Malcontent’s gambit

Listen to Alan Litchfield interview me for his superb podcast, The Malcontent’s Gambit, as we talk about beauty, neuroscience, and my first book.

The Age of Truthiness

There has been an interesting convergence recently of two worlds that rarely intersect: political journalism and classroom pedagogy. In the first category, New York Times public editor Arthur Brisbane asked on his blog a few weeks ago whether it ought to be journalists’ responsibility to identify what they suspect to be outright lies voiced by political figures–whether they should be, in his words, "truth vigilantes." In the latter category, my colleague Peter Boghossian has asked whether it ought to be a teacher’s responsibility to correct fallacious, i.e. faith-based, reasoning voiced by students.

The fascinating part is that both Brisbane’s and Boghossian’s contributions have generated hubbub, but largely in opposite directions. Hordes of commentators pounced on Brisbane as being doltish for wondering, even for a nanosecond, whether perhaps, possibly, journalists should report the objective truth. For example, Clay Shirky at The Guardian:

[Brisbane] is evidently so steeped in newsroom culture that he does not understand – literally, does not understand, as we know from his subsequent clarifications – that this is not a hard question at all, considered from the readers’ perspective. Readers do not care about the epistemological differences between lies and weasel words; we want newspapers to limit the ability of politicians to make dubious assertions without penalty. Judging from the reactions to his post, most of us never understood that this wasn’t the newspapers’ self-conceived mission in the first place.

In Boghossian’s case, although many students have rushed to his defense, many teachers, especially those self-identified as secular liberals, have attacked. One common opinion in that latter camp is that a professor’s responsibility is to preserve epistemological neutrality, in part because there is a power gap and teachers need to take pains to avoid oppressing their students. Also, on the opposition view, a teacher’s coming out on just one side of the “how do we know what we know” question contravenes widespread expectations, and indeed institutional mandates, of tolerance of diverse religious views. In that case, it seems that educators must betray absolutely no favor when it comes to different "ways of knowing"–something James Fallows of The Atlantic identified, in reference to Brisbane, as the false equivalence problem.

I find very interesting the parallels and anti-parallels between these situations: reader-journalist, on the one hand, student-teacher on the other. What role for the messenger? With respect to truth-telling, journalistic ambivalence is widely seen as an atavism: the raison-d’etre of the messenger is to guide readers to the best available understanding of reality. When it comes to a teacher’s role in the classroom, however, it would appear that no such consensus has been reached.

Film award

Science is a vaccine took the Grand Prize for Best Short Film at the Portland Humanist Film Festival yesterday. Huzzah!

Harris’s publishing challenge

Sam Harris has a blog post today outlining very lucidly the problems facing writers and publishers in the online age. He solicits ideas for a fix. Here’s one based on equal parts intuition and experience.

Like Harris, I probably wouldn’t pay much (or anything) for a book if I knew I could get, for free, a shorter essay or TED talk that contained most of the same information. As a matter of fact I still haven’t bought “The Moral Landscape,” because I saw the book talk in real life and feel like I got the idea. The talk was free, but here’s the thing: I might have been willing to pay.

Now: Would I pay anything to attend a live ONLINE lecture? You know, I just might. Especially if the video stream were accessorized with live, and I hope at least somewhat interesting tweets from other audience members, if I could submit questions for possible address by the speaker, if the video quality and presentation were good. Add some “PopUp Video” style annotations, perhaps pre-scripted for accuracy and convenience, and there might just be enough value added there to make it worth paying for.

Any takers?

Gov. Christie response

Last week, New Jersey governor Chris Christie addressed questions from the press about his recent appointment of Sohail Mohammed to the state bench. Mr. Mohammed is a Muslim, and apparently there has been some popular criticism of the appointment decision:

Had I been in Christie’s place, I might have said something like this:

“Yes. It’s absolutely true that Mr. Mohammed’s intellect and judgment are called into serious question by virtue of the fact that he is a Muslim. Absolutely, we should be worried. The same is true for any other judge who is a Christian, a Jew, a Hindu, a Buddhist, or any other religion. The cognitive abilities of all religious people are seriously compromised by their commitments to dogmatic faith. Unfortunately, the state of New Jersey is not lucky enough to have a large enough number of atheists to staff all the jobs where an ability to reason is necessary. So we’ll have to take what we can get. What I can tell you, after knowing Mr. Mohammed personally for nine years, is that he is no more compromised by his religion than any run-of-the-mill Protestant or Catholic. I’m sure he’ll do as good a job as anyone else we’re likely to be able to find.”