
:*1. Knowledge of the social determinants of crime and dysfunctional behavior.
 
::*The more we know (also a growth of knowledge argument) about SES and the "epidemiology of crime" the harder it is to blame people absolutely and, hence, retributively. 
 
 
 
:*2. Cultural evolution and the evolution of the idea of free will. 
 
::*While we feel certain about free will, that certainty might also be a product of cultural psychology (Henrich).
 
  
===Some arguments for retaining strong intuitions about Free Will===
+
===Montgomery, David. Chapter 2, "Skin of the Earth"===
  
:*1. All of this "growth in knowledge" isn't terribly predictive of individual behavior. It may still be me who determines whether I follow the patterns predicting by knowledge of behavior.  
+
::*Darwin's studies of worms. Worms are moving a heck of a lot of dirt. 10-20 tons per acre per year. digestive juices.
::*Hard to use science in court to say that someone "didn't do it."
+
::*Note the recentness of our lack of knowledge of this.  Also why antiquities sink.
 +
::*Darwin's calculations were off: underestimated the time scale for effects.  Didn't know about '''isostasy''' - a process which lifts rock as well.  But did understand soil formation as breakdown of minerals.
 +
::*15: overview of soil ecology relationships.  read.  even theories that soil formation was involved in first forms of organismic life.
 +
::*guanine and cytosine in clay-rich solutions. 
 +
::*15-16: overview of plant colonization of cooling earth (350 mya).  earth plant life accelerated soil formation.  lots of other physical and chemical processes (17). Gophers, roots, termites, ants….
 +
::*nitrogen fixation (18): note mechanism.  "nitrogen fixing plant" a misnomer.
  
:*2. We have strong intuitions that we are the authors of our actions and people do typically accept responsibility for rule breaking.
+
::*effects of agriculture:
 +
:::*tilling releases nutrients, but also disrupts soil life, short-rotation farming reduces soil diversity, increases vulnerability to parasites,
  
===How Can Someone be a Compatibilist?===
+
:::*p. 20:  Connection bt farming methods and soil erosion and soil health. 
  
:*Agency as a source of causal powers for normally competent individuals
+
:*Note how starting your account of food (vs. “Agriculture as Human Innovation”) from soil gives you deeper sense of your trophic relationships.
::*Even if determinism is true, normal human beings have agency. Agency is a causal power. The ability to control ourselves and affect the world around us.
 
::*Agency includes our ability to "do what we want"; even if we lack ultimate powers to determine what we want.
 
::*Free will may be something like "doing what I want to do" and having wants and desires that are "mine."
 
::*Agency is our capacity to control outcomes and take ownership of some of actions. 
 
::*A normally competent agent (NCA) can learn the expectations of their society and conform to them.
 
  
:*Free will looks less mysterious if you focus on our "agential capacities," rather than determinism. Consider these "ordinary language" statements. How is "choosing" and "free will" being used differently in each case?  Is this way of talking "compatible" with determinism?:
+
::*You are what you eat. You are what you eat eats.
  
::*I may choose to take up painting as a hobby.
+
===Montgomery, Dirt, Chapter 3, "Rivers of Life"===
::*My grandmother had a big influence on me and that's why I chose to become a doctor.
 
::*I cannot choose to become a concert violinists at this point in my life.
 
::*I can choose whether or not I get ready for class.
 
::*I have no choice, I have to turn you in to the police.
 
  
::*I can't choose not to love you, but I can't see you any more.
+
::*connection between humanity and soil in language: adama (earth) hava (living). We are living earth. In Latin "homo" from "humus", living soil.
::*I've decided I don't love you any more. (aww...)
 
  
::*Parent to child: You can do anything you put your mind to.  (Yeah, right.)
+
::*suggest myth of the garden represents transition to agriculture, climate change.
::*Parent to child: You need to try harder.
 
::*Parent to (older) child: You're doing fine. Just keep that up.
 
  
:*Note: We often talk about an action being "ours" even when we say we are determined or influenced to do that action.  Perhaps physics is the wrong place to look for free will?
+
:*Long history
  
:*Problem: What sort of approach to punishment does this compatibilist picture support?
+
::*20,000 years ago - last major glaciation (though not a single event).  Europe freezes, Africa dries. 
::*One line: Well, if it's really your wants and desires that you're acting on, and you chose them, then you can be db-MR for failures.
+
::*2 million years ago - earliest evidence of migration of homo erectus from Africa.  separation from Neanderthal (note some evidence that we ate 'em [https://www.theguardian.com/science/2009/may/17/neanderthals-cannibalism-anthropological-sciences-journal]),  
::*Another line: It's fine to say that your actions were "yours," and that's a good reason to knock on your door if you break the law, but that doesn't mean you chose. You may have "taken ownership" of the causal forces that made you the way you are, but they still did make you this way and not some other way.
+
::*300,000 year ago - first modern humans.
 +
::*45,000 years ago - another wave of migration from Africa (movement occurred in both directions).
 +
::*30,000 years ago - sharp stone tools (much later than the handaxe .5 mya) and at 23,000 yrs bows and arrows
 +
::*[https://www.newscientist.com/article/dn9989-timeline-human-evolution/ Human Evolution Timeline]
  
===Sapolsky, Chapter 16: Biology, the Criminal Justice System, and (Oh, Why Not?) Free Will (580-613) (Part Two 598-613)===
+
::*modifications in skin color and other features a response to UV radiation and Vitamin D production, selection effect.  
  
:*'''But does anything useful actually come of this?'''
+
:*Emergence of agriculture
  
::*Grounds for skepticism about using neuroscience in the courtroom: Stephen Morse. Neurolaw sceptic, ok with M’naugton, but thinks cases are rare. Reviews valid criticisms he makes: 1. Juries might overvalue neuroscience images, 2. Descriptive vs. Normative. 
+
::*'''oasis and cultural evolution theories'''. 
 +
:::*oasis theory - post glacial drying in Middle East restricted food sources to wetter flood plains.
 +
:::*cultural evo thesis - agricultural innovation independent of environmental change.
 +
::*problem with oasis theory - food variety in mid-east expanding at time of agriculture, esp from N. Africa - seeds.  
 +
::*problem with cultural evolution theory -- not everyone adopted ag (though in other examples, like hand axes, everyone does adopt).  
  
::*Morse supports a strong distinction between causation and compulsionCausation is not itself an excuseBut Sapolsky argues that this still involves walling off a “homunculus” and that’s not plausible.   
+
::*3rd possibility: increasing population density -- '''agriculture a forced option'''Note climate of the Levant 13 - 11,000bc - major food abundancecould have supported population explosion.   
  
::*Acknowledges an apparent problem. Neuroscience typically can’t predict individual behavior very muchFictional exchange with prosecutor. 600
+
::*mini-glaciation at 10,000 bc called the Younger Dryas -- recovered pollen samples drop by 3/4 -- decrease precipforests recede.
  
::*Explaining lots and Predicting Little
+
::*site evidence from Abu Hureyra, on Tigris -- evidence of cultivation of grains, drought tolerant ones (drought sensitive ones disappear from the record), for example. 
  
:*But is the lack of predictive power a problem in the argument? S. works through some cases in which probability of prediction decreases, but no less likely that it could be a case of compulsion. 601
+
::*more work to produce a calorie at start of agriculture --(recall crucial calculation here). population grew to six thousand. evidence of settlements chosen for ag condition.
  
:*602: Important methodological point:  There's no less biology in the leg fracture vs. the other disorders, but level of biological explanation is different.  Leg fractures are less connected to culture. Behavior is multifactorial and heavily cultural.  (Oh god, another Henrich digressionFree will has a history.) Example: how much does biology predict depression?  Factors are diverse biological mechanisms, including cultural factors. (But, point is, someone can be disable by depression, just like the leg fracture.)
+
::*note -- using evidence from burnt food remains, we can track the migration of food, independently of human migration.   
  
:*Marvin Minsky, “Free will: internal forces I do not understand”. Sapolsky adds “yet”.
+
::*agriculture developed in several places, but we missed this because in some places it developed before settled towns. Mesoamerica, China.
  
:*Neat charts showing historic trend to connect social behavior and biology in research journals. 604-605.
+
:*'''Spread of Agriculture'''
  
:*If you still believe in mitigated free will:
+
::*spread through Levant and Turkey.  Growth allowed defeat of nearby hunter/gatherers in contest for territory.   
::*Case of Dramer and Springer and the spiritual explanation for epilepsy. Biblical version with Jesus. 
 
::*Sapolsky imagines an Inquisitor (witch burner)Must be puzzled occasionally by fact pattern. Mom has epilepsy. 
 
::*Growth of knowledge argument 607-608.  read listMost likely option is that our kids will look at us as idiots about moral responsibility and culpability.
 
  
:*608: practical outcomes. Not about letting violent criminals freeOn the biological view, punishment can’t be an end in itself (restoring balance). Retributive punishment is an end in itself. 
+
::*The dog - 20k. The cat 4K.  (Google “human evolution and dogs” for research on dog/human convolution.)
  
:*Brain imaging suggests culpability judgements activate the cool and cognitive dlPFC, but punishment judgements activate more emotional vmPFC.  “A frothy limbic state”. Makes sense that punishment is costly.  But we need to overcome our attachment to punishment.  It is involved in a lot of unjustified suffering.   
+
::*Domesticated livestock a huge leap - animal labor, fertilizer, and stored food — on the hoof.   
  
:*Recaps the transition we've made with epilepsy 610.   
+
::*after agriculture, population doubles every 1,000 years200 million by 0 CE. 2,000 years later 6.5 billion.
  
:*Car free will.  A kind of ''reductio'' argument.
+
:*'''Sumeria / Mesopatamia'''
  
===Mistake/Accident Cases===
+
::*by 5,000 bc, evidence of overcultivation in Tigris valley, hillside erosion.  emergence of irrigation.  37
  
:*Generally, we don't hold people equally blameworthy for mistakes and accidents as for intentional wrongdoing.  
+
:*Also, early agricultural infrastructure and control by governing elites. Emergence of class, armies, fight for territory.
  
::*Kimberly Potter - police officer who mistook her taser and gun, killing a citizen.
+
::*very interesting: Mesopotamian religious elite controlled food production and distribution.  (Later we'll see that Jewish authorities do the same in the Levant). More population growth.   
::*Amber Guyger - the police officer, off duty, who mistook her neighbor, Botham Jean, for an intruder and killed him.
 
::*A man has a heart attack / epileptic attack while driving and kills a pedestrian.  (Consider variations.)
 
::*A man is working two jobs to support a family, nods off at the wheel and kills a pedestrian.
 
::*A man knows his car is close to a dangerous malfunctionWhen it occurs, he loses control and kills a pedestrian.
 
::*The tragic case of the man who left his baby in a hot car.
 
  
===Henrich, Joseph, "Hell, Free Will, and Moral Universalism"===
+
::*Uruk grows to 50,000.  agriculture brings property, inequality, class, gov't administration, (philosophers). Writing 3,000 bc - (mention Field Museum in Chicago - a “must see”).
  
:*This is a review of this section of C6, which we read earlier.
+
::*back to the environment -- Babylonian Empire emerges from Sumerian cities around 1800bc.  But irrigation led to salination of the soil, silting of rivers -- 39-40 evidence of lack of understanding of soil.  Babylon falls!  Pop peaks at 20 million. Temple records tell the story.  
  
:*This excerpt from ''The WEIRDEST People in the World'' comes in the context of a section on "universal moralizing gods" which characterize the major world religions (though Buddhism requires some discussion).  H's theory is that this cultural innovation in religions allows societies to grow, solving the problems associated with living with so many strangers, something our evolved psychology did not really prepare us for. 
+
:*'''Egypt'''
  
:*The three innovations of moralizing religions are:
+
:*story in Egypt - p. 40 on: short story, the Nile fed civilizations for 7,000 years in rough sustainability, ideal combination of new silt and humus (Blue Nile and While Nile).  Harvests increase over time. 
::*'''contingent afterlife''': how you behave in this life determines your after life or next life
+
:*But, desire to '''grow grain for export''' led to year round irrigation. 1880's salination extreme.  Then Nasser damn.  (Thinking about the logic of export crops for maximizing revenue.  Very similar to situation of local over population leading to exploiting the soil.)
::*'''free will''': encouraged followers to believe they could comply with moral code by acts of choice and will.  
+
:*Irony of Nasser dam producing electricity to make synthetic fertilizers that are now needed because of the dam and poor soil management. Read at 42.
::*'''moral universalism''': moral rules are the same for all people. (Note how this overcomes groupish morality.)
 
  
:*The rest of the excerpt goes into evidence of the effects of each feature on social life.  The research related to free will is at top of p. 148.
+
:*'''China'''
  
:*What consequences, if any, does this research have for our thinking about the modern problems of free will and moral responsibility?
+
::*story in China - interesting, administration of ag recognized many grades of soil. Yellow River (name from mineral erosion upstream) damned and diverted starting 340 bcProcess of raising levees around the river led to 30 foot levies by 1920s19th century floods killed millionsAlso .5 million in early 20th century.  
::*1. Cultural variants on ways of thinking about agency make (or made, in the past) real differences in social morality, whether or not they are metaphysically grounded.  They work to the extent that people can actually think of themselves as having FW and thinking this way changes their behaviorBut this can also be oppressive if it overlooks the material conditions needed to develop competence.
 
::*3. The philosopher's concern with the metaphysical problem of free will is hard to reconcile with the cultural utility of a belief in free will.  If a belief in FW motivates better outcomes, why do we care about it's metaphysical grounding? Should we be '''as-if Libertarians'''?
 
::*4. When you tell your future kids "You can do it if you try.  Don't let other people control your decisions.  What do you want to do with your life?" you may really be motivating them to take up a particular set of values to approach challengesBut notice this is only valuable motivationallyAt some point, your parents stopped saying this so much.  Instead, "you're doing fine..."
 
  
===Small Group Discussion===
+
::*story of Walter Lowdermilk -- 1922 - working on famine prevention.  First to write about soil management and civilization.  Follows major river up stream documenting 400 miles of levies and evidence of ancient mismanagement of early ag sites. Erosion from farming steep grades. 
  
:*Does a focus on "agency" do a better job of capturing our intuitions and evidence about free will?
+
::*'''thesis going forward''': Civilizations are defined by their management of soil.  And, everyone has messed it up eventually, even the Egyptians.
:*What view of moral responsibility does an agency model support?
 

Latest revision as of 17:10, 23 April 2025

24. APR 23

Assigned Work

  • Montgomery, David. Chapter 2: "Skin of the Earth" Dirt(pp. 9-25); (16)
  • Montgomery, David. Chapter 3: "Rivers of Life" (pp. 27-47) (20)

In-class

  • Documentary reports:
  • Island of the Whales

Montgomery, David. Chapter 2, "Skin of the Earth"

  • Darwin's studies of worms. Worms are moving a heck of a lot of dirt. 10-20 tons per acre per year. digestive juices.
  • Note the recentness of our lack of knowledge of this. Also why antiquities sink.
  • Darwin's calculations were off: underestimated the time scale for effects. Didn't know about isostasy - a process which lifts rock as well. But did understand soil formation as breakdown of minerals.
  • 15: overview of soil ecology relationships. read. even theories that soil formation was involved in first forms of organismic life.
  • guanine and cytosine in clay-rich solutions.
  • 15-16: overview of plant colonization of cooling earth (350 mya). earth plant life accelerated soil formation. lots of other physical and chemical processes (17). Gophers, roots, termites, ants….
  • nitrogen fixation (18): note mechanism. "nitrogen fixing plant" a misnomer.
  • effects of agriculture:
  • tilling releases nutrients, but also disrupts soil life, short-rotation farming reduces soil diversity, increases vulnerability to parasites,
  • p. 20: Connection bt farming methods and soil erosion and soil health.
  • Note how starting your account of food (vs. “Agriculture as Human Innovation”) from soil gives you deeper sense of your trophic relationships.
  • You are what you eat. You are what you eat eats.

Montgomery, Dirt, Chapter 3, "Rivers of Life"

  • connection between humanity and soil in language: adama (earth) hava (living). We are living earth. In Latin "homo" from "humus", living soil.
  • suggest myth of the garden represents transition to agriculture, climate change.
  • Long history
  • 20,000 years ago - last major glaciation (though not a single event). Europe freezes, Africa dries.
  • 2 million years ago - earliest evidence of migration of homo erectus from Africa. separation from Neanderthal (note some evidence that we ate 'em [1]),
  • 300,000 year ago - first modern humans.
  • 45,000 years ago - another wave of migration from Africa (movement occurred in both directions).
  • 30,000 years ago - sharp stone tools (much later than the handaxe .5 mya) and at 23,000 yrs bows and arrows
  • Human Evolution Timeline
  • modifications in skin color and other features a response to UV radiation and Vitamin D production, selection effect.
  • Emergence of agriculture
  • oasis and cultural evolution theories.
  • oasis theory - post glacial drying in Middle East restricted food sources to wetter flood plains.
  • cultural evo thesis - agricultural innovation independent of environmental change.
  • problem with oasis theory - food variety in mid-east expanding at time of agriculture, esp from N. Africa - seeds.
  • problem with cultural evolution theory -- not everyone adopted ag (though in other examples, like hand axes, everyone does adopt).
  • 3rd possibility: increasing population density -- agriculture a forced option. Note climate of the Levant 13 - 11,000bc - major food abundance. could have supported population explosion.
  • mini-glaciation at 10,000 bc called the Younger Dryas -- recovered pollen samples drop by 3/4 -- decrease precip. forests recede.
  • site evidence from Abu Hureyra, on Tigris -- evidence of cultivation of grains, drought tolerant ones (drought sensitive ones disappear from the record), for example.
  • more work to produce a calorie at start of agriculture --(recall crucial calculation here). population grew to six thousand. evidence of settlements chosen for ag condition.
  • note -- using evidence from burnt food remains, we can track the migration of food, independently of human migration.
  • agriculture developed in several places, but we missed this because in some places it developed before settled towns. Mesoamerica, China.
  • Spread of Agriculture
  • spread through Levant and Turkey. Growth allowed defeat of nearby hunter/gatherers in contest for territory.
  • The dog - 20k. The cat 4K. (Google “human evolution and dogs” for research on dog/human convolution.)
  • Domesticated livestock a huge leap - animal labor, fertilizer, and stored food — on the hoof.
  • after agriculture, population doubles every 1,000 years. 200 million by 0 CE. 2,000 years later 6.5 billion.
  • Sumeria / Mesopatamia
  • by 5,000 bc, evidence of overcultivation in Tigris valley, hillside erosion. emergence of irrigation. 37
  • Also, early agricultural infrastructure and control by governing elites. Emergence of class, armies, fight for territory.
  • very interesting: Mesopotamian religious elite controlled food production and distribution. (Later we'll see that Jewish authorities do the same in the Levant). More population growth.
  • Uruk grows to 50,000. agriculture brings property, inequality, class, gov't administration, (philosophers). Writing 3,000 bc - (mention Field Museum in Chicago - a “must see”).
  • back to the environment -- Babylonian Empire emerges from Sumerian cities around 1800bc. But irrigation led to salination of the soil, silting of rivers -- 39-40 evidence of lack of understanding of soil. Babylon falls! Pop peaks at 20 million. Temple records tell the story.
  • Egypt
  • story in Egypt - p. 40 on: short story, the Nile fed civilizations for 7,000 years in rough sustainability, ideal combination of new silt and humus (Blue Nile and While Nile). Harvests increase over time.
  • But, desire to grow grain for export led to year round irrigation. 1880's salination extreme. Then Nasser damn. (Thinking about the logic of export crops for maximizing revenue. Very similar to situation of local over population leading to exploiting the soil.)
  • Irony of Nasser dam producing electricity to make synthetic fertilizers that are now needed because of the dam and poor soil management. Read at 42.
  • China
  • story in China - interesting, administration of ag recognized many grades of soil. Yellow River (name from mineral erosion upstream) damned and diverted starting 340 bc. Process of raising levees around the river led to 30 foot levies by 1920s. 19th century floods killed millions. Also .5 million in early 20th century.
  • story of Walter Lowdermilk -- 1922 - working on famine prevention. First to write about soil management and civilization. Follows major river up stream documenting 400 miles of levies and evidence of ancient mismanagement of early ag sites. Erosion from farming steep grades.
  • thesis going forward: Civilizations are defined by their management of soil. And, everyone has messed it up eventually, even the Egyptians.