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The Dissenter
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Dr. Nick Chater is Professor of Behavioural Science at Warwick Business School. He works on rationality and language using a range of theoretical and experimental approaches. He has over 200 publications, has won four national awards for psychological research, and has served as Associate Editor for the journals Cognitive Science, Psychological Review, and Psychological Science. He was elected a Fellow of the Cognitive Science Society in 2010 and a Fellow of the British Academy in 2012. Dr. Chater is co-founder of the research consultancy Decision Technology, and is on the advisory board of the Cabinet Office's Behavioural Insight Team (BIT). He’s also the author of “The Mind is Flat: The Illusion of Mental Depth and The Improvised Mind”.
In this episode, the conversation revolves around the main topics of Dr. Chater’s book, The Mind is Flat. We talk about the many illusions that compose our minds, from the way we interpret other people’s behavior and our own, to the attribution of desires, motivations and goals to it. We also discuss how our cognition works, and how our perceptual systems process information. Other topics include the lack of correspondence between our representations and the things outside in the world; how we interpret emotions; the issue about preferences and personality; why we still need our mental illusions to function properly; and if AI systems can also acquire them, namely emotions and consciousness.
Time Links:
01:06 The basic premise of “The Mind is Flat”
05:33 We are like fictional characters
09:59 The problem with stories and narratives
13:58 The illusions our minds create (about motives, desires, goals, etc.)
17:44 The distinction between the conscious mind and brain activity
22:34 Does dualism make sense?
27:11 Is modularity of mind a useful approach?
31:21 How our perceptual systems work
41:49 How we represent things in our minds
44:57 The Kuleshov effect, and the interpretation of emotions
52:05 About preferences and personality
55:42 Why do we need our mental illusions?
59:10 The importance of our imagination
1:01:31 Can AI systems produce the same illusions (emotions, consciousness)?
1:04:53 Follow Dr. Chater’s work!
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Follow Dr. Chater’s work:
Faculty page: tinyurl.com/y8...
The Mind is Flat: tinyurl.com/yb...
Twitter handle: @NickJChater
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A HUGE THANK YOU TO MY PATRONS: KARIN LIETZCKE, ANN BLANCHETTE, BRENDON J. BREWER, JUNOS, SCIMED, PER HELGE HAAKSTD LARSEN, LAU GUERREIRO, RUI BELEZA, MIGUEL ESTRADA, ANTÓNIO CUNHA, CHANTEL GELINAS, JIM FRANK, AND JERRY MULLER!
I also leave you with the link to a recent montage video I did with the interviews I have released until the end of June 2018:
• MY CHANNEL - THE DISSE...
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3 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 1   
@WorthlessWinner
@WorthlessWinner 5 лет назад
8:00 spoiler warning lol. 13:00 the way some pan-adaptationists treat drift reminds me of this I would like to comment on what i thought about this video and why i think that way, but I'd just be constructing a narrative if i did that :P Still think we wouldn't have evolved the idea of beliefs and desires if it wasn't at some level helping us to predict behavior, even if we're only as good at predicting ourselves as we are at predicting strangers, even if our 'beliefs' are embedded in memories of concrete situations.
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