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Cordelia Fine: Let Toys Be Toys: The Science and Ethics of Gendered Toy Marketing
Cordelia Fine: Let Toys Be Toys: The Science and Ethics of Gendered Toy Marketing
ABSTRACT The gendered marketing of toys is under considerable scrutiny, with consumer-led campaigns against it invariably giving rise to vigorous debates. Critics argue that gendered toy marketing is socially and developmentally harmful; defenders see it as reflecting and responding to boys’ and girls’ fundamentally different interests. In this talk, based on work co-authored with Charles […]
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Cordelia Fine: The myth of the Lehman Sisters? Sex, testosterone, and financial risk-taking
Cordelia Fine: The myth of the Lehman Sisters? Sex, testosterone, and financial risk-taking
ABSTRACT There is growing scientific interest in the role of testosterone in financial risk-taking – a topic of considerable public interest too, with suggestions that there is “too much testosterone on Wall Street”. Both research and debate is often grounded in an implicit model in which testosterone is presumed to be the proximal mechanism underlying […]
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Carl Craver: Memory, Time and Agency
Carl Craver: Memory, Time and Agency
ABSTRACT Individuals with episodic amnesia and deficits in episodic future projection are frequently described as trapped in an eternal present or bound to stimuli in the here and now. I argue that individuals with medial temporal lobe damage and deficits in these capacities nonetheless retain much of their orientation in time and much of their […]
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Carl Craver: Ontic Basis of Network Explanation
Carl Craver: Ontic Basis of Network Explanation
ABSTRACT Network models are increasingly used across the sciences to describe complex relations among a number of individual actors. Philosophers enamored of this modeling approach claim to find in it evidence for non-causal, distinctively mathematical, or non-decompositional explanations. Using examples from contemporary resting state fMRI research, I show that this philosophical work in general misunderstands […]