Episodes

  • 16 | Can we increase democratic empowerment through decentralization?
    Aug 22 2024

    How can we balance knowledge transfer and democratic empowerment? We sit down with Kristina Vasić and Ákos Szegőfi in a wide ranging discussion about the importance of access to information in a democracy, the need for institutions for knowledge transfer, and how decentralization can help deconstruct entrenched power structures. The conversation spans types of dialogue, the usefulness of rhetoric, whether any argument can be free of bias, and a bunch of other related topics on power, information, and governance.

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    1 hr and 31 mins
  • 15 | On Nostalgia: Memory, personal histories, and decolonizing narratives
    Aug 1 2024

    What is the function of nostalgia? We sit down with Manu Sharma and talk about what makes a memory, what functions thinking about the past serves, and the impact of broader societal narratives on our senses of self. We discuss the construction of personal histories, their relationships to cultural histories, and also how historical narratives can be constructed by political movements to embolden and dehumanize groups of people.

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    1 hr and 47 mins
  • 14 | Elements of thought: Carving out reality through conceptual engineering
    Jul 18 2024

    How does the engineering of concepts impact how we think about them? We sit down with Bojin Zhu to discuss what makes a concept, how concepts change over time, and what it means to build a methodology for understanding conceptual change. We chat about the intersection of the value and meaning of concepts with their pragmatic and societal implications. Our conversations spans concepts like liberty (whether it's a useful term), free will (what to make of it), truth (whether it exists), and pain (and how to understand our experience of it).

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    1 hr and 48 mins
  • 13 | On Collaboration: How we work together on convergent goals
    Jun 12 2024

    How is it that human beings achieve collaboration? We sit down with Arianna Curioni and chat about the cognitive science of joint action in its many forms. We talk about human robot interactions, how moving a couch is not the same as boxing, and the difference between a hammer, a neural implant, and a teammate. We also chat a bit about collaboration in society at large and the implications for work on policy.

    Show notes on the website

    Or you can also watch on youtube

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    1 hr and 53 mins
  • 12 | On Lying: Deception through media past and present
    May 29 2024

    What differentiates lying from other examples of communicative intent? We sit down with Akos Szegofi and talk about misinformation, institutional trust, and the cognitive mechanisms underlying information processing. We chat about skepticism, how the media has changed over time, and why the intent to deceive is as old as communication itself.

    Show notes on the Monkey Dance website

    You can also watch the podcast on Youtube

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    1 hr and 36 mins
  • 11 | On Governance: What does Democracy get us?
    May 15 2024

    Does Democracy have intrinsic value or is it only as good as what it helps us achieve? We sit down with Kristina Vasic and chat about what Democracy is, whether it is for individual autonomy or collective autonomy, and the individual's place in systems of power. We chat about disenfranchisement, inequality, and what kids of political structures are best suited to challenge the status quo.

    Show notes on the Monkey Dance website!

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    1 hr and 42 mins
  • 10 | On Corruption: Building tools to identify and track networks
    Apr 25 2024

    How can we build better tools to identify and predict large scale corruption? We sit with Irene Tello Arista and chat about everything from what corruption is to the systemic pressures that bring it about, and discuss how grand corruption and petty corruption are different not only in scale but in methods. We cover a bit of Irene's background in Mexico starting an NGO to uncover corruption networks, human behavior more generally, and how corruption looks different in different places.

    Full show notes on the website

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    1 hr and 1 min
  • 9 | How does art impact cognition?
    Apr 9 2024

    Should we consider art beyond its utility? We sit down with Emily Kay Williamson to chat about what aesthetics can tell us about art's role in society and its impact on cognition. We talk about whether there is a difference between art and everyday objects, whether art has any boundaries, what there is to learn from art, and where things like journalism fall in discussions about art.

    Full show notes here

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    1 hr and 32 mins