quinta-feira, 10 de dezembro de 2015

Next Session - 17th December

In next week's session, instead of a text, we will use one of the videos provided by Luís Moniz Pereira a few weeks ago to start the conversation. The objective is that the group as a whole discusses the subject, preparing his or her own input beforehand. Everyone is welcome to mention any relevant articles or books, and to establish links to other fields.

Continuing the family thread of the previous session, I propose we discuss the video "Assuntos de Família". You can access it here: (use the password saraielt). Please watch it before the session.


To anyone interested in having a look at the other videos Luís provided, you can see them here (please use the same password).



Luís also kindly shared the link for his talk "Counterfactuals, Logic Programming and Agent Morality", here:

L. M. PereiraCounterfactuals, Logic Programming and Agent Morality, Invited talk, School of Computing University of Teesside, Middlesbrough, 2 December 2015.  Slides   Talk Audio (.mp3)   Talk Audio (.dss)

See you there! (room 1.05, 11am)

terça-feira, 1 de dezembro de 2015

Next Session - December 17th

The next and last session of 2015 will happen on December 17th, Thursday, at 11 am, room 1.05. 

Texts will be circulated in advance.

See you there!

There will be no session this Thursday (3rd)

Audio File - Session 11

You can hear the audio for session 11 here

sexta-feira, 13 de novembro de 2015

Next Session - November 19, 2015

For the next session, Sara Silva proposes a discussion on the interrelations between literature and science.

 





The first part of the meeting will explore the intersections between Charles Darwin’s theory of sexual selection and Edward Bulwer Lytton’s satirical depiction of gender in his utopian novel The Coming Race (1871), disclosing the Victorian fascination with theories of evolution whilst exposing nineteenth-century widespread stereotypes regarding gender. Text here










The second part invites a reflection on sibling rivalry from an evolutionary psychology perspective by analysing a variant of the folktale type ATU 315 - The Faithless Sister, entitled "Clever Daniel". Texts hereherehere and here.

Salmon, C. A. & Hehman, J. (2015).  Sibling conflict:  The role of relatedness, sex, and sources of conflict.  Evolutionary Psychological Sciences, 1, 123-129.

Salmon, C. A., & Hehman, J. A.  (2014).  The evolutionary psychology of sibling conflict and siblicide.  In T. K. Shackelford & R. D. Hansen (Eds.),  The Evolution of Violence (pp. 137-157).  New York:  Springer.

Salmon, C. A. & Shackelford, T. K.  (2011).  Towards an evolutionary psychology of the family.  In C. A. Salmon & T. K. Shackelford (Eds.),  The Oxford Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology.  Oxford University Press.

Until Thursday! 

(11 am, room 1.05 ID Building)

quarta-feira, 11 de novembro de 2015

Audio File - Session 10

You can now hear the audio file for session 10, led by Ludwig Krippahl, here:


EvoPsy


Enjoy!


(The videos mentioned in the meeting will be made available soon. The texts for the next session (Thursday 19) will be announced until Friday 13. Check soon for updates!)



domingo, 1 de novembro de 2015

Next Session - November 5, 2015


And...we're back!!!

From now on, sessions will take place on Thursdays at 11 am. 

The next one will be led by Ludwig Krippahl, professor at the Department of Computer Science at the Faculty of Science and Technology of the New University of Lisbon, and member of CENTRIAthe research Centre for Artificial Intelligence, who proposes a discussion on the "merits and demerits" of Evolutionary Psychology. 

Evolutionary Psychology: a good framework?

Evolutionary Psychology is an approach to understanding human behaviour on the assumption that the mechanisms responsible for our cognition and behaviour are mainly the result of evolution through natural selection. If this is so, then we should find common features of human behaviour and psychology that match what would have been selected for during our evolution (our “environment of evolutionary adaptedness”, a term coined by John Bolby in 1969). This framework has been used to propose evolutionary explanations in controversial topics such as rape, intersexual violence and mate choice. For example, the proposal by Thornhill and Palmer that rape and sexual coercion are mate choice strategies that can increase evolutionary fitness in some cases (1) led to criticisms that evolutionary psychology was trying to justify rape (2).

Other, better informed, criticisms focus the assumption that our behaviour is directly linked to specialized modules evolved to elicit some behaviour patterns instead of resulting from more general processes that allow us to learn behaviours from social interaction. However, this may not be an actual problem for evolutionary psychology but just a matter of distinguishing between more plastic aspects of our behaviour from more fundamental tendencies that result from evolutionary pressures.

I propose a brief discussion on the merits and demerits of evolutionary psychology based on four papers. The first is David Buss' 1995 paper introducing evolutionary psychology (3); the second is a criticism of evolutionary psychology by David Buller (4); and the third and fourth are research papers on sex differences in aggression, presenting both experimental results and evolutionary explanations (5,6).


1- Thornhill, Randy, and Craig T. Palmer. A natural history of rape: Biological bases of sexual coercion. MIT press, 2001.
2- «Thornhill and Palmer were careful not to take their analysis as any kind of moral mandate for rape; it was, rather, an evolutionary explanation of why men rape. They insist that their interest is in helping rather than harming women. Nonetheless some critics understood their analysis to justify rape, and, at least, to give some comfort to rapists» .Richardson, Robert C. Evolutionary psychology as maladapted psychology. Cambridge, MA: MIT press, 2007.
3- Buss, David M. "Evolutionary psychology: A new paradigm for psychological science." Psychological inquiry 6.1 (1995): 1-30.
4- Buller, David, “Evolutionary Psychology: A Critique”, in M. Nani and M.Marraffa (eds.), A Field Guide to the Philosophy of Mind, (http://host.uniroma3.it/progetti/kant/field/ep.htm), 2000.
5- Archer, John. "Does sexual selection explain human sex differences in aggression?." Behavioral and Brain Sciences 32.3-4 (2009): 249-266.
6- Vaillancourt, Tracy, and Aanchal Sharma. "Intolerance of sexy peers: Intrasexual competition among women." Aggressive behavior 37.6 (2011): 569-577.


The four texts can be found here



See you on Thursday at 11 am! (The room will be confirmed shortly).

domingo, 21 de junho de 2015



And so will we! 


Check back in September for updates.


In the meantime, have a great summer!