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X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/research-blog
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Connecting Research
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210427T163000
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UID:21861-1619541000-1619544600@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Online Children's Spring Lecture
DESCRIPTION:What is it like to be a climate scientist in Antarctica? Join polar scientist Dr Ella Gilbert in our Online Children’s Spring Lecture as she talks about her personal experiences of working in the coldest\, driest\, remotest continent on our planet. How do you set out to better understand climate change in one of the wildest and most unexplored places on Earth? Expect to hear the answer as Ella reveals the science of the sky using aeroplanes\, weather balloons\, clouds and much more!
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/research-blog/event/online-childrens-spring-lecture/
LOCATION:Microsoft Teams
ORGANIZER;CN="Events%20Team":MAILTO:events@​reading.ac.uk
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/London:20210427T170000
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LAST-MODIFIED:20210325T121138Z
UID:21794-1619542800-1619548200@research.reading.ac.uk
SUMMARY:Folk psychology\, normative cognition\, and the wide distribution of norms (RCCR Summer Seminar Series)
DESCRIPTION:Folk psychology\, normative cognition\, and the wide distribution of norms\, Kristin Andrews\nKristin Andrews is York Research Chair in Animal Minds and Professor of Philosophy at York University (Toronto)\, where she also helps coordinate the Cognitive Science program and the Greater Toronto Area Animal Cognition Discussion Group. Her research explores the evolution of morality\, the pluralistic and normative nature of human folk psychology\, animal cognition\, and normativity in human and nonhuman animals. \nThis seminar is part of The Reading Centre for Cognition Research’s 2021 Summer Seminar Series: Understanding ourselves and others: reasoning and rationality \nThe aim of this seminar series is to explore these newer approaches to reasoning and rationality\, looking at cutting edge work in the area and asking what these moves might tell us about how we go about understanding the actions of others and ourselves. \nA standard picture of humans as generally ordered and orderly thinkers has come under significant pressure in recent years\, in particular from the work of Kahneman and others who have stressed our susceptibility to a range of cognitive traps (such as framing or bias). Although the claim commonly associated with this school of thought – that we are ‘predictably irrational’\, in Ariely’s phrase – has been rejected by many\, even those who seek to defend our status as good reasoners often suggest a more complex and potentially messy set of processes\, mechanisms and features than those standardly appealed to in classic folk psychological approaches. \nAll welcome! \nIf you have any questions\, please email Emma Borg e.g.n.borg@reading.ac.uk \nMicrosoft Teams meeting – join here \nresearch.reading.ac.uk/cognition-research/
URL:https://research.reading.ac.uk/research-blog/event/folk-psychology-normative-cognition-and-the-wide-distribution-of-norms-rccr-summer-seminar-series/
LOCATION:Microsoft Teams
CATEGORIES:Heritage & Creativity
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