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Participate in our Listener Feedback Survey. 5 minutes for $50. Just email doug@storiesandstrategies.ca This is a Replay from Episode 79 which first published in January 2023.In this age of misinformation and disinformation we can all agree lies and deception are bad right? Aren't they?Philosophers, psychologists, economists – and all those morality experts on social media have always insisted deception harms trust.Four Behavioral Science studies done through the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania show that assertion just isn't true. In fact, there lies we hear, knowing they are lies, that make us trust those liars even more. So what's the truth about lying?Listen For4:02 Pro Social Lies and Trust11:06 Altruistic Lies and Moral Credit14:14 Cultural Differences in Lying18:08 Lying in Politics Guests Maurice Schweitzer, PhD and Emma Levine, PhD: Emma.Levine@chicagobooth.edu Schweitzer@wharton.upenn.edu Link to Emma and Maurice's study Prosocial Lies: When deception breeds trust Apply to be a guest on the podcastConnect with usLinkedIn | X | Instagram | You Tube | Facebook | ThreadsRequest a transcript of this episodeSupport the Show.Support the show
====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1=======================================================================VIRTUOSADevoción Matutina Para Mujeres 2024Narrado por: Sirley DelgadilloDesde: Bucaramanga, Colombia===================|| www.drministries.org ||===================07 DE AGOSTODEL EGOCENTRISMO AL OTROCENTRISMO (PRINCIPIOS 7 A 9)«La respuesta amable calma el enojo» (Proverbios 15: 1).Veamos hoy tres principios bíblicos más para lograr vivir de tal manera que no construyamos muros.7. «En las muchas palabras no falta el pecado; el que es prudente refrena sus labios» (Prov. 10:19, RVC). La Biblia es bastante incisiva en recordarnos la importancia de ser prudentes, porque «la sabiduría habita con la prudencia» (Prov. 8:12). Seamos prudentes. No digamos palabras hirientes, aunque sean verdad. Según un estudio de la Universidad de Chicago, mucha gente hace comentarios hirientes porque consideran que, si son sinceros, no es inmoral hacerlos. Como «la sinceridad es buena y mentir es malo» justifican decir verdades que duelen porque ven la sinceridad como un valor superior; pero después no se dan a la tarea de averiguar cuán profundo fue el daño que sintió la otra persona. El otro, por su parte, sintió esas heridas verbales como razones para alejarse. La directora del estudio, Emma Levine, recomienda: «Antes de decir algo que puede herir, pregúntate si tú querrías que te lo dijeran».* De lo contrario no es sinceridad, es sincericidio (es decir, una sinceridad excesiva y sin límites que resulta hiriente para la persona que recibe el mensaje).**8. «Si tu hermano te hace algo malo, habla con él a solas y hazle reconocer su falta. Si te hace caso, ya has ganado a tu hermano» (Mat. 18: 15). Si no te hace caso y valoras llamar a otra persona, hazlo, pero con el objetivo de lograr la reconciliación. Sé discreta en la resolución de conflictos. Tener buenas relaciones no significa no tener conflictos; significa no llegar a la ruptura por causa de ellos. Como dice Levítico 19: 17: «No abrigues en tu corazón odio contra tu hermano. Reprende a tu prójimo cuando debas reprenderlo»; con discreción, con cariño, intentando no destruir la hermandad en Cristo.9. «Amaos unos a otros; como yo os he amado» (Juan 13: 34, BLP). Este es el mandamiento de Jesús; ¡qué gran pecado sería desobedecerlo! ¿Y qué es amar? En palabras de Tomás de Aquino: «Amar a alguien es desear su bien». Ese amor no siempre es recíproco, pero es la esencia de la religión. «Si no tengo amor, no soy nada» (1 Cor. 13: 2), escribió Pablo, causante de muertes entre las filas de los primeros cristianos antes de su conversión. Ellos respondieron bendiciendo a quien los persiguió (ver Romanos 12: 14), mostrando un amor que viene de lo alto. Fruto de esa experiencia, Pablo pudo orar con conocimiento de causa: «Que el amor sea la raíz y el fundamento de sus vidas» (Efe. 3: 17). Yo oro la misma oración por ti.«Antes de decir algo que puede herir, pregúntate si tú querrías que te lo dijeran». Emma Levine.* «I'm just being honest», Psychology Today, octubre de 2021, p. 6.** Definición de «sincericidio» según la web nuevamentepsicologos.com
In this age of misinformation and disinformation we can all agree lies and deception are bad right? Aren't they?Philosophers, psychologists, economists – and all those morality experts on social media have always insisted deception harms trust.Four Behavioral Science studies done through the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania show that assertion just isn't true. In fact, there are lies we hear, knowing they are lies, that make us trust those liars even more. So what's the truth about lying?Guests Maurice Schweitzer, PhD and Emma Levine, PhD: Emma has a PhD from the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania; a BA (philosophy, politics, and economics) and BS (economics) from the University of Pennsylvania. She is an Associate Professor of Behavioral Science and the Charles E Merrill Faculty Scholar at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business.Emma.Levine@chicagobooth.edu Maurice has a PhD in economics, is the Cecilia Yen Koo Professor of Operations, Information, and Decisions and Management at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the Director of the Wharton Behavioral Lab and has published over 100 articles on trust, negotiations, and emotions. Schweitzer@wharton.upenn.edu Link to Emma and Maurice's study Prosocial Lies: When deception breeds trustLeave us a voice message we can share on the podcast https://www.speakpipe.com/StoriesandStrategiesStories and Strategies WebsiteDo you want to podcast? Book a meeting with Doug Downs to talk about it.Follow us on:LinkedInTwitterInstagramFacebookOur NEW You Tube ChannelSupport the show
Mossad Agents, Israeli Engineers, Revolutionary Guards. The Ayatollah Returns. The Iranian Revolution. This exciting 20th-century historical thriller inspired by real events is the story of a Jewish hero. A group of Israeli engineers are trapped in central Iran when the world about them explodes in chaos. Imagine their plight when they discover the Shah has been deposed and Ayatollah Khomeini has returned from exile. How can they escape with their lives? What should they do? Can our hero Guy Hart rescue the attractive Emma Levine and his colleagues from capture by the Revolutionary Guards? The result is an intense action-packed thriller full of danger, death, and fear with some romance, as well as surprising twists and turns.
In this episode, Brian Curtis, Ph.D. speaks with Emma Levine, Ph.D. Emma is an associate professor of behavioral science and director of the Honesty, Morality, & Ethics Lab at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. They discuss a wide range of topics, including Emma's path to becoming interested in the topic of honesty, some of her early childhood experiences about the tensions that can exist between truth, honesty, trust, and comfort, Emma and Brian's personal experiences about the complexities of honest communication in various medical contexts – including childbirth, death and dying, and the rights of patients to choose not to know certain truths, why intentions are so important to communicate when we're being honest with others, brutal honesty, white lies, the notion of prosocial and altruistic lying, the role of therapeutic lying when caring for patients with dementia, the sneaky concept of paltering, being honest with children, Emma's role in The Honesty Project, and more. Emma's Faculty Website: https://www.chicagobooth.edu/faculty/directory/l/emma-levine Emma's HOPE Lab Website: https://voices.uchicago.edu/hopelab/people/ Twitter: @EmmaELevine Experimental Honesty: https://www.experimentalhonesty.com/ Twitter: @BrianCurtisPhD
This week we talk about Netflix’s SMASH hit Bridgerton and how it depicts destructive entitlement in Poppin’ Culture. In our Academic Deep Dive segment, we discuss a paper “Hiding Success” published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology by Annabelle Roberts and Dr. Emma Levine at the University of Chicago, and Dr. Ovul Sezer, at UNC Chapel Hill. Finally, in Good or Bad Advice, we discuss found on social media. Article: HEREAdvice: here, here, here, here, and hereYouTube: Here
Episode description Student Dr. Emma Levine moderates a COVID-19 case discussion with expert input from Drs. Brian Block, Neeta Thakur and Peter Chin-Hong Dr. Peter Chin-Hong Peter Chin-Hong is Associate Dean for Regional Campuses at UCSF School of Medicine. He is a medical educator who specializes in treating infectious diseases, particularly infections that develop in… Read More »Episode 74: On COVID-19 – A case-based discussion with Drs. Block, Thakur, and Chin-Hong
Episode description Student Dr. Emma Levine & the CPSolvers talk COVID-19 with Dr. Carlos Del Rio Dr. Carlos Del Rio Carlos del Rio, MD is Distinguished Professor of Medicine at Emory University School of Medicine and Professor of Global Health and Epidemiology at the Rollins School of Public Health of Emory University. He is co-Director… Read More »Episode 70 – On COVID-19 w/ Dr. Carlos Del Rio & App Announcement
Episode description Emma Levine presents a clinical unknown to Dr. Paul Sax Download CPSolvers App here Dr. Paul Sax Dr. Paul E. Sax is Clinical Director of the Division of Infectious Diseases and the HIV Program at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH), and Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Sax received his MD… Read More »Episode 54 – Clinical unknown w/ Dr. Paul Sax – Fever and Headache
In the latest programme of the monthly series, Mishal Husain introduces dispatches from journalists and writers reflecting the range of contemporary life in the United Kingdom. Dan Johnson reports direct from the flooded River Don in South Yorkshire where feelings are running high among locals about the response to the latest inundation. As the rain returns after an all-too-brief respite, he reflects on the area's carbon-generating past and the effects of climate change. In Hartlepool, the BBC's Social Affairs Correspondent, Michael Buchanan, hears from a mother and father about their twenty year-long struggle with the corrosive effects on their domestic life and their position in the local community of their sons' misuse of drugs. We visit Walthamstow in north-east London in the company of Emma Levine. She talks to customers and staff of a long-standing local daytime eatery which at night converts into a cocktail bar that attracts an entirely different clientele. Will the two businesses thrive together? BBC Cymru Wales's Garry Owen visits Parc prison in Bridgend to learn about a pioneering project designed to foster the all-important bonds between prisoners and their children. He hears what inmates - and their relatives - think of the programme and how successful it is proving to be. And Stephanie Power, who has a love-hate relationship with the UK's capital city, explains how a recent visit to London brought out the conflicted nature of her view of the metropolis. Producer: Simon Coates
Robert Mugabe has died. How do you sum up such a complex and contradictory figure? Andrew Harding recalls his final encounter with Mr Mugabe and reflects on the perils of living too long. In Germany the far-right populist Alternative für Deutschland is celebrating after doing well in two regional elections. Damien McGuinness has been meeting some of their supporters and says that their electoral success has led to a wider debate about why east Germans have not felt the benefits of unification. Malaria is a constant threat to life in Burkina Faso. A newer threat comes from an Islamist-led insurgency that has forced hundreds of thousands of people to flee their homes. But the cutting-edge research into tackling mosquitoes continues undisturbed, for now, as Jennifer O'Mahony reports. The Romanian national football team is no great shakes at the moment and is unlikely to qualify for the European Championship finals in 2020. But another game, the origins of which are lost in the mists of time, is gaining popularity. Emma Levine has been to watch it being played in the town of Frasin. In Papua New Guinea it’s estimated that 40 per cent of the population lives below the poverty line, despite the country’s enormous mineral wealth. Charlie Walker says there’s one particular mineral that people are interested in.
In the latest programme of the monthly series, Mishal Husain introduces dispatches from journalists and writers around the United Kingdom that reflect the range of contemporary life in the country. Martin Vennard in Saltburn reveals how surfing has improbably helped revive the fortunes of the once-proud Victorian resort on Tees-side; while Travis Elborough taps a surf music beat in Worthing where a 50 year-old musical phenomenon is garnering new fans. Baby boomer Martin Gurdon, recently bereaved in late middle-age, explains how saying his final goodbye to an elderly parent was both something greater longevity had prepared him for and yet - at least initially - still left him disoriented. Emma Levine in Barnsley reports on how a strange football match saw differing contemporary Yorkshire identities on display off the pitch. And Athar Ahmad prepares to go on a solitary spiritual quest in the final days of the Islamic holy month of Ramadan. Producer: Simon Coates
In this episode, we showcase the latest research and patient care initiatives at UCSF and its School of Medicine focused on treating people with chronic pain, including student work in this area. We'll hear from Dr. Mark Schumacher, MD, PhD, Professor and Chief of the Division of Pain Medicine in the Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care, as well as third-year medical student Emma Levine. Music: Sneaker Chase by Podington Bear. Licensed under CC BY-NC 3.0.
The guest for this episode is Emma Levine. In this episode of Newy Tech People, Emma and I sit down and chat about her innovative role at the Village of Useful. We delve into her career, her past studies and her adventures overseas.
Bridget Kendall introduces correspondents' stories. Today, Tim Hartley hears how politics are forgotten amid the colour and friendship of the African Cup of Nations in Gabon. Nick Sturdee has a fantastical tale of intrigue and murder in Turkey - but where does the trail lead? Hywel Griffith, in Sydney, Australia, is with the 90 year old who is keeping the developers at bay. Emma Levine hunts down Albania's elusive rail network; and phoning home may have been difficult during the Kosovo conflict but Andrew Gray remembers fondly the opportunities and advantages of not being connected.
In our second annual Classical Classroom Summer Music Festival Series, we hit the (sound)waves at the Music Academy of the West in sunny Santa Barbara, California! All good things must come to an end, and...here we are. The final installment of our summer music mini-series features New York Philharmonic concertmaster (who used to be Houston Symphony concertmaster), Frank Huang. He talks about the job of a concertmaster, and about his own story of a life in two cities with two orchestras. Frank also discusses first being a student and then being a teacher and visiting artist at the Music Academy of the West, and he talks about what he's been doing at the MAW festival this summer. At the end of the interview, we kidnap him and bring him back to Houston. It's an action-packed thrill-ride! JK. There's no kidnapping. That's illegal! But we think you'll enjoy the conversation anyway. Music in this episode: - "We're Going to Be Friends," by the White Stripes. From White Blood Cells. - String Sextet in D minor "Souvenir de Florence", Op. 70 by Pyotr Tchaikovsky. Audio production by Todd "Triple Double" Hulslander with editing by Mark DiClaudio and three-wheel motion by Dacia Clay. Copious thanks to the Music Academy of the West for all of their help with this mini-series and for letting us crash their summer music festival, with special thanks to Kate Oberjat (oh-bur-yacht) who has not missed a spot and who’s done an awful lot, and to Emma Levine, Barbara Hirsch and Anthony Paggett. Thanks to Scott Reed, Richie Hawley, Matthew Sinno, Jeremy Denk, Bill Williams, Matthew Aucoin, Cynthia Phelps, Thomas Hampson, and Frank Huang without whom these interviews would have been monologues. Thanks to KCRW in Santa Barbara and to engineer Kathryn Barnes. May the Force be with you on your way back to school!
In our second annual Classical Classroom Summer Music Festival Series, we hit the (sound)waves at the Music Academy of the West in sunny Santa Barbara, California! Library of Congress “Living Legend” and Grammy Award-winning baritone Thomas Hampson has reached a point in his life and career at which one might use the term “venerable” to describe him. “Wise” is another word that music journalists probably throw down when talking about him. And they would not be wrong. But even Thomas Hampson got his start somewhere. In this interview, he talks about his classical music beginnings at the Music Academy of the West, and about conveying the grand meaning of music as a teacher to young people in master classes there now. Music in this episode (all performed by Thomas Hampson): Three Songs Op. 10: No. 1, Rain Has Fallen by Samuel Barber Sechs Lieder aus “Lotosblatter,” Op. 19, 6 Mein Herz ist stumm, mein Herz ist kalt by Richard Strauss Vier Lieder, Op. 27: 3. Heimliche Aufforderung by Richard Strauss. Audio production by Todd “Toddsong” Hulslander with editing by Mark DiClaudio and lipsyncing by Dacia Clay. Thanks to the Music Academy of the West for their help with these interviews, especially to Emma Levine and Kate Oberjat, who’s quite frankly, done a lot.