Blog Archives

Personality: The Body in Society

I hate the nature vs. nurture debate. It's a seductive but very dangerous formulation. As a rule of thumb, whenever a discussion of personality gets framed in terms of 'nature' and 'nurture', everyone loses 15 IQ points up front. Your

Ethology and Personal Identity

The actor has a constant problem of personal identity. — Cyril Cusack Ethology is the study of animal behavior, and humans, of course, are 'just' a special sort of animal. We are a social and political species — competitive and

The Embodied Worldview

Last week at Ribbonfarm I argued that we don't take the human body seriously enough. Today I'm going to illustrate what that means with lots of examples (and a few pictures). But first it's important to understand what an embodied worldview

Honesty and the Human Body

Originally posted at Ribbonfarm. In economics and biology, honesty is understood in terms of signals. Signals are anything used to communicate, to convey information. A price is a signal of value. Conspicuous consumption is a signal of wealth. A growl

Notes on an Embodied Worldview

For my upcoming post at Ribbonfarm, I've been thinking about what an "embodied worldview" looks like. By this I mean: an understanding of the world that begins with the human body, one in which we see ourselves as embodied creatures, situated in

Language for the Body

on poetry, metaphor, and trance states If you've never seen poetry on a stage — poetry performed — you should. It's immersive and enthralling, a feast for all the senses. In the hands, face, voice, and body of a skilled poet, a

Music in Human Evolution

I just finished the strangest, most disconcerting little book. It's called Why Do People Sing?: Music in Human Evolution by Joseph Jordania. If the title hasn't already piqued your interest, its thesis surely will. The thesis is wild, bold, and

The Ecology of Personal Politics

We fancy ourselves reasonable creatures. And it's true — our lives are suffused, if not with Reason, then at least with reasons. The world we inhabit demands we justify ourselves and we dutifully oblige, emitting all sorts of "because" clauses

Stories, Epilogue

After posting last week's piece on stories, I read a NYTimes profile on George Saunders, author of experimental short fiction and a so-called "writer's writer." It's a great read and a great introduction to Saunders' literary worldview. The profile touches

Stories, Take Two

A few weeks ago I wrote about Stories vs. Theories as two different ways of making sense of the world. In a nutshell: Stories help us reason about our shared experiences and what it means to be human. Theories help