Mind Scans to Map Decision Making Mechanics 218
rrangel writes "Newsweek is running an article on the fMRI, which tracks brain function by measuring blood flow, and using it for watching the mechanics of economics and choice. Best quote on economic choice: '... there is no quantity of juice sufficient to get a male monkey to look away from the hindquarters of a female in estrus.' H. Hefner has known that all along."
..there is no quantity of juice sufficient.. (Score:5, Funny)
Why can't wives understand that?
Re:..there is no quantity of juice sufficient.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:..there is no quantity of juice sufficient.. (Score:3, Funny)
What do you mean I should have alphabetized the cleaning supplies???
Re:..there is no quantity of juice sufficient.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Humans are lucky... (Score:5, Funny)
We don't need that the female be in estrus.
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:2)
>
> We don't need that the female be in estrus.
And from the article:
Suuuuuuuure. Then what are you showin' all that monkey pr0n?
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:4, Informative)
And with good reason: human females, almost uniquely among animals, conceal when they're fertile.
In fact, they conceal it so well, the women themselves don't know when they are fertile. At least not consciously: human females do show preferences for different types of males depending on whether or not they're fertile. Fortunately or not, depending on whether you're looking to have offspring or just consequence-free sex, human females will tend to prefer the more rotund and nerdy Slashdot-type male when she's not fertile, and very masculine hunks when she is fertile.
(Unlike fertility, there are somewhat obvious signs of how masculine a human male is: higher testosterone produces both dominant behavior and a thinner, more "cut" physical appearance, especially about the face. Female humans may not be able to consciously articulate why some males seem more masculine than others, but unconscious parts of their minds, adapted by evolution, can spot those signs.)
And rather than just be fertile at certain times of the year, human females are fertile all year 'round. This is not in order to allow greater numbers of offspring to be produced, because in our natural hunting and gathering condition, a human female can only support about one offspring every four years. Until the beginnings of agriculture (until recently thought to be about 10,00 years ago, recently pushed back to about 23,000 years ago), natural fertility suppression caused by breast-feeding and, if that failed, infanticide, suppressed additional offspring.
So why be fertile all the time? Well, if a female is fertile all the time, the male must be interested in sex all the time, as the parent poster pointed out, because he never knows when sex will result in progeny. The male may not consciously want offspring; he just wants sex, as those males not wanting sex never had offspring to pass that lack of desire on to. So continual male desire for sex is promoted by the sax evolutionary strategies that also promote non-seasonal but concealed female fertility.
What's the benefit to the female of the male's unrelenting interest in sex? The male's desire for sex keeps him around continuously -- and that aids, not the female, but the offspring. The male will barter for sex by giving the female and her offspring the highly concentrated protein and fat in the meat that the male hunts. By concealing ovulation, the male never knows when he can safely forego the sex, keeping the nutritious meat for himself until the female is fertile and sex will result in the male's progeny.
But there's even more to it: because fertility is concealed, the male cannot safely allow other males to copulate with "his" female -- as those other males might win the lottery of the female's fertile days. So concealed fertility also promotes pair bonding.
But if the female does manage to sneak off and copulate with another male, she can get meat from that other male for herself and her offspring -- giving her an incentive to "cheat". So the same pair bonding that cements a male to "his" female also leads, inevitably, to jealousy, fratricide between males, and even male violence toward his mate, to "keep her in line".
And once again, concealed fertility aids the female -- since the male can never be sure when the female conceives, he can never be sure that a particular child is his; he must take his chances and support all "his" mate's offspring on the hope they are his. (And yet another evolutionary adaptation comes into play, the tendency of newborns to resemble their fathers more than their mothers, to forestall their murder by a father unconvinced of his paternity.)
Which brings us back to the female preference, when fertile, for masculine men. Because that's only one side of the coin: when not fertile, the female actually prefers less masculine men. Now if it's preferable have offspring with a masculine man
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:4, Insightful)
One of the things that drives me nuts about evolutionary biology is the constant invocation of "when we were cave men", the supposed activities that humans undertook, and the supposed division of these roles. I would be hard pressed to believe that the minimal fossil and other records that exist over the time spans can give the kind of details necessary to validate this explanation. If I'm incorrect, please point me to these records, and I'll happily reconsider this assertion.
AFAICT, the whole business of evolutionary biology is to create a logical explanation for various perceptions about human behavior. For example, you are building a logical framework for your perception that dudes like sex more than chicks. But there are scarcely even clear records now that indicate whether on average men or women "want sex more" (or whether the mean is a properly representative statistic). A thorough explanation must obviously consider the role of reporting of desire, and to do this you must consider the long-term socialization of women to be less direct about their sexuality (which is well documented). Doesn't that go a long way in modifying or obscuring any biological phenomena that might exist? And what about the tremendously varying levels of sexual desire observed among men as well as among women (e.g., Match.com thought this important enough to include in their personality profile test for matches).
I see the researchers in the article undertaking much of this same assumption:
Leaving aside the brilliance of being able to detect a single neuron firing, he made a plot of how often the neuron fired versus some external parameter that he then varied. Great science. He then inferred a mathemetical relationship governing the relationship between the parameter and the firing of the neuron and presumably fit that plot to estimate how well the data were represented by the equation he chose. Also well done science. But to then claim that the logical conclusion is that this relationship is "hard wired" into the monkey's brain is wildly speculative, sort of like measuring the probability that I will ride my bike today versus the dollars I could make doing it, and concluding that I have an economic equation hard-wired into my brain. This negates both free will and any subtlety. What if I just don't feel like riding today?
The brain scanning stuff is obviously a young field, so it's understandable that people want to advance theories to explain all this new stuff they're seeing, but it'd be nice to see a clearer representation of what the research says and what the research think might explain it.
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:2)
Liar.
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:4, Insightful)
It also completely explains why men remain faithful to barren women.
This load of crap is nothing more than the ranting of some social evolutionist who believes that humans are driven by nothing more than instinct and so tries to come up with some biological mechanism to explain why human men marry human women.
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:2, Insightful)
Men remain faithful to women because they like (love?) that woman or because they are in some way dependent on them...NOT because they've figured it is the best way to ensure the proliferation of their genes.
That's what our brains buy us.
However, there are things beyond our control. A man might be in love with one woman, with absolutely no intention or desi
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:5, Insightful)
Steven Pinker discusses similar problems in his book The Blank Slate: The Modern Denial of Human Nature [amazon.co.uk]. Suggesting that nature can be an important factor (even if only a little) gets you labelled a extremist nutter. Yet those who say mans instincts are unimportant are considered moderate and acceptable. Robert Winston in his BBC programme [bbc.co.uk] also had to deal with similar attacks after his show aired.
It is clear, to me at least, that a large portion of human behaviour has an instinctive aspect to it. Some reinforced by culture and others reigned in by the same. No one is denying upbringing and culture have an affect on how someone behaves or that people are unable to contain the animal within. (Which I presume is your beef with the post). Just that human evolution has also provided some instinct mechanisms that also affect how someone behaves. I don't recall the 'crap' spouting poster suggesting otherwise.
It does explain it. (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:2)
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:2, Funny)
Fortunately or not
Sounds okay to me. But then I read:
And rather than just be fertile at certain times of the year, human females are fertile all year 'round.
There goes the last bit of hope I had in me.
Humans aren't so different at all (Score:2)
"And with good reason: human females, almost uniquely among animals, conceal when they're fertile."
Interesting theory, but direct experience and a little recent research [discoveryhealth.co.uk] claim otherwise.
Actually a good body of older research also points to signs that human females are likely to be more aggressive in pursuing a mating partner during estrus.
Start talking to some female friends (yes, this often requires we actually leave our desks - 'HotChik69' on that chat room window is probably an obese 40-somethi
Re:Humans aren't so different at all (Score:2)
Interesting theory, but direct experience and a little recent research [discoveryhealth.co.uk] claim otherwise.
Did you read what I wrote? Did you read the article you linked to?
I made a point that most women don't consciously know when they're fertile, but that (as shown by their tendency to prefer more masculine men when fertile) they are unconsciously aware of it. I wrote
Re:Humans aren't so different at all (Score:2)
"Did you read what I wrote? Did you read the article you linked to?"
Errrm... yes, I did. Hence my reply. You wrote as your key claim that: " human females, almost uniquely among animals, conceal when they're fertile.".
And I called bullshit on that. Talk to any number of women who care to discuss it. Many sure as hell know, based on the fact that they have marked changes in both physiology and increased sex drive. And yes, that's ovulation and hence fertility they're aware of, not only menstruation.
Re:Humans aren't so different at all (Score:2)
Maybe I know when I'm ovulating, maybe I don't (consciously). But I don't *change color* or anything when I do. Most primate species, however, do have outwardly visible biological changes during estrus.
Both of which point
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:2)
Re:Humans are lucky... (Score:2)
Until the beginnings of agriculture (until recently thought to be about 10,00 years ago, recently pushed back to about 23,000 years ago), natural fertility suppression caused by breast-feeding and, if that failed, infanticide, suppressed additional offspring.
Actually, before agriculture, women generally were *not* fertile year-round. Women have to be at a certain percentage body fat to build up the uterine lining, and ranging an average of 10 miles a day to find enough food to sustain
Re:Women don't know when they're fertile? BS (Score:5, Informative)
Yes, but ovulation is not menstruation (getting one's "period"). Ovulation occurs about fourteen days before menstruation, and the period of fertility is some period of time a up to five days before ovulation and one to two days after ("fertile" days can occur before actual ovulation because sperm can live inside a woman for up to a week).
While menstruation pretty reliably occurs fourteen days after ovulation, the time between menstruation and the next ovulation tends to vary much more.
So while your menstruation is pretty obvious, it gives you little idea of when you'll next be fertile.
And while some women feel a characteristic pain when ovulation occurs ("Mittelschmerz", German for "middle pain"), because of the varying time between menstruation and ovulation and the ability of sperm to live inside the women, it's entirely possible even for that minority of women who experience Mittelschmerz to become pregnant from sex after menstruation but before ovulation and the warning pain of Mittelschmerz.
You do know what the technical medical term for a woman who relies on the "rhythm method" of contraception is?
"Mother".
Re:Women don't know when they're fertile? BS (Score:2, Informative)
The fluid is thinner so there is more vaginal secretion. And you really do get more aroused.
From a woman.
Re:Women don't know when they're fertile? BS (Score:2)
No, no, that's incorrect.
I do not get more aroused when the woman is fertile. I get scared of her getting preggers and having my little bastards.
To be completely safe, when the woman's fertile, I don't get aroused, I get a blow-job.
Two things... (Score:5, Interesting)
Second, juice may not get him. but cocaine will. I saw a study that showed a monkey will give up everything, including food and sex, for cocaine.
Re:Two things... (Score:5, Interesting)
One can see motor movements in the brain. I tell you to move your finger (or think about moving your finger ) and I can see in the brain the area that: hears me say "move your finger" then the language area that interprets "move your finger" and the pre-motor area firing, then the motor area firing.
There are a million tests that can be given in the MR scanner. Some of them can be really funny.
Examples on request.
Obl. Duke Nukem ... (Score:2)
So what are you waiting for?
Christmas?
zRe:Two things... (Score:5, Interesting)
Second test: Stroop. Never seen so many smart people get so frustrated. A word is presented: "RED" It is written in green ink. What color is the ink? Then, just as you get the hang of it, what is the word?
Third: Nicotine addictions. Drop a bolus of nicotine into a willing research subject. I've heard "That's better than sex" to "Ohhhhhhh" to "I think I wet myself"
More later.
Ummm.. Jesus (Score:2)
Re:Two things... (Score:2, Interesting)
Next take a patient in an fMRI study. A very typical normalization task is to simply use a soft brush to rub say the left hand. Neuroanatomists have known for pushing a hundred years where in the brain (specifically where on the humonculus) this will be registered. (By reverse engineering: damage to some part of the brain leaves the pati
Re:Two things... (Score:2)
Why do Americans reading a popular description of research assume that the researchers are idiots &&/|| in a conspiracy?? :-)
As another comment said, there are of course lots of other data not mentioned in the popular article -- and a technical motivation (energy use correlates with blood flow).
I don't know much about cocaine, but most drugs stimul
Drugs (Score:2)
Go ask an addict of one of those drugs - NOTHING else matters, but the next hit. Sure you could keep giving drugs to them so they have a semblance of function, but their brains have been _damaged_.
I wonder what they'd pick if you give them a choice between getting the drug and the next high, and then after that _death_ vs not getting the drug forever.
Re:Drugs (Score:2)
Great idea! Gee, why hasn't anyone tried that?
Re:Two things... (Score:2)
My point was that the brain researchers are neither idiots nor in a conspiracy. They are aware of your points.
So if you haven't studied why the researchers have come to their conclusions (and not only the conclusions as printed in a popular journal), I do think that the one jumping to conclusions here is you.
It is of course possible that you are in the very small gro
Re:Two things... (Score:2)
That is what most biology researchers say. Have I contradicted it somewhere?
I'm sorry if I mistook you, but what you wrote was quite without any kind of specific details.
Could you give exact references and explain why all the researchers with fMRI are(/
Re:Two things... (Score:4, Informative)
1. Neurons fire
2. Transient decrease of blood oxygen in that area due to increased use
3. Compensatory regional increase in blood flow causes increase in blood oxygen.
4. Miracle occurs / Change in concentration in oxygen imaged with MRI and bright "blobs" superimposed over structural image.
Many problems with this technique, and many assumptions that must be made. Just a few:
1. We assume that there is a consistent time course to these steps. During image processing, the blood oxygen vs. time curve is usually assumed to follow a particular theoretical model all over the brain. Problem is, maybe the compensatory increase in oxygenation is much slower in some areas of the brain than it is in others.
2. We have very little idea what it means that we see increased or decreased "activity" in an area, particularly when comparing normal and diseased conditions. Perhaps some areas of the brain are "always on" and there is no clear contrast between that condition and a "working" condition, therefore they NEVER appear to be activated by fMRI. Maybe the area of increased activity represents a "downstream effect" of activity in another area? Does increased activity suggest better function (e.g. more blood = gasoline to the engine = higher speed) or worse (less efficient engine = more gasoline to engine = same speed at higher cost).
Despite these problems, fMRI is damn cool because you really can "see someone think", which is a relatively new scientific development. The technology will get better, and eventually we'll get closer to the actual neurons, in terms of taking pictures of real neuronal activation instead of a blood oxygen proxy four or five physiological steps away. Anyhow, cool stuff.
Re:Two things... (Score:2, Interesting)
True, I've read about a similar experiment with a monkey. The experiment with the monkey is a crude measurement of how addictive a substance is. Basically the monkey has to press a button a certain number of times to get a hit of some substance. Each time the monkey gets a hit it must make more presses than the previous time. By the end of the experiment the mon
Re:Two things... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Two things... (Score:2)
Suppose you want to recreate an electronic circuit formed of various components. For simplicity, let's limit this to an analog circuit. Furthermore suppose that all of the components look the same, so you can't tell what's what by looking at them. However, there are various places where you can give an input, and various other places where you can measure an output. The way any scientist will go about solving this "black box" problem is by making measurements and theorizing something like T
Rationality and expected value (Score:5, Interesting)
Dropping $20 on an array of Mega Millions tickets is mathematically irrational, but with or without that $20, my life for the next two weeks will be about the same. If I were to win, however, even the second-best prize, it would enable me to purchase a nice house.
When it's a matter of playing a game where the expected value of my dollar is $0.95, but I'm more likely to win $2 or $3, why bother? But even if the expected value of my dollar is $0.75 or less with a prize of many million and many over $100k, despite the miniscule chances of winning, it would change my life.
Of course, if I had an expected value of $1.05 for my dollar, I'm smart enough to play consistently even if my dollar only wins a little at a time.
-PM
Re:Rationality and expected value (Score:3, Interesting)
This isn't strictly relevant, but has anyone figured out why most people get the probablities wrong in Don't Get The Goat [grand-illusions.com] (no relation to goatse). Even intelligent people often get it wrong. I remember spending ages trying to explain it to an intelligent person with good
Re:Rationality and expected value (Score:2, Insightful)
Even then you still get some people thinking that suddenly they had a 50/50 shot of picking the right door on the first go...
Re:Rationality and expected value (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Rationality and expected value (Score:2)
Time to buy some tickets....otherwise I ignore the lotto...
Yet I know playing blackjack has better odds of my winning, if I'm going to gamble....
Blackjack? (Score:2)
Insufficient juice (Score:5, Funny)
Oh really? I bet they only tried 'reasonable' amounts of juice. They can't be sure unless they try an infinite amount of juice -- or rather, an amount of juice so unfeasibly preposterously gigantic that the monkey is simply nable to comprehend it, so that changes in the juice quantity no longer have any effect. When they use that much juice, I'll take remarks like the above seriously
Disclaimer: I am only writing this because I am thirsty and like thinking about juice.
Re:Insufficient juice (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Insufficient juice (Score:2)
There may not be a quantity of juice sufficient, but I bet I could make a monkey thirsty enough to look away.
Re:Insufficient juice (Score:2)
More realistically, we might also be able to submerge the monkey in juice. I suspect that the survival instinct outweighs the ass-staring instinct in most monkeys, with a moderate thousand-gallon juice investment, rather than the staggering quantity needed to form a black hole.
Re:Insufficient juice (Score:2)
And thus, the corrollary: there is no quantity of thirst significant enough to pull a geek away from
what advertisers won't do (Score:5, Insightful)
Someone please tell me how this is going to help me?
Re:what advertisers won't do (Score:2)
Yup, of course advertisers will use this stuff. Here's proof from the article:
And that, in turn, is a step toward the holy grail of marketing: being able to figure out how people will make choices that haven't been offered yet. The same tools that can answer deep questions about primate behavior can also be used to get people to sign up for mo
Re:what advertisers won't do (Score:2)
Except, of course, the slight problem that even if you can measure the result on a single neuron in a single primate, the brain is so horrendously complex that it will be an entirely different neuron firing at a different rate in an individual with a slightly different life experience.
Unless the idea is to have monitors surgically implanted into the entire
Re:what advertisers won't do (Score:3, Interesting)
This is a fair question. I'm in one of the labs mentioned in this article, so I'll try giving it a shot.
Most basic research is often a number of steps removed from applicability. Most non-scientists do not think research is useful unless it has clear applicability. One could make the subtle argument that an increase in human knowledge, especially an increase in knowledge about ourselves, is an intrinsic good and elevates us as a society. I'm not going
Re:what advertisers won't do (Score:2)
Kudos to you for giving a thorough and articulate reply to a skeptic. I find it very convincing when someone is willing to honestly address doubts with the work they are doing.
Re:what advertisers won't do (Score:2)
I am just finishing up a Master's program in Transportation Planning. What surprised me about the program was how often we kept coming back to the study of economics in approaching transportation problems. Understanding how people make decisions is key to *changing* the decisions they make. Without knowing why someone will drive by themselves, even though they know that they'll save money by taking transit or time by carpooling, you cannot hope to increase vehi
Ask my ex-wives (Score:4, Funny)
Retirement... (Score:2, Funny)
No, it's from not having a job! You insensitive clod!
origin of war (Score:5, Insightful)
fMRI (Score:5, Informative)
Perils of an incomplete model (Score:5, Insightful)
The only category of people who consistently play as game theory dictates, offering the minimum possible amount, are those who don't take into account the feelings of the other player. They are autistics.
Note that humans are thus called irrational, when in fact the game theory models is deficient, leaving out all of the factors that normal people use when making human decisions.
maybe they should have used MS marketing droids
:P
Re:Perils of an incomplete model (Score:3, Interesting)
It's economics, not game theory, that assumes human rationality. In 90% of circumstances, that assumption accurately predicts behavior. It's the other 10% when tribal mentalities (including trust, disgust, vengeance, anger, jealousy, etc.) all kick in that the axioms
Re:Perils of an incomplete model (Score:2)
Re:Perils of an incomplete model (Score:2)
Care to back up that claim? I think that if economics predicts human behavior accurately in 10% of circumstances, that is already giving it more credit than it is due.
Re:Perils of an incomplete model (Score:3, Insightful)
That use of the term "irrational" comes from economists, who started using it before it even dawned on them that social and other psychological rewards and concerns may be valuable as well. And many economists haven't figured it out to this day.
Biologists realized the rationality of emotions and their importance for survival much
Re:Perils of an incomplete model (Score:2)
It's like the old joke about the drunk searching for his keys under the streetlight.
Cop comes along, ask what's up, guy says, "Oh, I dropped my keys down the block, and I'm looking for them."
Cop asks, "But if you dropped your keys somewhere else, why are you look
Reporter did not complete the model. (Score:2)
A makes the most money by offering one dollar to B, keeping nine for himself, and B should accept it, because one dollar is better than none.
But fails to mention that B has exactly the same power and motive as A does. When you understand this, you understand why people tend to walk away with $5 each. There is nothing irrational about it.
Only a lack of reasoning can make the situation go any other way. People in the room might no
Re:Perils of an incomplete model (Score:2)
only because the other factors which enter into the equation are not always sensible. But Human logic is not merely based on simple game theory factors.
Re:Perils of an incomplete model (Score:2)
Re:Perils of an incomplete model (Score:2)
Some philosophical systems divide the sprectrum of life into a variety of areas for convenience of pigeon holing stuff. You start analysing the interplay of these cross factors at various strengths, and even with this simplification [tinyurl.com] the permutations become daunting.
(Link slightly tongue in cheek)
Cheaper version of this research (Score:5, Funny)
How many people here enjoy Hustler or Playboy?
ok, now how many enjoy "Big juice box weekly"?
What if they added more juice?
even more?
Case closed.
Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
Or people who don't want to look at pics of skin. (Score:2)
There is, in short, no fucking point. It's a waste of my time.
So yeah, if I'm going to read a magazine, it's going to be one that's focused on something of use to me, like technology. Something I can read and put down without feeling ir
Hey smart guy (Score:5, Insightful)
Yet another beautiful experiment runs headlong into the brutal facts.
Re:Cheaper version of this research (Score:3, Insightful)
The point is that human beings can consciously choose to restrain their sexual impulses which makes humans unique in the animal kingdom. And which also makes this study pretty much irrelevant. You may be able to find ways to exploit people who have totally given in to their sexual desires,
Re:Cheaper version of this research (Score:2)
Everyone has their price.
Re:Cheaper version of this research (Score:2)
But for every prude we have a goatse.
Re:Cheaper version of this research (Score:2, Insightful)
The brain is involved, irrespect
Re:Cheaper version of this research (Score:2)
'there is no quantity of juice sufficient' (Score:5, Interesting)
What to do with this info! (Score:5, Funny)
Trust? (Score:5, Insightful)
No, it would be used to get people to "trust" a corp. or Government, so that they buy more shit or follow mindlessly the politicians. Because, only the corps or gov'ts would have the money to afford such a procedure.
Re:Trust? (Score:3, Insightful)
You sure don't seem to have a lot of trust in the system...
But actually, increasing the level of trust between actors (using the economic terminology here) would solve a lot of prisoner's dilemma type issues. A lot of our dysfunctional systems are that way simply because people do not tr
I'm doing just fine... (Score:3, Funny)
trying to figure out what the EU is thinking.... (Score:2, Informative)
Consciousness Theory (Score:5, Interesting)
In this book he uses multi-dimensional scaling analysis of fMRI scans to predict past and future states of the same brain, as well as doing the same thing with artificial networks.
It then uses the evidence from this research to propose what (to me, at least) is the first really solid explanation for what consciousness may actually "be".
The book is written in 2 parts... the first one is a detective novel where the main character is a Phenomenologist and in the process of solving a murder finds a theory of consciousness. The 2nd part of the book is a factual appendix describing the work.
Awesome stuff, and I highly recommend it to anyone interested in neural nets and AI.
love-hate relationship of Science and Media (Score:5, Interesting)
I've actually started a blog devoted to megnetoic resonance imaging (http://refscan.blogspot.com/ [blogspot.com] and would like to invite anyone else interested in MRI to visit and comment. Our patron Saint is Magneto
Now thats what I call a magnet (Score:4, Informative)
Should be interesting to see what its capable of, and if anyone is willing to go inside (considering the strength)!
Nothing to see here... (Score:5, Informative)
"the Platonic metaphor of the mind as a charioteer driving twin horses of reason and emotion is on the right track--except that cognition is a smart pony, and emotion a big elephant."
The only thing is, this is basically what the Platonic metaphor says- reason is a weak little horse that doesn't do much of anything, and passion is a wild, kicking, biting stallion that moves the whole thing wherever it wants. The pony/elephant distinction doesn't add anything to the metaphor. Don't get me wrong- the technology is neat and all, and the article might have been worth it for news on technology. But 'humans are irrational'? Is that really news to anyone?
I'm Not As Much Of A Man As A Monkey (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't offer juice, offer a chance for a First Post modded up to +5, Insightful. Trust me, I have to beat the women off with a stick to get to my keyboard in time. Slashdot is my juice and I'm swimming in an ocean of it, baby.
And in the end, the reporter was an ass (Score:3)
"I reasoned that a man would have been just as competitive as I am, and guessed that I was going to betray him on the ninth round--so he would have kept all $30 to himself on the eighth round. At least, most of the ones I know would have, although maybe a sample consisting mostly of journalists isn't entirely representative."
These tests would be an excellent way to see the norms inside each profession. This sort of attitude is the same one routinely lambasted by the press, but in the context of business people. If the CEO of a company had said that he'd be a heartless capitalist. But it turns out that he's not heartless, the reporter is just jealous.
How about that, folks?
Re:And in the end, the reporter was an ass (Score:2)
These tests would be an excellent way to see the norms inside each profession.
And, in fact, in one article I read about game theory experiments, they pointed out that none of the sub
Well, That Sure Is A Lot Of Juice (Score:2, Funny)
Jonathan Edwards (Score:5, Interesting)
Jonathan Edwards said that Free Will consists of the mind choosing that which it finds most pleasing or agreeable based on what it knows at that moment. I think considerations like this drove Soren Kierkegaard mad choosing to make himself miserable because it pleased him to exercize his will so.
It would be interesting to know what this continent's most thoughtful Calvinist would think about these experiments. I think he'd be pleased, but he might differ on the interpretations of the findings.
Re:Jonathan Edwards (Score:2)
Research vs. Common Sense (Score:3, Insightful)
Y'know, the one thing that I could never understand about research of this type (trying to figure out what a consumer/person wants) is that the same people performing the research are consumers themselves. If they all just sat down and discussed their buying wants and habits, they'd have a huge body of work to publish from. I guess this is just further proof of my belief that man will always look to the outside to try to understand himself.
Shocking news (Score:2)
Depends on the kind of juice [imdb.com].
social economics (Score:3, Funny)
Because they're worth it.