IDEAS

Do We Listen/See/Read Differently When The Name Of The Artist Is Changed?

Why should a name matter so much? Psychologists have a term that might help explain what’s happening here: prestige bias. Developed by the cultural evolution theorists Joseph Henrich and Francisco J Gil-White, the concept describes the human tendency to preferentially attend to, learn from, and value the outputs of high-status individuals. - Psyche

When Innovation Scrambled Everything At The Turn Of The 20th Century

At the time, Americans did not understand that they were living through the largest energy transition in human history. Instead, they perceived a series of disconnected events. Unable to discern or conceptualize an underlying cause, they often declared the transformations around them were “kaleidoscopic.”  - MIT Press

Research: Learning From Short-Form Video Doesn’t Stay With You

Using social media applications to digest bite-sized educational content actually reduces a person’s ability to remember the information, according to new research. - Psypost

AI Labs Are Recruiting Philosophers

A.I. labs, and the related nonprofits around them, have been recruiting workers as versed in Consequentialism and John Stuart Mill as in neural networks and reinforcement learning. - The New York Times

The End Of A Cultural Era: “Hockey Night In Canada” Is No More

Some called for defunding the national public broadcaster and others bemoaned the failures of successive federal governments to properly invest in the CBC. Many other Canadians, however, mourned the loss while simultaneously breathing a sigh of relief. - The Conversation

The Knowing Beyond Knowledge

“What is the sense that something escapes the conditions of knowledge? It is, I think, the sense, or fact, that our primary relation to the world is not one of knowing it.” - The Point

What AI Is Doing To Art

Art forms that once expressed creators’ personal visions are reduced to fulfilling the audience’s cravings. In theory, I understand why some people say AI is just another creative tool, like the camera or the keyboard. In practice, that tool is filling our world with the ugly, frictionless, disposable content we’ve quickly come to call “slop.” - The Atlantic

What, Truly, Does The Statue Of Liberty Stand For?

Many, many artists have thoughts. - Hyperallergic

After Some Grim Times, The US Is Back In Love With Independent Cinemas

You can thank the young ones: there’s “a gen Z-led wave fueling a fresh resurgence of indie movie houses.” - The Guardian (UK)

If You Need Some Incredible Photographs, Not Only Of Space, NASA Probably Has Them

But how to search them up? Google won’t help as much (if at all) anymore, but there are ways. - Wired

The Two Versions Of Who We Really Are

Jean-Paul Sartre, for instance, insists that for humans ‘existence precedes essence’. We do not have an essence until we give ourselves an essence. In short, ‘man first exists: he materialises in the world, encounters himself, and only afterward defines himself.’ I define myself. - Psyche

The Wrong Way To Criticize The Humanities

This poorly argued case that it may be time to restrain the principles of academic freedom and faculty autonomy is not helping the situation. - Boston Review

Do We Have A Facts Problem Or An Interpretation-Of-Facts Problem?

Citizens can agree on verifiable facts and still inhabit different worlds, because facts do not interpret themselves. To see why, we need to look beyond narrow factual disagreements to the competing systems of interpretation through which people select, categorize, frame, connect, explain, and narrate facts. - Persuasion

Why It’s So Difficult To Calculate Benefits And Costs Of Technology Innovation

When a tool reliably performs a cognitive operation, the internal capacity for that operation tends to weaken with disuse. People who know they can look up something on Google develop weaker memory for the information itself, and habitual GPS users show measurable decline in hippocampal-dependent spatial navigation. - Aeon

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