About this episode
Apr 14
Episode 330: A Fact-Based Podcast (Gogol's "The Overcoat")
David and Tamler return to the strange world of Nikolai Gogol and discuss his absurdist masterpiece "The Overcoat," a story that both calls for and steadfastly resists interpretation. But first we discuss a forthcoming Phil Studies article "Philosophy as Fact-Based Discipline: 20 ... Show More
1h 16m
Mar 31
Episode 329: Why We Suffer
David and Tamler return to the work of Richard Shweder and colleagues, focusing this time on his foundational paper "The "Big Three" of Morality (Autonomy, Community, Divinity) and the "Big Three" Explanations of Suffering. What are the various ways that people explain suffering ... Show More
1h 20m
Mar 17
Episode 328: Weapons Free
David and Tamler cross the border into Denis Villeneuve's taut and propulsive thriller Sicario, the story of an FBI agent who gets pulled into a task force drawn from the shadiest elements of the US government. The assignment: to disrupt, infiltrate, and take down a major Mexican ... Show More
1h 42m
Jan 2024
5 Psychology Terms You’re Probably Misusing (Replay)
49m 12s
Feb 2024
183. Does Free Will Exist, and Does It Matter?
41m 9s
Dec 2023
175. Why Is Astrology So Popular?
37m 32s
Dec 2023
173. How Important Is Your Choice of Words?
35m 28s
Apr 2024
Should You Get Out of Your Comfort Zone?
40m 24s
Jul 2023
#254 — The Mating Strategies of Earthlings
Sam Harris speaks with David Buss about the differential mating strategies of men and women. They discuss the controversy that surrounds evolutionary psychology, the denial of sex differences, cross-cultural findings in social science, the replication crisis in psychology, the bi ... Show More
39m 32s
Jan 2024
180. What Makes Some Objects Feel Special?
38m 29s
Mar 2024
187. Is Fear Running Your Life?
39 m
Dec 2023
63. How Contagious Is Behavior? With Laurie Santos of “The Happiness Lab.” (Replay)
36m 30s
Jun 2023
#137 — Safe Space
Sam Harris speaks with Jonathan Haidt about his book The Coddling of the American Mind. They discuss the hostility to free speech that has grown more common among young adults, recent moral panics on campus, the role of intentions in ethical life, the economy of prestige in “call ... Show More
39m 50s
Thousands of studies in psychology rely on data from North American undergraduates. Can we really conclude anything about the "human" mind from such a limited sample-- especially since Westerners are probably more different from the rest of the world's population than any other group? We talk about Joseph Henrich and colleagues' critique of the behavioral sciences in their paper "The WEIRDEST People in the World." David offers a defense of psychology, arguing that it's usually not the goal of lab studies to generalize findings to all humans in the first place. Also, Tamler gives a brief, heartfelt, completely non-awkward rant about monkey torturer Harry Harlow and David defends the practice of electrocuting baby monkeys for no reason.
Links
- The Gods Must Be Crazy [IMDB.com]
- Bushmen [wikipedia.org]
- Homo Economicus [wikipedia.org]
- The Ultimatum Game [wikipedia.org]
- Müller-Lyer illusion [wikipedia.org]
- We aren't the world [psmag.com]
- Harlow studies [wikipedia.org]
- Henrich, J., Heine, S. J., & Norenzayan, A. (2010).The weirdest people in the world. Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 33, 61-83.
- Henrich, J., Boyd, R., Bowles, S., Camerer, C., Fehr, E., Gintis, H., & McElreath, R. (2001). In search of homo economicus: behavioral experiments in 15 small-scale societies. American Economic Review, 73-78.
- Mook, D.G. (1983). In Defense of External Invalidity. American Psychologist, 38,379-387.
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