Results for “jonathan haidt”
37 found

Saturday assorted links

1. Zvi annotates the CWT with Jon Haidt.

2. How is bird flu spreading in cows?

3. Not sure I believe in these kinds of correlations, but here are some results suggesting that automation leads to less religion.

4. Claims about GPTs.  Complicated but interesting.

5. Ezra Klein and Nilay Patel on AI and the future of media and the internet (NYT).

6. dataforindia.com

7. Janan Ganesh on peace and technological stagnation (FT).

Friday assorted links

1. Haidt and Gray on play deprivation as a cause of mental illness.

2. Some kind of weird story I don’t understand about an AER retraction.

3. “The SAT’s Predictive Power for College Grades is Systematically Underestimated Because of Range Restriction.

4. Noteworthy observations on China and AI.

5. Markets in AI girlfriends.

6. “A female microscopic roundworm that spent the last 46,000 years in suspended animation deep in the Siberian permafrost was revived and started having babies in a laboratory dish.

From my WhatsApp

Tyler Cowen: I am, by the way, not so convinced by the Jon Haidt piece on social media and mental illness: https://jonathanhaidt.substack.com/p/social-media-mental-illness-epidemic?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=1221094&post_id=104255435&isFreemail=true&utm_medium=email
Tyler Cowen: He readily admits that across individuals social media use explains only a tiny portion of the variation in happiness. His response is that it is other people’s usage of social media that makes you unhappy, because you can’t go talk to them.
Tyler Cowen: So there are (in his view) only system-wide effects, nothing that can be verified at the micro level. [TC: note the “to the point” style of WhatsApp leads to certain exaggerations and inaccuracies]
Tyler Cowen: It seems to me that if the stuff makes you so miserable, young people should be able to build small social “pods” of individuals who don’t do the stuff so much, hang out together, and are just way happier.
Tyler Cowen: Furthermore, if a lot of the problem is “young girls comparing themselves to thinner others on Instagram” and the like, that should show up as an individual-level effect. Not a group effect. There can be those beautiful, envy-inducing models on Instagram even if only a small percentage of one’s peers are on Instagram.

Tyler Cowen: I agree the problem is larger with girls. And I think it is a mix of bullying, cyberbullying, envy, and unrealistic expectations. I just don’t think it is nearly as a large a problem as he claims.
Tyler Cowen: And I think that often “going to talk to other people” — you know the “Mean Girls” — is the problem itself. In that sense his various hypotheses contradict each other.

You will note also the recent result that school closures lower not raise the rate of youth suicide.  It is thus hard for me to string together the hypothesis of a) “youth suicide rates are way up,” b) “this is because of social media,” and c) “social media make us miserable by taking away people to talk to and hang out with.”

Friday assorted links

1. More on Edelman, the Chinese food cost complainer (can you blame him?).

2. Jon Haidt follows up on social media and mental health.

3. In defense of J.K. Rowling (NYT).  And Connecticut is considering apologizing for its 17th century witch trials (NYT).

4. A note on Sydney.  And anotherAnd a third.

5. Full transcript of the Roose/NYT chat with Bing (NYT).  And Gwern on Sydney.  In the meantime, it seems that Sydney has been sent to the glue factory.

6. Jeremy Stern interviews me on issues related to Russia and Ukraine.

Sunday assorted links

1. Economic factors behind the demise of footbinding.

2. Paul McCartney plays bass for an obscure Malawian group.

3. Effective pandemic policy reduces fear.

4. Hadza hunter-gatherers are not deontologists and do not prefer deontologists as social partners.

5. The global median income has doubled in 17 years from 2000 to 2017.

6. Liberty Institute at UT Austin.

7. Social media better than many people think.