Podcast appearances and mentions of Shaun Nichols

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  • Apr 14, 2025LATEST
Shaun Nichols

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Best podcasts about Shaun Nichols

Latest podcast episodes about Shaun Nichols

Philosophy on the Fringes
Past Life Memories

Philosophy on the Fringes

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 68:14


In this episode, Megan and Frank investigate the strange phenomenon of past life memories. Are past life memories evidence for reincarnation? Is what we remember a good guide to who we are? And how might a single identity span different lifetimes? Thinkers discussed in this episode include Plato, Pythagoras, Thomas Reid, J.M.E. McTaggart, and Michael Sudduth.-----------------------Hosts' Websites:Megan J Fritts (google.com)Frank J. Cabrera (google.com)Email: philosophyonthefringes@gmail.com-----------------------Bibliography:Timaeus by PlatoDiogenes Laërtius: PythagorasThe Next Dalai Lama: Preparing for Reincarnation and Why It Matters to IndiaClaire White, Robert M. Kelly & Shaun Nichols, Remembering Past LivesThomas Reid, Essays on the Intellectual Powers of ManChildren Who Report Memories of Past Lives - Division of Perceptual StudiesThe Case of James Leininger_ An American Case of the Reincarnation TypeJim Tucker - Response to Sudduth's “James Leininger Case Re-Examined”The Science of Reincarnation—VIRGINIA MagazineThe Philosophy of Dr. McTaggart.S2, Episode 6: The Self and Survival (Mar. 27th, 2018) – Hi-Phi NationNew evidence shows false memories can be created | UW News-----------------------Cover Artwork by Logan Fritts-------------------------Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!):https://uppbeat.io/t/simon-folwar/neon-signsLicense code: ZMHYPZTDWFJ3QXU2

Phone Freaks
Uncle Roger Sandwich? Yes, Please

Phone Freaks

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 51:46


I took what was afforded to me...Jenny Roberts understands being a mom means being there...Every bread needs a seat at the table...Mammz has broken ears cause he's old AF...Monogomy exception...Let me taste your precum...Shaun Nichols wants oral in public...NY and LA are fun to visit, but SF is home...Brooklyn's gonna cum get Tony's D!...That's it, pop it in...Of course I'm gonna rag on Portland--it's Portland...Putting on a condom for phone sex?... For more Jenny Roberts come back all week and follow her below! Instagram @LadraRoberts https://www.instagram.com/ladraroberts/ TikTok @LadraRoberts https://www.tiktok.com/@ladraroberts

Phone Freaks
Thank God. It's Just Masturbation.

Phone Freaks

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2023 50:45


I'm single, so yay!...Don't be a jackass just because we both have pride flags...Oh my god, more gun talk...Lisa Marie Presley's goodbye at Graceland...Shaun Nichols gets homemade underpants from his mother...Malicious compliance is the best thing in the world...Ja Rule or Jelly Roll?...Covid testing for toddlers...That laugh, FML...It was a lot of poop...Airport security is just great for him...Always hard sounds like a medical condition... For more Jenny Roberts come back all week and follow her below! Instagram @LadraRoberts https://www.instagram.com/ladraroberts/ TikTok @LadraRoberts https://www.tiktok.com/@ladraroberts

CSO Perspectives (public)
Amazon AWS and cybersecurity first principles.

CSO Perspectives (public)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2022 18:53


Amazon AWS adoption with cybersecurity first principle strategies. In this second session reviewing cloud platforms through the lens of first principle thinking, Rick Howard reviews Amazon Web Services (AWS). He discusses how AWS supports, or doesn't support, strategies of resilience, zero trust, intrusion kill chains, and risk assessments. Cybersecurity professional development and continued education. You will learn about: AWS networking and API techniques, DevSecOps in a cloud environment, AWS services and security tools, AWS strategies that support cybersecurity first principles. CyberWire is the world's most trusted news source for cybersecurity information and situational awareness. Join the conversation with Rick Howard on LinkedIn and Twitter, and follow CyberWire on social media and join our community of security professionals: LinkedIn, Twitter, Youtube, Facebook, Instagram Additional first principles resources for your cybersecurity program. For more Amazon AWS and cybersecurity first principles resources, check the topic essay. Selected Reading: S1E6: 11 MAY: Cybersecurity First Principles S1E7: 18 MAY: Cybersecurity first principles: zero trust S1E8: 26 MAY: Cybersecurity first principles: intrusion kill chains. S1E9: 01 JUN: Cybersecurity first principles - resilience S1E11: 15 JUN: Cybersecurity first principles - risk S2E7: 31 AUG: Identity Management: a first principle idea. S2E8: 07 SEP: Identity Management: around the Hash Table. S4E3: 25 JAN: Microsoft Azure through a first principle lens S4E4: 01 FEB: Microsoft Azure security (Hashtable Interviews) “5 Best Practices for Resiliency Planning Using AWS | Amazon Web Services,” Amazon Web Services, 7 October 2020. “6 Best Practices for Increasing Security in AWS in a Zero Trust World.” by Louis Columbus, Forbes, 4 January 2019.  “About: History,” Cloud Security Alliance. “A Brief History of AWS,” by Alec Rojasm, Media Temple, 31 August 2017. “Amrandazz/Attack-Guardduty-Navigator.” by amrandazz, GitHub, 2021. “AWS Networking and Security 101,” by Net Joints, YouTube Video, 2020. “AWS Networking Fundamentals,” by Amazon Web Services, YouTube Video, 2019. “AWS Training and Certification,” by Aws.training, 2021. “Exposed Azure Bucket Leaked Passports, IDs of Volleyball Reporters,” by Ax Sharma, BleepingComputer, February 2021. “How to Connect Your On-Premises Active Directory to AWS Using AD Connector | Amazon Web Services,” by Amazon Web Services, 6 July 2015.  “How to Think about Zero Trust Architectures on AWS | Amazon Web Services.” by Amazon Web Services, 20 January 2020.  “Leaky AWS S3 Buckets Are so Common, They're Being Found by the Thousands Now – with Lots of Buried Secrets,” by Shaun Nichols, Shaun, Theregister.com, 3 August 2020.  “Network Address Translation (NAT) - GeeksforGeeks,” by GeeksforGeeks, 7 May 2018.  “Zero Trust Architectures: An AWS Perspective | Amazon Web Services,” by Amazon Web Services, 3 November 2020. 

Inside The Media Minds
Inside the Media Minds Episode 52 - Shaun Nichols - TechTarget

Inside The Media Minds

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021 21:43


In the latest episode of #IMM, Christine speaks with Shaun Nichols, senior news writer at TechTarget's Search Security.

Very Bad Wizards
Episode 214: You Shouldn't Feel Bad (Except You Should)

Very Bad Wizards

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2021 80:41


Tamler welcomes social psychologist David Pizarro of Cornell University to the podcast to talk about his recent article (along with Raj Anderson, Shaun Nichols, and Rachana Kamtekar) on “false-positive emotions.” When agents commit accidental harms, we typically tell them they shouldn't feel too guilty, it's not their fault, it was out of their control, and so forth. At the same time, we don't want them to let themselves off the hook right away either. They shouldn't feel guilty, but also they…should. What's behind these mixed messages and attitudes? Are we looking for information about their character? What kind? Plus, a new algorithm can predict someone's political orientation with 72% accuracy based on one profile photo (either from Facebook or a dating app). Is Big Brother around the corner?

The Dissenter
#339 Shaun Nichols: The Philosophy And Psychology Of Morality

The Dissenter

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2020 54:53


------------------Support the channel------------ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thedissenter SubscribeStar: https://www.subscribestar.com/the-dissenter PayPal: paypal.me/thedissenter PayPal Subscription 1 Dollar: https://tinyurl.com/yb3acuuy PayPal Subscription 3 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/ybn6bg9l PayPal Subscription 5 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/ycmr9gpz PayPal Subscription 10 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/y9r3fc9m PayPal Subscription 20 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/y95uvkao ------------------Follow me on--------------------- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thedissenteryt/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheDissenterYT Anchor (podcast): https://anchor.fm/thedissenter Dr. Shaun Nichols is Professor in the Sage School of Philosophy at Cornell University. He works in philosophy of cognitive science. Most of his research concerns the psychological foundations of philosophical thought. Recently he's been drawing on learning theory to try to understand how people acquire philosophically significant concepts and distinctions, especially in the domain of morality. In this episode, we talk about morality. We approach it from a philosophical and scientific perspective. We discuss the role that emotions and other mental mechanisms play. We also refer to child development, learning, and human universals and the folk psychology of morality. Then, we talk about psychopathy and moral rationalism; the link between morality and violence; and the is-ought dichotomy. Finally, we discuss a possible new kind of moral realism. -- Follow Dr. Nichols' work: Faculty page: http://bit.ly/2SNizJ3 Website: https://bit.ly/34DRr51 Google Scholar profile: https://bit.ly/2K9ugpB PhilPeople profile: https://bit.ly/2VeLk3K ResearchGate profile: https://bit.ly/2z6myKO -- A HUGE THANK YOU TO MY PATRONS/SUPPORTERS: KARIN LIETZCKE, ANN BLANCHETTE, PER HELGE LARSEN, LAU GUERREIRO, JERRY MULLER, HANS FREDRIK SUNDE, BERNARDO SEIXAS, HERBERT GINTIS, RUTGER VOS, RICARDO VLADIMIRO, BO WINEGARD, CRAIG HEALY, OLAF ALEX, PHILIP KURIAN, JONATHAN VISSER, DAVID DIAS, ANJAN KATTA, JAKOB KLINKBY, ADAM KESSEL, MATTHEW WHITINGBIRD, ARNAUD WOLFF, TIM HOLLOSY, HENRIK AHLENIUS, JOHN CONNORS, PAULINA BARREN, FILIP FORS CONNOLLY, DAN DEMETRIOU, ROBERT WINDHAGER, RUI INACIO, ARTHUR KOH, ZOOP, MARCO NEVES, MAX BEILBY, COLIN HOLBROOK, SUSAN PINKER, THOMAS TRUMBLE, PABLO SANTURBANO, SIMON COLUMBUS, PHIL KAVANAGH, JORGE ESPINHA, CORY CLARK, MARK BLYTH, ROBERTO INGUANZO, MIKKEL STORMYR, ERIC NEURMANN, SAMUEL ANDREEFF, FRANCIS FORDE, TIAGO NUNES, BERNARD HUGUENEY, ALEXANDER DANNBAUER, OMARI HICKSON, PHYLICIA STEVENS, FERGAL CUSSEN, YEVHEN BODRENKO, HAL HERZOG, NUNO MACHADO, DON ROSS, AND JOÃO ALVES DA SILVA! A SPECIAL THANKS TO MY PRODUCERS, YZAR WEHBE, ROSEY, JIM FRANK, ŁUKASZ STAFINIAK, IAN GILLIGAN, SERGIU CODREANU, LUIS CAYETANO, AND MATTHEW LAVENDER! AND TO MY EXECUTIVE PRODUCER, MICHAL RUSIECKI!

Philosophy Un(phil)tered
Shaun Nichols: Free Will and Moral Responsibility

Philosophy Un(phil)tered

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2019


In this episode Ju Chen, a Ph.D. student at Renmin University, talks with Shaun Nichols, Professor of Philosophy at the University of Arizona, on his book Bound.

Very Bad Wizards
Episode 137: Are Buddhists Afraid to Die? (with Shaun Nichols)

Very Bad Wizards

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2018 79:16


Why are we always attracted to people who mock us, resist our advances, and play hard to get? Maybe because it’s extra satisfying when you finally get them to… appear on your podcast. In our first live episode (recorded in San Antonio), the philosopher Shaun Nichols joins us to discuss his recent article “Death and the Self”. You might think that Buddhist conceptions of the self as illusory would reduce their fear of death (after all, if there’s no real self, why worry about it ceasing to exist?). But the evidence collected by Shaun and colleagues suggests exactly the opposite. Why would that be? Plus, David and Tamler choose six finalists for the Patreon listener selected episode (did Jordan Peterson make the list?), and we announce a special bonus for people who pre-order Tamler’s forthcoming book "Why Honor Matters." Special Guest: Shaun Nichols.

death afraid san antonio buddhist jordan peterson tamler shaun nichols why honor matters
Philosophy Talk Starters
216: Mind Reading

Philosophy Talk Starters

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 29, 2015 10:56


More at http://philosophytalk.org/shows/mind-reading. We base many decisions every day not only on the belief that other people have minds, but on detailed beliefs about what is going on in those minds: what these other people believe, feel, hope, and fear. The basis of our ability to "read" the minds of others is a lively area of research in psychology and the philosophy of psychology. Ken and John discuss mind-reading with Shaun Nichols from the University of Arizona, author of "Mindreading: An Integrated Account of Pretense, Self-Awareness and Understanding Other Minds."

Oral Argument
Episode 58: Obscurity Settings

Oral Argument

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2015 98:17


What kind of privacy do we want to have? What makes others’ knowledge about us turn from everyday acceptable to weird and creepy? Woody Hartzog talks with us about the difficulties of maintaining privacy, whatever it should be, online and in social networks. We’re used to the cheap obscurity and fleetingness of our physical lives, but it’s cheap and tempting to know more about others online than they’d like. Can we design platforms to deliver the individual obscurity we’ve enjoyed in the past? Conversation ranges between celebrities and privacy, searchability, giving up on hiding that we’re all gross and weird, our many identities, the problem of dumb teenagers, protected Twitter accounts, internet bad guys, and naked, dancing Buddhist monks. This show’s links: Woody Hartzog’s faculty profile and writing Philosophy Bites, Shaun Nichols on Death and the Self Woodrow Hartzog, Chain-Link Confidentiality Joshua Fairfield, BitProperty About security through obscurity Woodrow Hartzog and Frederic Stutzman, Obscurity by Design Daniel Solve, A Taxonomy of Privacy David Brin, The Transparent Society Cass Sunstein, Republic.com About the narcissism of small differences Richard Posner, The Right of Privacy Neil Richards, Intellectual Privacy (the article) and Intellectual Privacy (the book) Library of Congress, Update on the Twitter Archive at the Library of Congress Twitter, About Public and Protected Tweets; see also Greg Kumparak, Twitter Bug Allowed Some Protected Accounts to Be Read by Unapproved Followers About Yik Yak Mike Isaac, A Look Behind the Snapchat Photo Leak Claims In the Matter of Red Zone Investment Group, Inc., an FTC case involving, among other things, a fake windows registration window Woodrow Hartzog, Website Design as Contract About the Whisper app About the Sears Holdings Management Corp. case before the FTC Special Guest: Woodrow Hartzog.

Philosophy Bites
Shaun Nichols on Death and the Self

Philosophy Bites

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2015 14:43


How does your view of the self affect your attitude to your own death? Shaun Nichols discusses this question in this episode of the Philosophy Bites podcast.

Moral Psychology Research Group
Professor Shaun Nichols - 12 March 2015 - What is the Nature of Human Morality?

Moral Psychology Research Group

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2015 60:00


What is the Nature of Human Morality? Professor Shaun Nichols (Arizona) Abstract Prof Nichols: Philosophical observation and psychological studies indicate that people draw subtle distinctions in the normative domain. But it remains unclear exactly what gives rise to such distinctions. On one prominent approach, emotion systems trigger non-utilitarian judgments. The main alternative, inspired by Chomskyan linguistics, suggests that moral distinctions derive from an innate moral grammar. We develop a rational learning account. We argue that the “size principle”, which is implicated in word learning (Xu & Tenenbaum 2007), can also explain how children would use scant and equivocal evidence to interpret candidate rules as applying more narrowly than utilitarian rules. Shaun Nichols is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Arizona. A pioneer of the emerging discipline of ‘experimental philosophy’, Prof Nichols is interested in the psychological processes underlying our everyday moral intuitions, moral reasoning and moral decision-making – and in how understanding these processes can shed light on classic and contemporary questions in morality and ethics. More specifically, his research has brought an empirically-informed lens to bear on a range of philosophical questions including free will, moral responsibility and blameworthiness, and notions of self and personal identity. He is author of three edited volumes and two books (Sentimental Rules and Mindreading), and has been published in such prestigious journals as Mind and Language and the Journal of Philosophy.