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  1. 7 de sept. de 2011 · It is, in our patois, “logically rude,” to ask someone else to painstakingly refute points you don’t really care about yourself. Imagine someone went to all the trouble to look up references and demonstrate to you that those traits were 90% hereditary, and then you turned around and said that you didn’t care.

  2. Confira avaliações e notas de clientes para Brain, Belief, and Politics (Cato Unbound Book 92011) (English Edition) na Amazon.com.br. Leia avaliações reais e imparciais de nossos usuários sobre os produtos.

  3. 19 de sept. de 2011 · As I noted in my book, let’s begin by reversing the process and characterizing Democrats and liberals as suffering from a host of equally malevolent mental states: a lack of moral compass that leads to an inability to make clear ethical choices, an inordinate lack of certainty about social issues, a pathological fear of clarity that leads to indecisiveness, a naïve belief that all people ...

  4. Compre Brain, Belief, and Politics (Cato Unbound Book 92011) (English Edition) de Shermer, Michael, Carter, Joe, Yudkowsky, Eliezer, Bailey, Ronald, Kuznicki, Jason ...

  5. www.cato-unbound.org › contributors › michael-shermerMichael Shermer | Cato Unbound

    Shermer’s latest book is The Believing Brain: From Ghosts and Gods to Politics and Conspiracies—How We Construct Beliefs and Reinforce Them as Truths. His previous book was The Mind of the Market , on evolutionary economics.

  6. www.cato-unbound.org › contributors › eliezer-yudkowskyEliezer Yudkowsky | Cato Unbound

    Eliezer Yudkowsky is a research fellow at the Singularity Institute, where he researches Friendly AI and recursive self-improvement. In 2001, he published Creating Friendly AI: The Analysis and Design of Benevolent Goal Architectures. He is the author of the papers “Cognitive Biases Potentially Affecting Judgment of Global Risks” and “AI ...