排序方式: 共有18条查询结果,搜索用时 15 毫秒
1.
The emergence and development of convergent technologies for the purpose of improving human performance, including nanotechnology,
biotechnology, information sciences, and cognitive science (NBICs), open up new horizons in the debates and moral arguments
that must be engaged by philosophers who hope to take seriously the question of the ethical and social acceptability of these
technologies. This article advances an analysis of the factors that contribute to confusion and discord on the topic, in order
to help in understanding why arguments that form a part of the debate between transhumanism and humanism result in a philosophical
and ethical impasse: 1. The lack of clarity that emerges from the fact that any given argument deployed (arguments based on
nature and human nature, dignity, the good life) can serve as the basis for both the positive and the negative evaluation
of NBICs. 2. The impossibility of providing these arguments with foundations that will enable others to deem them acceptable.
3. The difficulty of applying these same arguments to a specific situation. 4. The ineffectiveness of moral argument in a
democratic society. The present effort at communication about the difficulties of the argumentation process is intended as
a necessary first step towards developing an interdisciplinary response to those difficulties. 相似文献
2.
Michael Inzlicht Jennifer N. Gutsell Lisa Legault 《Journal of experimental social psychology》2012,48(1):361-365
Humans are empathic animals. We automatically match other people's motor responses, allowing us to get “under the skin” of other people. Although this perception–action-coupling—a form of motor resonance—occurs spontaneously, this happens less readily with the outgroup (vs. the ingroup) and for those high (vs. low) in prejudice. Thus, prejudice diminishes our tendency to resonate with the outgroup. Here we suggest that the reverse is also possible—that resonating with the actions of an outgroup member can reduce prejudice. We predict, in other words, that explicitly mimicking the outgroup can reduce prejudice. Participants watched a 140-second video depicting actors repeatedly reaching for and drinking from a glass of water. They passively watched a video with Black actors; watched the video and mimicked the Black actors; or watched and mimicked a video with actors from their ingroup. Participants then completed the Affect Misattribution Procedure (Payne, Cheng, Govorun, & Stewart, 2005), a measure of implicit anti-Black prejudice, and an explicit symbolic racism measure. Results indicate that the outgroup-mimicry group had similar implicit preference for Blacks and Whites, unlike the other two groups, which preferred Whites over Blacks. The outgroup-mimicry group also reported less explicit racism towards Blacks than the ingroup-mimicry group, but no less than the ingroup-observation group. Mimicking specific outgroup members, therefore, reduces implicit, and possibly explicit, bias against the outgroup more generally. 相似文献
3.
Suzanne C. Danhauer Claudine Legault Hanna Bandos Kelley Kidwell Joseph Costantino Leslie Vaughan 《Neuropsychology, development, and cognition. Section B, Aging, neuropsychology and cognition》2013,20(5):532-552
ABSTRACTObjectives: This study examined the relationship between positive and negative affect, depressive symptoms, and cognitive performance. Methods: The sample consisted of 1479 non-demented, postmenopausal women (mean age = 67 years) at increased risk of breast cancer enrolled in the National Surgical Adjuvant Breast and Bowel Project’s Study of Tamoxifen and Raloxifene. At each annual visit, women completed a standardized neuropsychological battery and self-report measures of affect and depression. Data from three visits were used in linear mixed models for repeated measures using likelihood ratio tests. Separate analyses were performed to relate positive/negative affect and depression to each cognitive measure. Results: Higher positive affect was associated with better letter fluency (p = .006) and category fluency (p < .0001). Higher negative affect was associated with worse global cognitive function (p < .0001), verbal memory (CVLT List B; p = .002), and spatial ability (p < .0001). Depressive symptoms were negatively associated with verbal knowledge (p = .004), figural memory (p < .0001), and verbal memory (p’s ≤ .0001). Discussion: Findings are consistent with some prior research demonstrating a link between positive affect and increased verbal fluency and between depressive symptoms and decreased memory. The most novel finding shows that negative affect is related to decreased global cognition and visuospatial ability. Overall, this research in a large, longitudinal sample supports the notion that positive affect is related to increases and negative affect to decreases in performance on distinct cognitive measures. 相似文献
4.
Sixty-four checks were cashed in a field examination of sex role discrimination using a non-sex-role stereotyped (neutral role) task. Experimenter (customer) sex, subject (teller) sex, amount of the check, and bank branch were varied to produce a 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 design. Transaction times were longer for female customers than for male customers, and were longer with male tellers than with female tellers. Results were interpreted as supporting the hypothesis of greater sex role salience in cross-sex, as compared with same-sex dyads. Suggestions are made for further research using neutral-role tasks to better define certain role concepts. 相似文献
5.
6.
Although prejudice-reduction policies and interventions abound, is it possible that some of them result in the precise opposite of their intended effect--an increase in prejudice? We examined this question by exploring the impact of motivation-based prejudice-reduction interventions and assessing whether certain popular practices might in fact increase prejudice. In two experiments, participants received detailed information on, or were primed with, the goal of prejudice reduction; the information and primes either encouraged autonomous motivation to regulate prejudice or emphasized the societal requirement to control prejudice. Ironically, motivating people to reduce prejudice by emphasizing external control produced more explicit and implicit prejudice than did not intervening at all. Conversely, participants in whom autonomous motivation to regulate prejudice was induced displayed less explicit and implicit prejudice compared with no-treatment control participants. We outline strategies for effectively reducing prejudice and discuss the detrimental consequences of enforcing antiprejudice standards. 相似文献
7.
How are we to understand the fact that the philosophical debate over nanotechnologies has been reduced to a clash of seemingly
preprogrammed arguments and counterarguments that paralyzes all rational discussion of the ultimate ethical question of social
acceptability in matters of nanotechnological development? With this issue as its starting point, the study reported on here,
intended to further comprehension of the issues rather than provide a cause-and-effect explanation, seeks to achieve a rational
grasp of what is being said through the appeals made to this or that principle in the range of arguments put forward in publications
on the subject. We present the results of the study’s analyses in two parts. In the first, we lay out the seven categories
of argument that emerged from an analysis of the literature: the arguments based on nature, dignity, the good life, utility,
equity, autonomy, and rights. In the second part, we present the background moral stances that support each category of argument.
Identifying the different categories of argument and the moral stance that underlies each category will enable a better grasp
of the reasons for the multiplicity of the arguments that figure in discussions of the acceptability of nanotechnologies and
will ultimately contribute to overcoming the tendency towards talking past each other that all too often disfigures the exchange.
Clarifying the implications of the moral arguments deployed in the debate over nanotechnologies may make it possible to reduce
the confusion observable in these exchanges and contribute to a better grasp of the reasons for their current unproductiveness. 相似文献
8.
Although plenty of evidence supports the link between intergroup threat and prejudice, few intrapersonal moderators of this association have been investigated. One potentially important moderator is the source of motivation underlying prejudice regulation. In Study 1, we examined whether self-determined prejudice regulation reduces the impact of intergroup threat on various outgroup attitude variables (e.g., modern racism, outgroup affect, etc.). Results suggest that being self-determined in one??s motivation to regulate prejudice buffers the impact of intergroup threat on prejudice, whereas regulating prejudice primarily for non-self-determined reasons serves to exacerbate the threat-prejudice effect. In Study 2, a cross-sectional corroboration of this interaction was obtained using structural equation modeling, revealing that the threat-prejudice link differed significantly across groups of prejudice regulators. The role of self-determination in reducing the harmful effects of intergroup threat is discussed, and implications for prejudice reduction and diversity education are identified. 相似文献
9.
Lisa Legault Kayla Ray Amy Hudgins Marissa Pelosi Will Shannon 《Motivation and emotion》2017,41(1):1-21
We investigate the possibility of two distinct approaches to autonomy satisfaction—one that is contextually “assisted” and one that is individually “asserted”. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses (Pilot Study and Study 1; N = 449) develop and validate the two-factor structure. We then show that asserted and assisted autonomy orientations predict psychological wellbeing through distinct pathways (i.e., highly active/agentic vs. interdependent). In Study 2 (N = 206), we examine the sociodevelopmental antecedents of each type of autonomy satisfaction, revealing that assisted autonomy is associated with having had authoritiative parents, whereas asserted autonomy is associated with having had authoritarian parents. In Study 3 (N = 109) we show that asserted—but not assisted—autonomy predicts the integration of negative life experiences. Finally, in Study 4 (N = 202), we examine the degree to which assisted and asserted autonomy moderate responses to conflict in need-thwarting contexts, showing that assisted autonomy predicts an acquiescent coping style, whereas asserted autonomy predicts an assertive negotiation style. 相似文献
10.